Government/industry partnership to boost construction exports
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The Department for International Trade will join with 17 of the
UK’s leading firms from the infrastructure industry in a new
partnership to help UK companies secure major international
contracts. Infrastructure Exports: UK (IE:UK) will bring together
companies of all sizes to bid for global infrastructure contracts
as a single ‘Team UK’ consortia, to deliver complex projects
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The Department for International Trade will join with 17 of the UK’s leading firms from the infrastructure industry in a new partnership to help UK companies secure major international contracts. Infrastructure Exports: UK (IE:UK) will bring together companies of all sizes to bid for global infrastructure contracts as a single ‘Team UK’ consortia, to deliver complex projects by combining their expertise. Launched today, the new body will be co-chaired by International Trade Minister, Greg Hands, and James Wates CBE, Chairman of the Wates Group. It aims to make the UK more competitive on the global stage and bring smaller companies into the infrastructure export supply chain. International Trade Minister Greg Hands said:
IE:UK Companies from across the UK, including Midlands-based Carillion, Mace Group, and Northern Ireland’s Lagan Construction will make up IE:UK, representing around 200,000 employees from across the UK. Members have experience of working on large scale projects such as Crossrail, the Dubai World Expo 2020 and ITER Fusion Reactor in France. By 2030, global annual construction investment alone is expected to grow by 85% to $15.5 trillion, almost the size of the US economy, and with research showing that large infrastructure projects award bigger contracts to consortia, this will increase the competitiveness and income of UK companies. IE:UK will meet 3 times a year to choose which projects they, as business, wish to pursue with government support. The body will select the UK businesses with the right expertise to group together and create winning bids. James Wates CBE, Chairman of Wates Group said:
Supporting construction exports IE:UK will also build on the Department for International Trade’s existing work to boost UK infrastructure exports. In March, Greg Hands led a delegation of 15 UK firms to Argentina and Brazil where $12 billion is being invested in infrastructure projects in the region, projects that the IE:UK will look to target. The UK’s export credit agency, UKEF, has also provided financing enabling UK firms to secure major contracts worth hundreds of millions, such as Carillion’s £490 million contract to deliver key parts of the Expo 2020 Dubai Park. UKEF has also brokered recent infrastructure deals in Africa as the UK takes advantage of the opportunities in new and developing markets. Building contacts abroad Board member British Expertise International will also link the IE:UK to its own network of 25 trade bodies which it supports to operate abroad, reaching 14,000 businesses including SME’s. The Department for International Trade will also support with its network of local staff in 109 markets across 53 countries – who will identify key projects in their areas for the IE:UK to consider and potentially create consortia of UK companies to bid for contracts. Notes to editors
UK Export Finance (UKEF) UK Export Finance is the UK’s export credit agency, working as part of the Department for International Trade. It exists to ensure that no viable UK export should fail for want of finance or insurance from the private market. It provides finance and insurance to help exporters win, fulfil and ensure they get paid for export contracts. UKEF’s credit risk appetite was doubled in the Autumn Statement to £5 billion, allowing it to support more and bigger contracts around the world where there is a benefit for the UK. |
