Galliford Try, Clancy and Morrison Water Services are among the successful companies appointed to carry out essential work across Scottish Water’s water and wastewater portfolio
Scottish Water forecasts to spend £1bn a year on thousands of miles of water pipes, sewer networks, treatment works and other assets to ensure they continue to play a vital role in the daily lives of five million people.
The programme of work will help to deliver net zero emissions water and wastewater services by 2040 and build capacity in the network to cope with changing weather patterns.
Seven companies have been appointed to carry out essential work across key elements of Scottish Water’s operational services and the capital investment portfolio.
The procurement, which has a maximum value of more than £5bn over 12 years, is one of the biggest ever carried out in Scotland and will support construction, engineering and employment.
The successful companies include:
- Clancy
- Galliford Try Infrastructure Ltd (Morrison Construction)
- George Leslie Ltd
- RWGM joint venture
- Ross-shire Engineering
- WGM Engineering & BGEN Ltd joint venture
- Morrison Water Services
The period of work spans the next six years with a six-year extension option thereafter. Known as Delivery Vehicle 2 (DV2), it will operate as a single entity to maximise collaboration, consistency and integration to help meet net zero emissions targets, efficiency and supply chain support.
The range of work covers repair, refurbishment and replacement works, covering mechanical, electrical, engineering, civil engineering, construction and maintenance services.
‘Achieving the change needed’
Mark Dickson, Scottish Water’s director of capital investment, said: “This represents a significant milestone in the delivery of our service and investment activity.
“The companies and joint ventures appointed to carry out this work on behalf of Scottish Water will play a vital role in ensuring customers have the most resilient network which brings them water and removes and treats wastewater daily.
“The procurement itself has been a lengthy and rigorous process – the biggest we have ever undertaken.
“The team at Scottish Water is looking forward to working with our partners to progress our ambitious plans for the next decade and beyond.”
Douglas Millican, Scottish Water’s chief executive, added: “We set out our strategic ambitions for the future of the country’s water and wastewater services in the face of unprecedented challenges from climate change and ageing infrastructure in February 2020.
“Partners will play a critical role in helping us achieve the change needed, on the scale and speed required to meet the dual challenges of providing services the public can rely on and addressing the impact of a changing world climate on our infrastructure.”