Using its back catalogue of work
auditing major projects such as HS2, the National Audit Office
(NAO) report sets out characteristics of mega-projects, alongside
insights into the governance challenges for these projects during
the early stages and throughout delivery, which can take
decades.
As mega-projects can often be costly
and carry much risk and uncertainty, it is important that those
involved in governance and decision-making are clear about
purpose, deliverability and
affordability.
There have been cases where differing
views on critical issues have led to delays, pauses and the
resetting of programmes. Mega-projects therefore need a shared
and agreed vision and strong leadership. Without this agreement
there is a risk of committing to mega-projects – and their
budgets and timetables – too soon. This is particularly important
considering the pressure for major projects to get started
quickly.
To address the various risks that
mega-projects face, the NAO makes a series of recommendations for
HM Treasury and the new National Infrastructure and Service
Transformation Authority (NISTA) including:
-
HM Treasury and the National
Infrastructure and Service Transformation Authority (NISTA)
should improve how they categorise and define major projects
according to their risk and strategic importance.
-
HM Treasury and NISTA should
strengthen the governance of mega-projects. This would ensure
that accountability sits in the correct place, and that roles
and responsibilities are clear and understood.
-
HM Treasury and NISTA should improve
project gateway and business case approval processes to ensure
that government has robust assurance about the affordability,
value for money and feasibility of the project before it is
given final approval to
proceed.
The report also includes questions for
project sponsors to consider as they set up governance
arrangements.
, head of the NAO,
said:
“This report offers important insights
from the National Audit Office's work on government's largest and
riskiest projects. These lessons will assist the government as it
makes changes to the way in which major projects are organised
and overseen.
“Mega-projects often involve high
levels of innovation, cost and risk, and can take decades to
deliver and see the benefits. This means government needs
stronger governance approaches for these
projects.”
ENDS
Notes to
Editors:
-
While there is no official
definition of a ‘mega-project', they often share
characteristics, such as spanning Parliaments, involving
multiple government departments and stakeholders – meaning they
can be complex and challenging. Mega-projects are often
transformational to the economy, society or a government's
ability to achieve its
priorities.