Part 1: Introduction
1.1
By this time in 2008, we expected to have produced a report for Parliament providing
assurance about how effectively the Ministry of Defence (the Ministry) and the New Zealand
Defence Force (the NZDF) were managing acquisition projects. We wanted to provide this
assurance by carrying out a performance audit to identify and report changes to costs, time
frames, and essential user requirements for specific projects managed by the Ministry and
the NZDF (the defence agencies). However, we had difficulty getting all of the necessary
information, particularly from the Ministry’s information systems, and it was not possible to
complete the audit.
1.2
On 20 March 2008, we briefed the Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade Committee (the
Committee) about these difficulties and proposed a new approach. This interim report is part
of that new approach – it sets out what we have found so far, and describes why the existing
reporting by the defence agencies is problematic. It also describes how we will work with the
defence agencies during the next two financial years to encourage them to make the
changes needed to improve the quality, transparency, and usefulness of their reporting
about defence acquisition projects.
1.3
This interim report does not make any conclusion about how well the defence agencies are
managing specific defence acquisition projects, or on the causes or justifications for any
changes in costs, time frames, and essential user requirements. We do not have enough
information or the right information to form a judgement on that larger question. The purpose
of the audit was to improve the quality of reporting by the defence agencies, not to assess
the quality of the decisions made in managing the projects.
1.4
In this Part, we describe:
- the purpose and approach of our original audit;
- the change in our approach; and
- the structure of this interim report.
Purpose and approach of our original audit
1.5
We expect the defence agencies to monitor and be able to report on the progress of major
defence acquisition projects as part of its accountability to Ministers, Parliament, and other
stakeholders. We started to audit 10 of the largest and highest-priority defence acquisition
projects against that expectation. The projects are listed in the Defence Long-Term
Development Plan (LTDP) that the defence agencies regularly publish.
1.6
The purpose of our audit was to identify and report changes to costs, time frames, and
essential user requirements for the 10 defence acquisition projects. The selected projects,
and their forecast acquisition costs (excluding GST) according to the 2006 LTDP, were:
- Medium Utility Helicopter, $771 million;
- Multi-Role Vessel and Patrol Vessels (Project Protector), $500 million;
- P-3 Systems Upgrade, $373 million; • C-130 Life Extension, $234 million;
- Boeing 757 Acquisition and Modification, $220 million;
- Training/Light Utility Helicopter, $110 million;
- Light Operational Vehicle, $93 million;
- Medium Range Anti-Armour Weapon, $24 million;
- Improvised Explosive Device Disposal, $22 million; and
- Very Low Level Air Defence Alerting and Cueing System, $14 million.
1.7
We were particularly interested in measuring the progress of these projects against the
costs, time frames, and essential user requirements at two main project approval points (that
is, the “Approval to Commence” and the “Approval to Commit” points in the defence
acquisition process).
Approval points for defence acquisition projects
1.8
The process for acquiring defence capability is set out in the New Zealand Defence
Capability Management Framework (CMF). The defence agencies first implemented the
CMF in May 2004 and last updated it in March 2008. There are five stages (including four
approval points) described in both the 2004 and 2008 versions of the CMF:
- Ministerial Note;
- Approval to Initiate;
- Approval to Commence;
- Approval to Negotiate; and
- Approval to Commit.
1.9
Eight of the 10 selected projects were given Approval to Commence before the 2004 CMF
was implemented. However, the 2004 CMF set out practices and procedures that had been
in place since mid-2002, after which most of the projects obtained Approval to Commence.
1.10
We consider that the 2004 and 2008 versions of the CMF are not materially different in their
requirements, particularly the requirement for accurate estimates at the Approval to
Commence point. Both versions require the defence agencies to submit to Cabinet estimates of cost and time at the Approval to Commence point that have a high level of confidence. By
this approval point, the 2004 CMF states that:
…risk should have been sufficiently reduced and the project should have reached a sufficient degree of maturity for user and systems requirements, [expected introduction into service date] and costs to be set with confidence. (Note that [the Approval to Commence] for major projects could be used for external reporting and performance measurement of the [defence agencies].
…
The highest acceptable cost will normally be set at the 90% confidence level. This cost and the expected cost of the demonstration and manufacture phases will be derived from a three point cost estimate.
1.11
In comparison, the 2008 CMF says:
…accurate cost estimation (to 90% level of confidence) is critical at the [Approval to Commence] stage. Moreover, investment proposals should set out the costs of the project derived from a three-point estimate (high, low, and expected cost).
1.12
We have used the 2008 version as our source because it describes the defence agencies’
current required acquisition process. Paragraphs 1.13-1.17 describe the stages of the
process for acquiring defence capability in more detail, reflecting the requirements from the
2008 CMF.
Ministerial Note
1.13
The defence agencies identify new defence acquisition projects through the Defence
Strategic Plan process and list the projects in either the LTDP (which looks ahead 10 years)
or the Long Range Capability Forecast Review (which looks more than 10 years
ahead). Cabinet is asked to note and approve the projects’ listing. To begin one of the listed
projects, the Minister of Defence is notified through a Ministerial Note about such matters as
the capability being considered, the expected level of capital and operating funding required
and available, and the proposed year of delivery and entry into service. The Minister is asked
to note that the defence agencies are to start assessing and identifying options for meeting
the capability in more detail.
Approval to Initiate
1.14
The NZDF is then primarily responsible for defining the capability required, and getting
Cabinet Approval to Initiate a project to acquire the capability. Cabinet is presented with
options for delivering the desired capability and asked to approve the defence agencies
initiating a capability project and conducting a detailed assessment of those options. At this
point, the defence agencies can consult with suppliers to clarify the range of options to meet the capability need, to provide information on emerging technologies, and to provide
information that will support the development of robust cost estimates. Once that work is
completed, the defence agencies then seek Cabinet Approval to Commence the acquisition.
Approval to Commence
1.15
The CMF describes the Approval to Commence point as the “Main Gate”. At this point, the
defence agencies seek Cabinet approval on the basis of the Main Gate Investment Case,
which describes in detail the proposal for investment, supported by links to strategy,
quantified risk analysis and options for mitigating risk, cost-benefit analysis, an
implementation or procurement plan, and a specification of expected performance. The CMF
states that accurate cost estimation is critical at this point. Cabinet notes the estimated costs,
and sometimes public announcements on the details of the project are made at this point.
1.16
The Approval to Commence gives approval for the acquisition phase to begin. During this
phase, the Ministry’s Acquisition Division acquires the equipment component of
the capability and the NZDF acquires the other functional components of the capability (such
as personnel and infrastructure).
Approval to Negotiate and Approval to Commit
1.17
The Approval to Commit point is when the defence agencies seek final Cabinet approval to
commit funds for the project before signing a contract with a supplier. Between the Approval
to Commence and Approval to Commit points, the Ministry’s Acquisition Division carries out
activities including tendering, acquisition risk management, tender evaluation, and contract
negotiation. Depending on the nature and complexity of the project, the Acquisition
Division may seek an Approval to Negotiate with a preferred tenderer. When evaluations of
tenders and negotiations with potential contactors are complete, the defence agencies seek
Approval to Commit. Once this approval is given, the contract is awarded and the Acquisition
Division manages the contract until the NZDF accepts the contract deliverables and
services.
1.18
The defence agencies work together throughout these five stages, but the balance of
responsibility changes from the Approval to Commence point. Before that point, the NZDF
does most of the work. After that point, the Ministry’s Acquisition Division is solely
responsible for the equipment acquisition phase until the NZDF accepts the equipment.
Once the NZDF accepts the equipment, it is responsible for bringing the equipment together
with the functional components of the capability that it had acquired, to introduce the
capability into service.
1.19
We used the process described in the CMF as the basis for our original audit and set out to:
- compare estimated costs, time frames, and essential user requirements at the Approval to Commence point with those at the Approval to Commit point, and identify the reasons for the changes; and
- compare the latest forecasts of costs, time frames, and essential user requirements with those approved at the Approval to Commit point, and identify the reasons for the changes.
1.20
We expected the defence agencies to be able to report the reasons for changes in estimated
costs, time frames, and essential user requirements from those defined at the Approval to
Commence point.
1.21
We expected the tender and negotiation process to cause some changes to estimates
between the Approval to Commence and Approval to Commit points. Because the CMF
states that accurate cost estimation is critical at the Approval to Commence point, we
expected that these changes would not be significant.
1.22
During our audit, we were told by the defence agencies that the cost estimates submitted to
Cabinet at the Approval to Commence point had not been set with the high level of
confidence described in the CMF. The defence agencies told us that they can only make
general enquiries of potential suppliers before the Approval to Commence point to support
the development of robust estimates, as described in the CMF. This means that the
submitted estimates were, at best, an “intelligent guess”.
1.23
We expected there to be few changes to costs, time frames, and essential user requirements
after the Approval to Commit point. The defence agencies advised us that the forecast costs
and time frames at the Approval to Commit point are much more accurate because the
Ministry has been able to get costed proposals from potential suppliers and is about to award
a firm fixed-price contract.
Problems with the information about each acquisition project
1.24
We sought information from the defence agencies on cost and time frame changes and
changes to essential user requirements for all of the selected projects. We wanted to present
information in our report on:
- the extent to which estimates changed between the Approval to Commence and Approval to Commit points, and why they changed;
- the total and average cost changes since the Approval to Commit point, the variations making up the totals, and the reasons for them (including any common reasons);
- the total and average time frame changes since the Approval to Commit point, the variations making up the totals, and the reasons for them (including any common reasons); and
- the extent to which essential user requirements at the Approval to Commit point were met, and the reasons for any changes to those requirements.
1.25
Our audit work mainly involved reviewing project files and documents held by the Ministry
and the NZDF at Defence Headquarters in Wellington. For the most part, we focused on
information held by the Ministry. We tried to complete a standard set of information for each
acquisition project. This proved extremely difficult and time-consuming. It led to a number of
queries and information gaps, which we tried to resolve by working closely with the defence
agencies’ staff.
1.26
However, it became clear that the Ministry’s project monitoring and reporting systems in
particular were not able to readily produce much of the detailed information needed to
explain changes to costs, time frames, and essential user requirements for each project.
This was particularly so for historical information about projects that have spanned several
years.
1.27
When the defence agencies’ systems were introduced, they were not designed to monitor
the progress of projects in the way that we set out to. Nevertheless, we expected the sort of
information we were looking for to have been more readily available and easier to extract.
Change in our approach
1.28
We advised the Committee in March 2008 that it was not possible for us to report accurately
and completely to Parliament in the way we originally intended. Even if we continued the
time-consuming work to extract the project information, it would be subject to so many
assumptions and qualifications that its value and usefulness would be questionable.
1.29
We told the Committee that we would produce this interim report to explain in more detail the
problems we had, and set out our proposed approach to working with the defence agencies
to resolve them. We are committed to finding a way to provide effective assurance to
Parliament on this area of spending.
1.30
The Treasury has carried out a Capital Asset Management Review to assess the
effectiveness of capital asset management regimes, practices, and performance in
government departments and Crown entities. We will ensure that any work we do on a
revised reporting framework aligns with the Treasury’s work.
Structure of this interim report
1.31
Part 2 provides a high-level analysis of cost and time frame changes for the 10 selected
acquisition projects. This analysis builds on the information provided by the Ministry to the Committee in December 20071 and by the NZDF to us during our audit. We do not report on
changes to the essential user requirements, because of the difficulty we had in getting that
information. In preparing our analysis, we checked the information reported by the Ministry to
the Committee in December 2007 against Cabinet approvals and LTDPs, where appropriate.
1.32
Part 3 summarises the difficulties we encountered, particularly with the Ministry’s information
systems. These difficulties have prevented us from identifying and properly reporting the
details of – and reasons for – the changes to project costs, time frames, and essential user
requirements.
1.33
Part 4 presents our planned new approach – how we will work to encourage the defence
agencies to improve their reporting on the progress of defence acquisition projects.
1.34
In this performance audit, we did not verify the accuracy of the individual financial
transactions within the procurement phase of each of the selected acquisition projects. We
review a sample of those transactions as part of the annual financial audit of the Ministry.
This performance audit examined other aspects of the Ministry’s reporting on the projects in
more detail than we have done in the financial audit. The results of the respective audits can
be different, depending on their scope and level of detail.
1.35
We do not include recommendations in this interim report, because we have not yet formed
a view on the best way for the defence agencies to address the problems we have identified.
We will complete the work needed to do this as part of the first stage of our planned new
approach.
1 Ministry of Defence response to the Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade Committee’s Supplementary Questions from the Ministry’s Financial Review 2006/07 (response dated 7 December 2007), pp 5-6.
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