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Investigation Into The Government's Handling Of The Collapse Of Carillion

15th June 2018

Photograph of Investigation Into The Government's Handling Of The Collapse Of Carillion

The National Audit Office (NAO) has published an investigation into the government's handling of the collapse of Carillion. The liquidation of Carillion will cost UK taxpayers an estimated £148 million, although this is subject to a range of uncertainties and it could take years to establish the final cost. There will also be wider costs to the economy, Carillion's customers, staff, the supply chain and creditors.

The investigation identifies that the Cabinet Office began contingency planning for the possible failure of Carillion shortly after the company posted its first profit warning on 10 July 2017. The scale of the profit warning came as a surprise to the government, as it contradicted market expectations and information and commentary that had been provided by Carillion. The government's contingency planning started in July 2017, accelerated in October 2017 and was complete across central government by 15 January 2018, when Carillion collapsed.

Carillion's 2016 accounts were published in March 2017 and showed the company as profitable and solvent. The Cabinet Office raised Carillion's risk rating from amber to red in response to the July 2017 profit warning. However, it did not increase Carillion's rating to its highest rating, ‘high risk’ as it accepted Carillion’s argument that it was already in receipt of the sensitive financial information such a rating would require and that they did not wish to risk precipitating Carillion’s financial collapse.

In the months following Carillion’s first profit warning, the company announced £1.9 billion of new government work, including two joint venture contracts with HS2 worth £1.3 billion. Many of these contracts had been agreed before the profit warning, although in some cases contracts were signed, or variations agreed, afterwards. None of the contracting authorities believed they had grounds for disqualifying Carillion’s contracts under procurement rules. In addition, Carillion’s partners in joint ventures were liable to take over and finish the contracts if Carillion failed. In the case of Network Rail, not awarding contracts would have meant re-procuring and redesigning the projects, increasing costs for the taxpayer and delaying work.

In early January, Carillion asked the government for £223 million to help it through to April 2018 and additional support with its financial restructuring. Rather than provide this, the Cabinet Office decided it was better that Carillion enter into a trading liquidation, because it had serious concerns about Carillion’s business plans, the legal implications, potential open-ended funding commitments, the precedent it would set, and the concern that Carillion would return with further requests. At the point of liquidation, Carillion had around 420 contracts with the UK public sector.

The Cabinet Office will pay an estimated £148 million government loss on the insolvency, although this is subject to a range of uncertainties, such as the timing and extent of asset sales. The £148 million would be covered by the £150 million the Cabinet Office has already provided to help finance the costs of liquidation. The Cabinet Office believes almost all services have continued uninterrupted following liquidation, although work on some construction contracts stopped, including two PFI hospitals.

There will also be significant costs to the supply chain, former Carillion workers, and investors. 31 of Carillion’s 198 companies are in liquidation. So far, around 64% (11,638) of the Carillion UK workforce have found new work, 13% (2,332) were made redundant, and the remainder (3,000) are still employed by Carillion.

Carillion’s non-government creditors are unlikely to recover much of their investments, and the company’s extensive pension liabilities, totalling £2.6 billion as of 30 June 2017, will need to be compensated through the Pension Protection Fund.

Notes on the report

This investigation sets out Carillion’s role in the market for government services, the Cabinet Office’s monitoring of Carillion’s financial health, the government’s contingency planning for Carillion’s possible failure, the government’s response to Carillion’s request for financial support and the impact on government of the liquidation.

On 15 January 2018, Carillion declared insolvency and the Official Receiver, an employee of the Insolvency Service, started to liquidate its assets and contracts. Carillion was a British multinational company that provided facilities management and construction services. It operated in the UK, Canada and the Middle East and employed around 45,000 people. At the time of liquidation it employed around 18,200 people in the UK and had around 420 contracts with the UK public sector including direct contracts, sub-contracts, and special purpose vehicles to deliver private finance schemes. These included services for hospitals, schools, the armed forces, prisons and transport.

The NAO has not assessed Carillion’s management of its pension schemes, or the actions of its directors and advisers.

Carillion announced that it had won four central government contracts and three extensions after the 10 July profit warning, totalling around £1.9 billion.

Two joint venture defence contracts had been signed before the profit warning. HS2 Ltd approved two contracts worth £1.3 billion before 10 July but signed them afterwards. Network Rail confirmed the next phase of three contracts worth £365 million. Further details can be found in paragraph 3.10-3.11 and Figure 16 on pages 33-34.

Up to July 2017, the Cabinet Office had rated Carillion as either green or amber since it established a risk assessment system for strategic suppliers in 2011. Since February 2016, Carillion had been rated as amber because of performance concerns on important central government contracts.

In November 2017, the Cabinet Office wrote to Carillion to say that it proposed rating Carillion as ‘high risk.’ Further information can be found in Figure 14.

A number of timelines have been included in the report. This includes one outlining the timeline of events leading to liquidation (Figure 18), the actual and planned timelines for contracts transferring to new arrangements from January to June 2018 (Figure 20), the risk ratings allocated to Carillion by the Cabinet Office over time (Figure 14) and the meetings and phone calls between the Cabinet Office and Carillion from January 2017 to January 2018 (Figure 12).

See the full report at

https://www.nao.org.uk/report/investigation-into-the-governments-handling-of-the-collapse-of-carillion/