Defence infrastructure push risks stalling without reform | Construction Enquirer News
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Contractors demand faster procurement and alliancing to drive delivery
A report from consultant Gleeds says the Defence Infrastructure Organisation must shift away from one-off procurement towards alliancing and early contractor involvement to build the strong supply chain needed to deliver at pace the UK’s ambitions. Defence infrastructure spending is expected to rise sharply as part of wider plans to increase defence budgets towards 2.5% of GDP, unlocking tens of billions of pounds of work across bases, training estates and secure facilities over the coming decade. The Strategic Defence Review has already committed £1.5bn to deliver at least six new UK munitions and energetics factories, underlining the scale of the pipeline coming forward. But the report warns the system is not set up to deliver at pace. One defence construction contractor told the consultant that despite public discussion about increased defence spending, the last six to eight months have seen a hiatus in schemes reaching contractors, leaving uncertainty over timing, scope, and funding sources. Fragmented procurement, slow approvals and inconsistent pipelines are driving inefficiency, inflating bid costs and deterring contractors from committing long-term resources. Mark Graves, senior director of energy and defence at Gleeds, said: “The basics are missing, and this is not new. Budgets are fluid, programmes are delayed or slow to reach market, and ageing infrastructure drives a ‘make do and mend’ approach within overly complicated contractual arrangements. “Pace in strate...