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Fragmented data undermines confidence on both sides.
Without a shared baseline, handback decisions are based on differing assumptions, that often diverge between parties.
Early data readiness reduces risk for PFI handback.
Data gaps are one of the most significant, and underestimated, risks in PFI handback. Mott MacDonald commercial director Katherine Jackson explains in this third part of her blogs on PFI handback challenges.
Handback depends on evidence. But in many cases, that evidence does not stand up to scrutiny when it is needed most.
Organisations often assume their data is broadly sufficient, only to discover its limitations when trying to establish a clear position. Records may exist, but lack consistency, completeness or structure. Reconciling them requires more effort than expected.
Where information is fragmented – across systems, suppliers or formats – it becomes difficult to establish a reliable view of asset condition or lifecycle performance. Without that baseline, discussions shift away from facts and towards interpretation.
The most effective response is to treat data readiness as a defined workstream, not an administrative task.
This involves organising existing records, identifying gaps and converting information into usable insight through structured analysis, lifecycle review and forecasting. The objective is a defensible, shared understanding of asset condition and future performance.
When this discipline is applied early, it reduces friction, improves decision-making and supports more effective engagement between parties.
Katherine has more than 20 years’ UK and international infrastructure experience, combining a civil engineering foundation with deep private finance, commercial and contractual expertise.
Wednesday 9th September, 11:00-12:00
As PFI contracts approach expiry, successful handback is becoming a critical challenge for organisations across the UK. Join our webinar to explore the key risks, lessons learned and practical steps needed to reduce risk, protect value and achieve a smoother transition.
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