The following Statement was made in the House of Commons on
Wednesday 28 February. “With your permission, Mr Deputy Speaker, I
would like to make a Statement on our plans for reform of the
Ministry of Defence’s acquisition system. Nimrod, Snatch Land
Rovers, Ajax, Crowsnest and Morpheus—the narrative of our
acquisition system has long been dogged by major programmes that
were variously over-complex, over-budget and over-time. Of course,
military procurement is...Request free
trial
The following Statement was made in the House of Commons on
Wednesday 28 February.
“With your permission, Mr Deputy Speaker, I would like to make a
Statement on our plans for reform of the Ministry of Defence’s
acquisition system.
Nimrod, Snatch Land Rovers, Ajax, Crowsnest and Morpheus—the
narrative of our acquisition system has long been dogged by major
programmes that were variously over-complex, over-budget and
over-time. Of course, military procurement is inherently complex,
and external factors—supply chain disruption in particular—have
caused delays across the board that are likely to continue
hitting programmes for the time being.
It is also true that our system has excelled at procuring vast
quantities of ordnance into Ukraine. We have not stood still. We
have been identifying and addressing systemic issues that impact
on delivery, we have been driving pace and agility through
streamlined processes and increasing the capability and capacity
of our senior responsible owners, and, over the last six years,
Defence Equipment and Support has come a long way in its internal
reform efforts.
None the less, the long-standing weaknesses of defence
acquisition are well known. They include a tendency for exquisite
procurement—potentially too bespoke to export, leaving industrial
capacity vulnerable—and, as Sheldon’s Ajax report assessed,
personnel wary of speaking up as problems emerge. In my view, the
most significant issue is a model of delegated authority
implemented after Lord Levene’s 2011 report, which was supposed
to drive financial responsibility but instead makes
prioritisation hard to achieve in practice. With budgets under
strain from inflation, the result is inevitable—what we call
“overprogramming” where, in the absence of effective
prioritisation, too many projects are chasing a finite amount of
funding. Inadvertently, that drives competition between the three
single services, each vying to get their programme on contract,
knowing that funding is oversubscribed. Such overprogramming can
only be dealt with in one way: delay, shifting programmes to the
right to make the books balance.
None of those problems compares with the most compelling reason
for reform. In a world where our adversaries are threatening to
out-compete us in capability terms, we have no choice but to
reform acquisition, or we will see our military competitiveness
diminished. Ukraine has shown that today’s battlespace is highly
contested, and integrated operations are essential. In 2021 we
announced the integrated operating concept, recognising the
military need for an integrated concept of operations but
maintaining a delegated procurement system. Today, I announce our
new integrated procurement model, in a world where multidomain
communications are critical and data integration is paramount. At
the same time, our kit must be secure, with key elements made in
the UK, and we must prioritise procuring enablers alongside the
shiny new platform that cannot work without them.
What does that mean in practice? There will be five key features
of our new approach. First, it will be joined up, with
procurement anchored in pan-defence affordability rather than ad
hoc silos that are vulnerable to overprogramming. A key example
will be our pending munitions strategy—a top priority given our
need to replenish weapons stocks to war-fighting levels.
Pan-defence prioritisation of munitions procurement will be
driven not only by the hard reality of the greatest threats we
face but by the scale of demand signal required for always-on
production—the optimal outcome for both military and
industry.
Secondly, we will have new checks and balances to challenge
assumptions at the outset of programmes. Specifically, our new
integration design authority, based within Strategic Command,
will be empowered to ensure that our new approach is adopted in
practice. If requirements lack a plan for data integration or
accompanying enablers, the proposal will be sent back. The
authority will also be able to monitor programmes where
opportunities may arise, such as to better harness AI or novel
technologies.
Meanwhile, in the MoD’s largely civilian sphere, a defence-wide
portfolio approach will bring together all the expertise at our
disposal to enable properly informed choices and decisions on
priorities. The aim will be to provide a credible second opinion
for Ministers to weigh alongside the military’s proposed
requirements. In particular, there will be a far stronger role
for our brilliant scientists at the Defence Science and
Technology Laboratory to focus on technological viability.
Experts will be tasked with market analysis and prioritising
advice on industrial options, ensuring that we make the
best-informed decision on whether to go for off the shelf,
sovereign manufacture or somewhere in between. To avoid new
oversight leading simply to more red tape, the reform takes place
hand in hand with defence design, aimed at streamlining our
internal processes.
The third key feature is prioritising exportability, which will
now be considered in depth from the very outset of programmes, to
maximise the potential market for a given capability and,
therefore, drive British industrial resilience. That is why one
of the key expert voices will be our export specialists. At the
moment, their primary focus is on export campaigns, largely for
mature products. However, I want that expertise to be embedded
within the MoD’s acquisition process from the beginning, giving
us robust data to quantify the risk that bespoke requirements
might create a delta between our needs and international demand.
Above all, that means that our international export campaigns can
commence at a far earlier point in the product life cycle.
The fourth feature of our new approach is to empower industrial
innovation. We have already started our radical new venture of
engaging industry at secret, to give the strongest possible
understanding of our future requirements. My aim is to embed this
approach throughout procurement, driving the deepest possible
relationship with industry, to enable entrepreneurial innovation
to flourish and our supply chains to become more resilient. A
more holistic supplier management approach will complement that
by enabling the department to speak with a clearer voice
regarding priorities once on contract.
Fifthly, we will pursue spiral development by default—seeking 60%
to 80% of the possible, rather than striving for perfection. For
such spiral programmes we will abolish initial operating
capability and full operating capability. Instead of IOC or FOC,
there will be MDC—the minimum deployable capability. There will
have to be exceptions, but we have set new default time targets
for programmes: three years for digital and five for platforms.
This is all about pace, but to achieve pace we need the right
people: capable senior responsible owners, operating in an
environment of psychological safety. As such, and given the
emphasis on our people and psychological safety, I am pleased to
report that we believe we have now implemented all 24
recommendations of the Sheldon review.
Finally, how will this systematic change be implemented? I said
to the Defence Committee that our plan was to launch our new
model in the next financial year. From the second week of April,
the integration design authority will formally deliver its new
oversight function in support of the integrated procurement
model. For major new programmes starting after that date, newly
formed expert advice will be made available to Ministers,
ensuring that we thrash out all the hard issues at the beginning
of a major procurement, locking down the key policy decisions so
that our SROs and commercial functions can deliver at pace from
then. For contractual reasons, existing programmes will continue
under their current procurement mode, but on 8 April we will
publish our new spiral development playbook so that existing
programmes that can adopt spiral features will be empowered to do
so.
On exportability, yesterday I published the next stage of our new
medium helicopter competition, which includes a strong weighting
for exports to ensure that the high-quality rotary work that it
will support in the UK is sustainable in the long term. Such an
approach to weighting exportability, where appropriate, will
become the default from 8 April. From that date, our three and
five-year targets will apply to new programmes, including top
priority pending procurements, such as the Mobile Fires Platform.
Ukraine has shown how close combat artillery remains critical to
war-fighting. We will now accelerate that crucial acquisition,
exemplifying our new approach whereby we will order critical
enablers in parallel to the platform itself, particularly
ammunition. Ukraine has also shown the importance of drones.
Uncrewed systems will form the first overall category of pipe
cleaner for the integrated procurement model from end to end.
Alongside this Statement, I am today publishing a short guidance
note explaining the nuts and bolts of our new acquisition
approach. Copies will be placed in the Library, and will be
available in the Vote Office after I have sat down. The current
environment in which we find ourselves—war in Europe—has made it
impossible to ignore the urgent need for change. I commend this
Statement to the House”.
2.35pm
(Lab)
My Lords, I thank the noble Earl for coming to the House to
respond to these questions and the necessary scrutiny, on a
repeat of the Statement from another place. It is welcome that
the Government are finally beginning to acknowledge what we on
these Benches and many others, including the National Audit
Office, the Public Accounts Committee and the Defence Committee,
have been saying for a long time—that defence procurement is not
working.
The Statement referred to the narrative of the acquisition system
being dogged by major programmes and, while certain programmes
have indeed been over budget and over time, the issues go much
wider. Some 46 of 52 major projects have been either late or over
budget under this Government. It is a systemic problem. In the
past 14 years, £15 billion of taxpayers’ money has gone to waste,
£5 billion in this Parliament. Report after report from the NAO
and the committees that I have mentioned have been critical.
This is not just about the wasted money, as important as that is.
Continuous failure in MoD procurement sends a message to the
world, to both our allies and our adversaries. Good defence
procurement can strengthen our sovereignty; make our country more
secure; provide economic growth by creating and supporting jobs;
and ensure that our troops can fulfil their roles and fight,
while allowing us to fulfil the obligations that we have to our
NATO allies. As we would all agree, it is therefore a top
priority.
The changes are right and welcome and we agree with the reasons
for the reforms set out by the Minister. Indeed, there is not too
much in the Statement that you can disagree with, but the real
concerns with the Government’s approach stem from the lack of
action to tackle the bigger issues, which is a disappointment and
a missed opportunity.
The Government’s policy for acquisition reform, as set out in the
Command Paper refresh and the Statement, do not address the waste
and poor value for money that have plagued the Government’s
mismanagement. Without addressing the waste of taxpayer money at
the scale that I have set out, it is difficult to see how the
reform as set out by the Government will fix the problem. How
will the Government ensure that these reforms offer value for
money and stop the waste that we have seen? What steps are they
taking to address the underlying systemic issues that have
contributed to the delays and mismanagement that the Minister has
acknowledged in the Statement, which have led to these projects
being late and over budget? It certainly does not appear that
they would have prevented the issues with some of the major
programmes mentioned in the Statement, such as Ajax or Morpheus,
or others that were not mentioned, such as the E-7 Wedgetails. Is
that analysis wrong and, if so, why?
We are under no illusions that the problems can always be
eliminated entirely—as the Statement says, these are incredibly
complex programmes and procurements—but they should not be on the
scale that we have seen. Does that not mean that there is real
scope to improve in this situation? How will these reforms ensure
proper accountability to prevent further delays and mismanagement
of these vital defence contracts, those that we have now and
those we will have in future? A fundamental question that the
Government need to answer is how the report will make the
difference that we all want, and why it will be successful when
so many other reports have failed.
We believe that we should create a new strategic leadership in
procurement. If we form the next Government, we will establish a
fully fledged national armaments director, responsible to the
strategic centre for ensuring that we have the capabilities
needed to execute the defence plans and operations demanded by
the new era. We envisage core delivery tasks that currently do
not seem to be vested properly anywhere in the system; they
should have sufficient authority or accountability to carry these
out effectively. This leadership includes alignment of defence
procurement across all five domains to cut waste and duplication,
securing NATO standardisation, collaboration with allies, driving
export campaigns and delivering a new industrial strategy. What
is the Government’s view of a new director such as this to drive
the change that we all want? Which of the things that I have said
does the noble Earl disagree with? They are a sensible plan for
driving forward change.
We have to do better. Report after report promises action on the
problems in defence procurement and promises that there will be
improvement as we move forward. Yet our procurement process is
dogged with failure and delay, which means that our troops and
Armed Forces do not have the equipment that they rightly should.
The fundamental question that the noble Earl needs to answer is
this: why will this report be different from the reports that
have gone before it?
of Newnham (LD)
My Lords, “over-complex, over-budget and over-time” is how major
programmes of defence procurement have been characterised not
just by the opposition, our enemies or even our allies but by the
Minister for Defence Procurement in giving this Statement in the
other place. Defence procurement has, over years, been riddled
with problems, as the noble Lord, , pointed out. While this
Statement is very welcome, there is a question about whether it
goes far enough or thinks about the wider pattern of defence
procurement.
I read the Statement as it was produced and put into the Printed
Paper Office last week. It said, “Check against delivery”. I read
it, and there were various points where I thought, “Surely no
Minister actually said this”. I went back and looked at Hansard
to see what the Minister for Defence Procurement said in the
other place and, indeed, some of the slightly strange comments
were made in the House of Commons. I will therefore ask a few
very specific questions.
What we have as the fifth aspect of the new approach to
procurement is:
“Fifthly, we will pursue spiral development by default”.
Other noble Lords might know what spiral development is, but I am
afraid that I do not. The Statement did not give me much clarity
on it, nor does the document that was produced to go alongside
it, so I hope the Minister can explain a little more what spiral
development means.
Even more, however, I would like to know what is meant by the
next line:
“seeking 60% to 80% of the possible, rather than striving for
perfection”.
I realise that there have been concerns about the fact that we
have looked for exquisite solutions and platforms that are so
highly specified that they become ever more complicated, with the
timeline for procurement shifting ever further to the right.
However, “60% of the possible” raises a lot of questions. Does it
mean that only 60% of our ammunition is going to work, or that
only 60% of our trials of Trident will work? Given that we seem
to have had a couple of problems with Trident recently, I very
much hope that the Minister can explain what this means. There is
nothing in the Statement or the document that explains clearly
that we do not want to spend so long over-specifying things that
we never deliver the platforms or equipment that our Armed Forces
need. Do we think that we need to specify less? What do the
Government mean?
The Statement talks about learning the lessons of experience,
which is clearly very welcome. We do not want another Ajax.
Learning from that experience is highly welcome and I am sure the
Minister would be very grateful not to have to face the situation
that his predecessor, the noble Baroness, Lady Goldie, did, of
repeatedly coming to your Lordships’ House and having to answer
questions about Ajax for which, frankly, there were not any good
answers.
Do the Government think that just learning the lessons of the
recent past is enough? Will that deliver, at pace, as we say we
need, the defence equipment that the United Kingdom needs in an
era of unprecedented challenges? Will the noble Earl, in his
response, tell the House how far this procurement model will
really help us deliver beyond what we have been seeing and help
ensure that, if we are sticking at 2% of GDP on defence
expenditure, which seems to be the case from the Budget, that we
are actually going to be equipped at the level we need to be to
face the challenges that we and our allies are facing, and send
the messages that we need to be sending to Russia, China, Iran
and other countries, some of which we certainly would not think
of even as collaborators in international relations?
The Minister of State, Ministry of Defence (The ) (Con)
My Lords I thank the noble Lord, , and the noble Baroness, Lady
Smith, for their questions and their very well-made points. The
whole point of this paper is to look forward, not to the past. I
think there is a full acceptance on all sides of the House that
we can agree on the need to reform our acquisition processes,
because they are rooted in the past, not in the current; and of
course they ought to be rooted in the future.
As mentioned by my honourable friend the Minister for Defence
Procurement in the other place,
“the long-standing weaknesses … are well known”.—[Official
Report, Commons, 28/2/24; col. 354.]
They include highly exquisite requirements—“exquisite” is his
word—constrained export opportunities, vulnerable supply chains,
personnel wary of speaking up when problems emerge, not to
mention the overprogramming and unintended competitiveness
between different parts of the organisation for finite funding.
All these have to be addressed if we are going to move
forwards.
I draw all noble Lords’ attention, if they have not already been
made aware of it, to the publication placed in the Libraries of
both Houses last week, Integrated Procurement Model: Driving Pace
in the Delivery of Military Capability. Within that document,
noble Lords will find the five core principles through which we
will deliver acquisition reform. For the benefit of the House,
these are as follows—some have already been mentioned.
A coherent, joined-up approach across the defence portfolio to
break down the silo nature of procurement.
New checks and balances to challenge assumptions. Taking expert
advice from the outset of projects, not half way through, when it
is either too late or no longer appropriate.
Prioritising exportability. Far too much of what we have done has
been tailor-made. We work in a global market now, where there are
skills and abilities outside our shores, sitting with our allies,
where we should not only take advantage of their industrial
capability but also the sales opportunity that it presents to
us.
Empowering industrial innovation through greater transparency and
common endeavour. Transparency is so important in this ability to
be honest about the situation as things progress. We need to be
able to have the honesty to challenge each other the whole way
through the process, to make certain that we do not disappear
down blind alleys and that things are produced to time and to
budget, when they ought to be, and that everybody feels open
enough and relaxed enough to be able to challenge some of these
issues.
Then there is the whole question of continuous improvement, or
spiral development. Spiral development is a new term for me as
well. I come from the private sector, where it is called “test
and refine”. The principle is very simple. There is a point when
you know that what you are doing is capable of achieving the aim.
It is not perfect, but you test it, you use it, you learn and you
refine it. You can also refine it for other customers as well:
you have the base model, it works well, you can test it and then
start to develop it in various different directions, to do
various different things that you might want, but also what any
potential customer might want. It does make perfect sense, I must
admit.
Before turning to the questions quite rightly raised, and some of
the challenges, I will look at the way procurement has been
taking place. Let us be in no doubt, these are extremely complex
pieces of technology and equipment, and they do take a long time
to bring to fruition—particularly some of the larger ships and
aircraft, as I am sure noble Lords are fully aware. It is a long
gestation process, where checks and balances need to be inserted
at the right place. But it appears to me, looking from the
outside, that the process is well overdue an update, and that it
needs to be much nimbler, quicker, more open, more collaborative,
more informed, more technologically advanced, more digitally
enhanced—you name it. There is such opportunity here.
Will it work? Well, it has certainly made a good start. I will
mention just a few things about where we have got to. We already
have some initiatives under way, and they are starting to improve
things. We are starting to drive pace; risk and complexity are
being looked at; senior responsible owners and their teams are
much more focused; the strategic alignment is getting better; and
the capacity and capability of the professionals involved and the
SROs is improving. Psychological safety—this idea of being open
and honest with each other and having a non-blame culture, which
I do not think we have had in the past—pan-defence category
management and financial savings: all these things come down to
capability having to be holistic. To have an effective operation
and delivery across organisational boundaries, you have to have a
holistic view.
I will now address some of the questions. The question of value
for money, as raised by the noble Lord, , which I am sure everybody is
aware of, is a question of budgeting and taking a sensible
approach, being up front about the budget and making certain that
the opportunities and contingencies within the budget are
transparent. That is very much the case.
On the question of underlying mismanagement, there are various
plans in place within the organisations to ensure greater
accountability, less project management and more specific
accountability for specific parts of work, which makes the whole
ownership that much easier and more driven on a private sector
opportunity basis.
I think I have addressed the questions of analysis and
accountability in speaking on the empowering of individuals. Will
this work? Like everything, it is never going to work from day
one, but it is a real move in the right direction. It is the
current way that large industrial organisations work now, and the
ability to insert SMEs in the process the whole way along is
absolutely critical. If one thinks about technology and digital
in particular, it is often SMEs that come up with the good ideas.
They need to be inserted within the business and supported right
the way through so that—I hardly dare say this—the primes do not
gobble them up and sometimes destroy their nimbleness. So, this
is the right thing to do. The question of co-operation with NATO
and other allies is, equally, extremely well made.
The noble Baroness mentioned spiral development. It is a strange
concept to be described like that, but I completely understand
that it is “test and refine”. You get to a certain level, which
is 60% to 80% of where you want to end up; you feel confident
enough that you can actually put it out into the live
environment, in the clear knowledge that you are going to get it
back to make it better once it has been used and other people
have seen its breadth of opportunity.
On the question of overcomplication, it is a difficult matter. We
are dealing with very complicated machinery and skills, and
everything we have learned in the past couple of years suggests
that things do not need to be overcomplicated; they just need to
work, and we need to be able to produce them at pace and in
volume.
On Ajax, the Sheldon review has addressed this, I hope. Without
making silly jokes about it being back on the road, the lessons
really have been learned on Ajax—luckily, it is a thing from the
past. We do learn from the lessons of the past, and procurement,
if it is properly addressed, is about learning from experience,
or enhancing and living with the concept of change. I hope that
the challenges that we have seen have been addressed by what I
think is a an extremely sensible and practical way forward for
the very complicated and broad-ranging challenge of military
procurement for a nation state. We could not take it more
seriously; I certainly undertake to keep noble Lords fully up to
date with all progress as we start to introduce some of the main
milestones that will come up within the next two to three
years.2.56pm
(Lab)
My Lords, war is raging in Europe, the Levant, the southern Red
Sea and Sudan. We are in the most dangerous and hostile world we
have been in for many years and, amazingly, the Government have
not increased or provided any extra spending for defence in
yesterday’s Budget. State-on-state warfare is back. Does the
Minister agree that, in terms of procurement, we must look much
longer-term? For example, the carriers had £1.5 billion added to
their cost because, to get the funding line straight in MoD, they
stopped work on them for two years—a ridiculous thing to do.
Equally, we are now desperately trying to get enough frigates
into our Navy because we took too long ordering them. The SMEs
have a real problem. We need to have a drumbeat of orders looking
to the future, which we should commit to, because we now know
that we are in a world where there is state-on-state warfare.
More importantly, does the noble Earl agree that that will
provide some resilience, so that, for example, when we start
giving ammunition stocks or whatever to people, the firms
involved have built into their whole organisation a structure
that enables them to be replaced?
The (Con)
I agree with almost everything that the noble Lord said.
Certainly, the immediacy of the situation has already introduced
into the procurement cycle within the Ministry of Defence a much
more nimble way of acquiring the needed munitions, both for
gifting and for our own stockpiles. We have started to invest
substantial sums of money in the industrial base. If you think
about this way of proceeding, it is very much a joint
relationship with the industrial manufacturers that will deliver
exactly what we want here, as far as both the primes and the SMEs
are concerned. It is being driven by the current situation and
the rate of technological advance.
(Con)
My Lords, I declare my interests as set out in the register. It
is nearly 30 years since I became the Minister for Defence
Procurement, so ably succeeded by the noble Lord, , who I see in his place—and the
questions do not change. New threats arise as old threats remain,
and sometimes get worse. Our dependence on technology is greater
now than it ever has been; therefore, our vulnerability is
greater now than it ever has been. I welcome what my noble friend
says about a more joined-up approach across the defence sector,
but does he not agree that it has to be married with a more
joined-up approach across the infrastructure sector as a whole,
because of that very vulnerability?
The (Con)
My Lords, I agree. The Americans have a very good expression:
“soup to nuts”. It is a very simple way of describing any project
from one end right to the other. I believe that is precisely what
my friend in the other place is trying to achieve here, in coming
up with a considerably more flexible and nimble approach to the
threats that we currently face.
(Con)
Could my noble friend go back to number two of his five
principles? It seems to me that in the private sector, we have a
very large number of these problems as far as procurement is
concerned. There are many places where great strides have been
made. It has always been thought that the forces are not always
willing to accept, with a degree of openness, advice from the
private sector—not just in the single programme, but overall. Can
my noble friend reassure the House that this is really going to
change, and that people understand that there are aspects of
procurement which are not just about how you do this very
difficult technical kind of procurement, but which really can be
learned from other people?
The (Con)
My Lords, I entirely agree with my noble friend. There is no
doubt that the private sector and the Ministry of Defence need to
work much more closely together to ensure that the absolutely
current technology is not only available but able to be
developed, and that the working practices and checks and balances
on some of the assumptions that have been made are tested
properly within the wider concept, not just within the forces
network. This is incredibly important. If there is to be a
joined-up approach and a proper pan-defence affordability
exercise at the outset, it almost demands engagement across a
much wider base than previously.
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