Roads contractors face a severe downturn in work after the Highways
Agency (HA) slashed £275m off its planned expenditure for
major or Targeted Programme of Improvements (TPI) schemes and
maintenance work in 2004/05.
The shocking discovery is revealed in the Civil Engineering
Contractors Association (CECA) review of the HA's 2004/05 Business
Plan, which is due to be sent out to its members soon.
Research shows that budgets for major improvement schemes have
fallen from the £691m outlined in last year's business plan to
£508m this year.
This fall of £183m breaks down into a £154m cut in
capital expenditure, representing a fall of 37%, and a £29m
cut in resource expenditure (an 11% drop), which is mostly used on
scheme preparation.
Maintenance has also been hit with a £92m cut from last year's
stated figure for 2004/05 of £822m to £730m.
The combined capital and maintenance cuts amount to a total of
£275m.
Worryingly, CECA added that although the HA's document listed 91
TPI schemes - of which 20 were added during 2003/04 - the HA has,
for the first time, failed to give dates for actual/estimated
construction starts and actual/estimated schemes available for
use.
CECA also commented that it has been some considerable time since
either the HA or the Department for Transport has published
estimated costs of schemes, which makes it impossible to judge
whether starts will make up for completions.
"Judging by the budget figures, however, in 2004/05 they clearly
will not," CECA economic adviser Jim Turner told CJ.
He added that the downturn is both worse and sooner than
expected.
"The HA's document makes grim reading. There is not one ounce of
encouragement for contractors in the business plan. The downturn in
major scheme work has come earlier, and will be worse in the
short-term than was previously expected. The question is whether
there is enough work in other sectors to keep civils contractors
busy during a two- or three-year quiet period."
An HA spokeswoman said: "We are pressing forward with our
procurement and construction programme for 2004/05. There is a
spending review being undertaken across the whole of government and
we have made submissions in relation to that. We are still waiting
for a response from government, but we anticipate that eight major
schemes will start construction in the 2004/05 financial year. We
are fully committed to delivering these schemes to the previously
announced timetable."