Source · National Audit Office
Managing PFI assets and services as contracts end
Published: 5 Jun 2020
Recommendations: 7
Type: Value for Money
NAO confirmed: 6
Department: Cabinet Office
This report provides information on managing PFI contracts when they end and considers whether government is preparing for expiry appropriately.
Recommendations
| Rec | Recommendation | Addressee | Acceptance | Implementation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
Sponsor departments should:
a) Encourage authorities to:
• start preparing for contract expiry on a timely basis;
• ensure the PFI contract is complete and all expiry provisions are well understood;
• develop a contract expiry plan that identifies all the critical tasks and obstacles that may prevent a successful exit; and
• escalate problems which cannot be resolved at a local level to the sponsor department in a timely fashion.
Ref Page 10, point a
· Implemented Not completed
|
Infrastructure and Projects Authority | Accepted | In progress |
| 2 |
b) provide direct financial support to authorities where required, with particular focus on funding dispute resolutions and hiring additional resources.
Ref Page 10, point b
· Implemented Q3 2021-22
|
HM Treasury | Partially accepted | Implemented ✓ NAO |
| 3 |
IPA and sponsor departments should:
c) proactively coordinate and develop a programme of support that can be made available to authorities. This should include:
• building internal resource and sector-specific expertise;
• developing a range of different tools that can be deployed depending on the nature of support required, including specialist advice and guidance documents; and
• developing contract expiry training.
Ref Page 10, point c
· Implemented 05/2022
|
Infrastructure and Projects Authority | Accepted | Implemented ✓ NAO |
| 4 |
d) develop an approach to identifying high-risk projects, such as those sitting with authorities that lack appropriate skills and capabilities. The IPA and departments should work with public sector stakeholders to assess how skill shortages can be addressed; and
Ref Page 10, point d
· Implemented 09/2022
|
Infrastructure and Projects Authority | Accepted | Implemented ✓ NAO |
| 5 |
e) assess the costs and benefits of developing an electronic repository of PFI contracts which supports authorities to manage their contracts and helps sponsor departments and IPA to identify high-risk projects and enable a more consistent approach across government.
Ref Page 10, point e
· Implemented 10/2021
|
Infrastructure and Projects Authority | Accepted | Implemented ✓ NAO |
| 6 |
IPA should:
f) assess whether any areas of the contract expiry process would benefit from a more coordinated and centralised approach. This should include:
• assessing the value for money of developing a new centralised pool of internal resources, such as lawyers and surveyors, that authorities can use;
• publishing contract expiry guidance and other useful documents such as terms of reference templates for engaging with external consultants;
• developing a consistent approach to resolving legal disputes including guidance on how an authority should balance the costs and benefits of taking
legal action; and
• developing an investor strategy which manages the relationship with private sector PFI stakeholders – equity investors, management service companies,
contractors – across all PFI contracts. Such a strategy could also consider working with other government bodies, such as UK Government Investments, who may have interactions with similar private sector companies.
Ref Page 11, point f
· Implemented 03/2025
|
Infrastructure and Projects Authority | Accepted | In progress ✓ NAO |
| 7 |
HM Treasury should:
g) provide funding to departments which assist financially constrained authorities in formal disputes where it is value for money and practical to do so.
Ref Page 11, point g
· Implemented Q3 2021-22
|
HM Treasury | Partially accepted | Implemented ✓ NAO |