Royal yacht: Government sunk £2.5m on successor to Royal Yacht Britannia before project was scuppered | UK News


The government sunk almost £2.5m into commissioning a new royal yacht before scuppering the project, Sky News can reveal.

Figures obtained through a Freedom of Information request found the Ministry of Defense splashed £2,476,000 on the vessel, a successor to the Royal Yacht Britannia.

Announced in May 2021 by Boris Johnson and set to be named after the Duke of Edinburgh, the plans were cut adrift last month.

It was paid for by the Ministry of Defense.

John Healey, Labour’s shadow defense secretary, said the money was “blown” on a “Tory vanity project”.

A breakdown of the spending obtained by Sky News shows that £648,000 was spent on crown servant and military staff costs.

Some £348,000 was spent on workforce replacement costs.

More on Ministry Of Defense

Around £40,000 was spent on operating and admin costs, and £809,000 was spent on private sector support.

The government racked up £476,000 in consultancy fees, and £110,000 in branding and digital media costs.

It is not unusual for unrealized projects to cost a lot of money – the garden bridge commissioned by Mr Johnson when he was London mayor cost the taxpayer tens of millions before it too was scrapped.

An MoD spokesperson said: “The initial phase of the National Flagship program delivered significant value to the maritime industry that will be fundamental to the future success of the British shipbuilding pipeline.

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A breakdown of the spending

“There are multiple costs involved in commencing a credible, rapid commercial competition, including internal and external staff costs, consultancy spend and private sector support.

“However, as threats continue to evolve it is right that we prioritize delivering capabilities which safeguard national infrastructure.”

Mr Healey said: “The Conservatives have blown millions on a Tory vanity project at a time when threats are increasing, and they are cutting the size of our armed forces.

“The scale of waste in the defense department is unacceptable. Ministers are failing British troops and British taxpayers.

“A Labor government would get to grips with these deep-seated problems from day one.

“We would commission the NAO to conduct an across-the-board audit of MoD waste and make the MoD the first department subject to our new Office for Value for Money’s new tough spending regime.”

All of the vendors were approached for comment, but most either declined to comment or did not reply.

A spokesman for the Royal Institute of British Architects did get back to Sky News, saying: “The MoD contracted RIBA for the provision of specialist architectural services and support related to the design of the National Flagship project.”

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