Details of combustible materials were kept under wraps, inquiry hears in first week back after two-month pause

Kingspan and manufacturing giant Arconic were in the spotlight this week at the public inquiry into the Grenfell Tower fire, which killed 72 people in June 2017.

It was the first week of hearings for nearly two months after the inquiry wrapped up early for Christmas last year following a member of the inquiry team testing positive for covid.

Hearings have now moved out of the inquiry鈥檚 Paddington headquarters with evidence now being heard remotely after the imposition of a third national lockdown in England in January.

Arconic made its first appearance on Tuesday, but first came a single day of evidence from Kingspan as the firm鈥檚 former technical services manager Andrew Pack appeared for questioning.

Kingspan鈥檚 test reports 鈥榢ept secret鈥

Pack, who now works as Kingspan鈥檚 global technical support manager based in the Middle East, admitted that he had never read a BS 8414 test report for a system which included K15, the insulation which was installed on Grenfell Tower, during the period from 2001 to 2010 when he advised the industry about the product.

Andrew Pack

Andrew Pack giving evidence at Monday鈥檚 hearing

Asked if the test reports were 鈥渁lmost kept secret鈥 he agreed, adding: 鈥淭hroughout my career at Kingspan, when people do fire testing, it has been the case that those test reports have been kept within the people that do that testing.鈥

The inquiry heard last year how Kingspan鈥檚 K15 product, which was never specified for the refurbishment of Grenfell Tower but was found after the 2017 fire to be included in its cladding system, had been marketed using a test report of a chemically different product for nearly 15 years.

Monday鈥檚 hearing was also told how Kingspan had obtained a certificate for K15 from the Local Authority 黑洞社区 Control (LABC), a body representing building control inspectors at local councils.

The certificate stated that K15 could be considered as a 鈥渕aterial of limited combustibility,鈥 the minimum standard in official guidance needed for an insulation product to be considered safe to use on high rise buildings.

The inquiry heard that when Kingspan鈥檚 then-technical manager Philip Heath had read a draft of the certificate, which was sent by a Herefordshire council inspector who had not been trained in the rules for high rise buildings, he had written in an email: 鈥淢ake no mistake, this document could be GOLD鈥 Please progress this ASAP to the next stage鈥 Peddle to the floor.鈥

Heath reacted to the final draft by writing: 鈥淔ANBLOODYTASTIC.鈥

Last year, the inquiry was shown emails from the National House 黑洞社区 Council which called the LABC certificate 鈥済arbage鈥 adding: 鈥淗ereford LABC didn鈥檛 know what they were talking about.鈥

Arconic withheld product information

Tuesday saw Arconic鈥檚 first appearance in the second module of the inquiry鈥檚 second phase, as former UK sales manager Deborah French gave the first of three days of evidence.

Emails shown to the inquiry revealed how French was ordered to withhold information from Arup which outlined the differences between two versions of the firm鈥檚 Reynobond panels (Reynond PE, with a polyethylene core, and Reynobond FR, which was fire retardant).

When French asked if she could forward documents on the two products to Arup, a prospective client, Arconic鈥檚 technical manager Claude Wehrle replied: 鈥淥H MY LORD!!! Where did you get that from??? For sure you鈥檙e NOT allowed to diffuse to the customer those documents.鈥

Grenfell new

Deborah French made admissions in a secretly recorded phone call days after the 2017 fire at Grenfell Tower

Asked by counsel to the inquiry Richard Millett QC if she had ever explained to customers if PE would burn, French replied: 鈥淚 don鈥檛 recall specifically explaining that to them. If I had been asked the question I would have explained it.鈥

She insisted that her technical knowledge was 鈥渧ery limited,鈥 adding: 鈥淲orking for an organisation like Alcoa [as Arconic was known], it didn鈥檛 even enter my head, the question of whether it was or wasn鈥檛 suitable. 

鈥淎s far as I was concerned, it was a product that had been used, they were a big, known company and therefore it was all perfectly suitable for what I need - for what it needed to do in the UK.鈥

Wehrle, who is based in France, is one of three former Arconic staff who have refused to give evidence because of the risk of incriminating themselves under French law.

The two other Arconic witnesses who have refused to give evidence to the inquiry are Gwenaelle Derrendinger, who lives in France, and Peter Froehlich, who lives in Germany. A fourth Arconic witness, Claude Schmidt, has now agreed to attend the inquiry.

Downgraded fire rating

On Wednesday, it was revealed that French had emailed a link to a May 2013 BBC News article to colleagues about a string of fires in the Middle East of buildings which had been clad in ACM, the same type of cladding which she had been selling to UK customers in the form of Arconic鈥檚 Reynobond PE panels.

She had also forwarded an email from a salesperson at rival company Alucobond who wrote that ACM cladding could behave like a 鈥渃himney which transports the fire from bottom to top or vice versa within the shortest time鈥.

At the time of the email, French was negotiating with the project team for the Grenfell Tower refurbishment for the sale of 3,000m2 of Arconic鈥檚 combustible Reynobond PE cladding, a type of ACM. 

Despite being aware of the dangers of ACM, French said in her witness statement that, during negotiations with the Grenfell refurbishment project: 鈥淚 do not recall ever thinking about the height of the building or the extent of the cladding鈥.

She then admitted that she had not updated customers when the fire rating of Reynobond PE was downgraded from the Euroclass B standard, which marked it as safe for use on high rise buildings, to the much lower Euroclass E.

Counsel to the inquiry Richard Millett QC asked: 鈥淲as it not reasonably clear to you at the time when you received this information from Mr Wehrle that it was being sent to you for you to do something with?鈥 

French replied: 鈥淎t the time, no. I didn鈥檛 think it was relevant to the UK.鈥 

Millett asked: 鈥滵id you simply take it on yourself to ignore it without seeking any advice or instruction or guidance or help from those senior to you at Arconic?鈥

Deborah French 3

Deborah French giving evidence at Thursday鈥檚 hearing

French replied: 鈥淵eah, I don鈥檛 recall what I - what action I took at the time.鈥

Millet then asked: 鈥淲ell, on the look of it, you just sat on it; is that right?鈥 to which French replied: 鈥漎eah, I don鈥檛 recall what action I did or didn鈥檛 take with it.鈥

Reynobond PE was the most popular of Arconic鈥檚 cladding products in the UK at the time, with the inquiry hearing yesterday that it was sold 鈥渂y default鈥 over a slightly more costly fire retardant version known as Reynobond FR.

French told Tuesday鈥檚 hearing how she 鈥渃annot remember a single occasion on which I sold FR鈥 in the UK, despite the fire retardant product being 鈥渕uch more鈥 popular in Germany.

Why Reynobond PE panels were not withdrawn 

French鈥檚 disclosures continued the following day, as she told Thursday鈥檚 hearing that Arconic had not withdrawn Reynobond PE from the market because of the 鈥渃ost implications鈥.

She had made the admission on 21 June 2017, a week after the Grenfell Fire, to John Simmons, who worked at Arconic client Simco, in a phone call which Simmons secretly recorded.

Simmons had asked French why Arconic had not withdrawn its Reynobond PE panels, which were used as part of Grenfell Tower鈥檚 refurbishment, as rival firm 3A had done with its similar Alucobond product.

French replied: 鈥淭here were some discussions around when Alucobond did do that and it was鈥 it was the cost implications.鈥

She added that she had advised that Arconic should withdraw the panels but 鈥渋t was more to do with the fact that we didn鈥檛 want two products in the market鈥.

Arconic had at the time been selling two versions of Reynobond. One, was fire retardant, known as FR, which had a 70% mineral core, and another called PE, which had a polyethylene core and was cheaper but combustible.

Thursday鈥檚 hearing was told that Arconic鈥檚 margin on FR was around 鈧5-鈧6, but was  鈧7-鈧8 on the far more popular PE.

Asked by counsel to the inquiry RIchard Millett QC what she meant by 鈥渃ost implications,鈥 French replied: 鈥淭he fact that we would have had to have supplied FR at a more expensive rate.鈥

Millet then asked: 鈥淒o you recall whether, in considering those commercial considerations, any consideration was given to the fire safety consequences of continuing to sell Reynobond PE?鈥 

French replied: 鈥淚 don鈥檛 recall any conversations of that nature.鈥

French, who left Arconic in 2015, also told the inquiry that she had not warned her replacement Vince Meakins about the downgraded fire rating of Reynobond PE.

Millet asked: 鈥淰ince Meakins had taken over your role at Reynobond; did you not seek to tell Vince Meakins to warn Harley and warn those on the Grenfell Tower project that you had supplied Reynobond with a PE core which in fact did not have class B but class E?鈥

French replied that she did not, and when asked by Millet why that was, she replied: 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know, I鈥檇 moved on and I didn鈥檛 think in that way.鈥

Meakins will be appearing at the inquiry on Monday morning, with senior executive Claude Schmidt appearing from Monday afternoon until the week鈥檚 last hearing on Thursday afternoon.

The inquiry continues.