Irish Water to spend €85m on consultants by 2015

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 14 Januari 2014 | 22.40

Tuesday 14 January 2014 15.24

Irish Water will spend €85m on external special service providers or consultants, including legal services, by April 2015.

Irish Water executives are appearing before the Oireachtas Environment Committee this afternoon and the Public Accounts Committee tomorrow.

Managing Director of Irish Water John Tierney said he was appearing before the committee to answer questions.

He said this demonstrated Irish Water's commitment to transparency.

Last week, it emerged that the company had spent €100m, of which €50m was spent on consultancy fees.

By April 2015 IBM will receive €44.8m, Accenture will receive €17.2m, Ernst & Young will get €4.6m, while KPMG and Financial Panel Works will be paid €2.2m.

Two legal firms will receive €3.87m, while €13.3m will be paid to another 18 contractors.

During the committee hearings Fianna Fáil TD Barry Cowen criticised Irish Water for supplying answers where most of the information had been redacted and blocked out.

John Tierney said he has worked with Freedom of Information since its introduction and that if that system is decided on by Government, Irish Water will co-operate.

The managing director added that Irish Water had discussed the release of today's information with all the providers but that there were situations where the release of information could damage further tenders. 

Read details of consultancy fees here.

A document obtained by RTÉ showed the initial plan had been to largely rely on existing expertise within Bord Gáis when setting up the utility.

A commissioner at the Commission for Energy Regulation has said it was not aware of the amount of consultantcy costs for Irish Water.

Paul McGowan said the commission was asked to provide advice to the Minister for the Environment on Irish Water's establishing costs, and the commission had carried out an initial review of a submission provided by Irish Water.

He said the submission gave overall costs for line items such as customer services and billing, and he said the commission believed these costs were reasonable and would deliver benefit to customers.

He said the submission did not indicate consultancy costs and the commission was not aware of them.

Mr McGowan said the commission will carry out a further cost analysis of Irish Water, and will offer advice to the Minister for the Environment on these costs.

Mr McGowan said the minister will ultimately decide if these costs are legitimate, and can be included in the water charges.

He said most of the major costs incurred by Irish Water will be on ongoing operation expenditure and capital investment.

He said legislation providing the commission with regulatory oversight was passed in late December.

FOI legislation to apply to Irish Water

Irish Water will be subject to the Freedom of Information legislation, according to Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform Brendan Howlin.

He said commercial semi-State firms who compete with private sector companies are not subject to FOI legislation in order to ensure that they were operating on a level playing field.

However, Mr Howlin said that as Irish Water would be a monopoly it would be appropriate for it to be amenable to FOI.

He said the same could apply to other semi-State bodies operating in a monopoly situation, including some of the CIÉ companies.

The minister also said the €20 million per annum saving targeted from rationalising State agencies had been achieved.

Meanwhile, Irish Water has rejected any suggestion that the company was not fully compliant with all procurement rules.

The company said that all contracts awarded by Irish Water and Bord Gáis in the establishment of Irish Water are fully compliant with EU public sector procurement guidelines.

A report in today's Irish Independent claims that four contracts were not put to tender.

Irish Water has been under pressure since Chief Executive John Tierney told RTÉ News last week that it had already spent €50m on outside consultants.

In a statement this morning, Irish Water said: "Bord Gáis and Irish Water have been scrupulous in the awarding of contracts.

"To ensure value for money and transparency, all contracts have been awarded in line with the guidelines set out at EU level for public sector procurement."

Irish Water also pointed to the fact the company, as a subsidiary of the Bord Gáis group, had drawn on the skills of an experienced public utility.

It said this means using Bord Gáis's capability running billing, asset management and utility financial systems.

It said it has been set up using the same IT systems and processes as Bord Gáis and this has enabled Irish Water to save at least €58m in software licences.

The company concluded by saying the procurement of software licences with Bord Gáis was subject to a full competitive tender process.


Anda sedang membaca artikel tentang

Irish Water to spend €85m on consultants by 2015

Dengan url

http://newsdeadlineup.blogspot.com/2014/01/irish-water-to-spend-a85m-on.html

Anda boleh menyebar luaskannya atau mengcopy paste-nya

Irish Water to spend €85m on consultants by 2015

namun jangan lupa untuk meletakkan link

Irish Water to spend €85m on consultants by 2015

sebagai sumbernya

0 komentar:

Posting Komentar

techieblogger.com Techie Blogger Techie Blogger