The Government has recently ended its £750m border security contract with a Raytheon-led consortium and said it had no confidence in the U.S. company.

£755m UK border contract scrapped

By Lorraine Turner

Friday, 23 July 2010

The Government ended its £750m border security contract with a consortium led by Raytheon yesterday, saying it had no confidence in the US company.

The contract was awarded by the previous Labour administration to a group of companies [also] including Serco, BAE, Qinetiq and Accenture in November 2007. They were asked to develop and implement a scheme to collect and check passenger details against police, security and immigration watch lists.

The Home Office said Raytheon, which provided technology to carry out security checks on travellers, had been in breach of the e-Borders contract since July 2009. Although the cancellation comes amid austerity measures, the Government, which has spent £188m on the contract to date, said it would seek alternative providers for the project.

This is interesting news in light of the fact that The Minister for the Armed Forces, Nick Harvey, when speaking on the decision to move Defence Training to St Athan, stated in Parliament recently that to change course now “would undo a great deal of investment that has already been made and add considerably to the final cost.” The preferred bidder for defence training is the QinetiQ/Sodexo-led Metrix consortium of which Raytheon is a member.

A further article on the scrapping of the borders contract can be found here.

6 Comments CherryPie on Jul 26th 2010

6 Responses to “The Government Scrap £750m Border Security Contract”

  1. Denise says:

    The Government wasting money? Surely not! Why am I not surprised!

  2. angus says:

    Interesting that CP:)

  3. Marcie says:

    Sounds like governments are the same everywhere. Love your little ‘wordle’ interpretation. FUN!