The government publishes a set of cost benchmarks for public projects as part of its drive to cut the cost of public construction projects by 20%
The government has published a set of cost benchmarks for public projects as part of its drive to cut the cost of public construction projects by 20%.
The publication of cost benchmarks, , is one of the key reforms the government is making to improve its performance as a client.
The reforms aim to make links across departments to allow the government to act as a single customer.
The government has published a new set of benchmarks today with the aim of driving project costs down further.
Cabinet office Minister Chloe Smith (pictured) is today expected to tell 黑洞社区鈥檚 Government Construction Summit that reforms to strip out inefficiencies in public sector construction generated 拢447m of savings last year.
Smith is expected to say: 鈥淕overnment is a good client who pays on time and invests in projects that make an important economic impact to help the UK compete in the global race.
鈥淲e鈥檝e always been ambitious in our plans to reform public sector construction, and the 拢447m in savings generated by acting as a single customer shows just how we are spending public money more intelligently.
鈥淲orking more collaboratively has identified where we can strip out unnecessary waste in construction projects and test out innovative models to help businesses of all sizes win government contracts.
鈥淥ur reforms aim to deliver projects up to 20% cheaper by 2015 鈥 making at least 拢1.2 billion available to reinvest. That means 60 new secondary schools, or 60 new community hospitals.鈥
Civil Engineering Contactors Association (CECA) director of external affairs Alasdair Reisner said: 鈥淭wo years ago industry and government agreed to work together to drive the cost of construction down by 20%.
鈥淲e have welcomed the chance to be involved with this work, and are pleased to see that the results are starting to emerge, producing sustainable savings that reduce the cost of construction for the taxpayer.
鈥淲e hope that the new approaches will be adopted widely, creating a leaner and more competitive industry that delivers exemplary results for its customers.鈥
Constructing Excellence chief executive Don Ward said: 鈥淭he early findings of the trial projects monitored by Constructing Excellence already point to smarter procurement delivering significant improvements in value for money for the public purse.
鈥淥f course it is key to ensure savings do not impact on safety, quality or whole life performance, and our monitoring will focus on this as well as capital cost savings.鈥
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