Audit Report No. 43 2008-09
Chapter 8 Construction of the Christmas Island Immigration Detention Centre
Introduction
8.1
In the latter part of 2001 several measures were introduced to address
an increase in unauthorised arrivals to Australia. These measures included
legislation excising Christmas Island, Ashmore and Cartier Islands and Cocos
(Keeling) Islands from the migration zone for the purposes of unauthorised
arrival as well as arrangements for the reception and accommodation of
unauthorised boat arrivals and the processing of their claims for protection at
various offshore locations.
8.2
In addition, on 11 March 2002, the Government decided to proceed
urgently to construct a new purpose built permanent Immigration Reception and
Processing Centre[1] on Christmas Island,
together with the construction of essential infrastructure associated with the
construction and on-going operation of the Centre. In terms of project
delivery:
n the then Department
of Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs (DIMIA)[2]
was to be responsible for the construction of the facility; and
n the then Department
of Transport and Regional Services (DOTARS)[3] was responsible for all
associated infrastructure and headworks to support the facility, construction
of staff housing in the Island’s residential area and provision of the
construction camp.
8.3
The project approved in March 2002 had been for a 1200 person facility
to be built in 39 weeks for an indicative budget of $242.9 million. By June
2002, architects and a Construction Contractor had been appointed. However,
delays in the project timelines and increases in project costs had begun to
emerge. By September 2002, the project estimate had increased to $427 million
with a delivery period in the order of 120 weeks.
8.4
After considering the work of a departmental taskforce as well as
commercial and legal advice, in November 2002 the Government reaffirmed the
need for the CIIDC [Christmas Island Immigration Detention Centre] project.
However, following discussions with the appointed Construction Contractor, it
was concluded that construction of a 1200 place purpose-designed and built
facility could not be achieved within the budget, and it was decided to
terminate the contract with the Construction Contractor.[4]
After considering options, on 18 February 2003, the Government decided to
respecify the project to an 800 place facility at a forecast estimate of $276.2
million.
Respecified project
8.5
Prior to the termination of the original construction contract entered
into by DIMIA, a fully operational construction camp had been built, and some
land clearing bulk earthworks for the CIIDC facility had been undertaken.
8.6
At the time the project was respecified, responsibility for delivering
the CIIDC facility was transferred from DIMIA to the Department of Finance and
Deregulation[5] (Finance), with a more
conventional delivery method[6] to be adopted in an
endeavour to provide greater cost certainty. Responsibility for the provision
of associated infrastructure remained with DOTARS. Finance was to manage the
facility construction project from 19 February 2003 to completion, which was
expected to take 34 months (that is, practical completion by December 2005).
The budget of $276.2 million was allocated as follows:
n facility construction
budget of $197.7 million (referred to in this report as the Finance Budget
Allocation);
n $58 million in
budgeted costs for DOTARS to deliver housing and infrastructure works[7]
and resume the mining lease on which the CIIDC would be constructed (the DOTARS
Budget Allocation); and
n $20.5 million in
budgeted costs associated with DIMIA’s management of the project up to the
February 2003 transfer of responsibility to Finance. DIAC was allocated a
further $3.1 million for project supervision and consultancies for the period
from the February 2003 transfer of project management to Finance until project
completion, but this allocation was not included in the $276.2 million figure.
Collectively, these amounts are referred to as the DIMIA Budget Allocation.
8.7
In June 2003, the proposal to construct a respecified, purpose-built
CIIDC was referred to the Public Works Committee (PWC) for its consideration.
The PWC’s December 2003 report recommended that the respecified project proceed
at its estimated facility construction cost of $197.7 million.
8.8
A two-stage project delivery model was adopted by Finance for the
remaining construction work for the CIIDC facility. The first stage was the
‘Early Works’, which were carried out under a lump sum contract arrangement and
involved bulk earthworks. The second stage was the ‘Main Works’.
8.9
The planned Main Works delivery strategy was to involve a modified lump
sum form of contract that included a Guaranteed Maximum Price (GMP). GMP
construction contracts are arrived at through a staged process that involves
the construction tender being carried out prior to the completion of the
design, and the Preferred Tenderer being involved in the final documentation of
the design. Each party participating in the tender process is provided with
construction drawings and specifications to a sufficient level of detail to
allow them to submit a fixed price for the works based on the required dates
for practical completion.
8.10
A three phase open tender process to appoint the Main Works Contractor
was conducted between February and December 2004. Two tenders were received in
August 2004, with prices of both tenders being above the available budget. As a
result, the Finance Budget Allocation was increased by $59 million. The Main
Works Contract was signed in January 2005, with a stated GMP of $207.9 million
and a date for Practical Completion of 31 August 2006. A second budget increase
(of $60 million) was obtained by Finance in August 2006, during the
construction stage.
8.11
Practical Completion by the Main Works Contractor of the CIIDC occurred
in October 2007. However, various deferred and additional works had to be
completed by Finance (through its contracted Project Manger) in order to bring
the facility to a ‘fit for purpose’ condition such that it could be handed over
to DIMIA. This handover occurred in April 2008. The estimated out-turn cost of
the facility works is within the amended Finance Budget Allocation of $317.0
million.
8.12
The PWC Manual requires[8] that, if there are
significant changes to a project after it has been considered by the Committee
and approved by the Parliament, proponent agencies are to report these changes
and, if necessary, seek the Committee’s concurrence. Finance advised the PWC of
the budget increases in January 2008. In June 2008, the Committee announced
that it would receive a briefing from Finance and DIAC on the development of
the CIIDC, focusing on the increase in the total budget from $276 million in
2003 to $396 million. After a public briefing was held in June 2008, the PWC
wrote to the ANAO advising that it had concerns about the costing provided to
it in September 2003, and the subsequent management of the project. ANAO
advised the PWC that the audit of the project, which at that time was underway,
would assess the rigour of the project estimates and budgets as well as the
management of the project in terms of its cost, timing and scope.
The Audit[9]
Audit scope and objectives
8.13
A performance audit of the CIIDC construction project was first included
as a potential audit in ANAO’s Planned Audit Work Program for 2006-07. As the
project was not completed in 2006-07, the audit of the construction of the
CIIDC was not commenced that year but was rescheduled as a potential topic in
the 2007-08 Planned Audit Work Program.
8.14
The objective of the audit, in examining the construction of the CIIDC,
was to assess:
n the adequacy of the
planning and delivery processes for the project;
n the value-for-money
achieved in the delivery of the project, including with regard to the
suitability of the centre for its intended purpose; and
n the extent to which
the Public Works Committee Act 1969 (PWC Act) and approved procedures
have been complied with.
Overall audit conclusions
8.15
The ANAO made the following overall audit conclusion:
The CIIDC was a more difficult construction project than many
others undertaken by the Australian Government. It involved numerous challenges
and risks including the isolation of Christmas Island, shipping being adversely
affected by the swell season (which typically runs for five months from
November to March), the absence of a wharf suitable for ships to berth
alongside and the facility being constructed on reclaimed mining land that was
surrounded by a National Park. In addition, the construction works were of
considerable scale (the CIIDC facility comprises more than 50 buildings and
associated landscaping works) with an ambitious design and delivery timetable,
and a tight budget.
The CIIDC facility has been completed, has been accepted by
DIAC as fit for its purpose and is now operational. However, this result has
come at a considerably greater cost than budgeted at the time the project was
respecified and over a substantially longer timeframe than had been expected.
In this context, the audit has underlined several important messages for
agencies to bear in mind when managing future construction projects.
The first is that it is only after sufficient scoping and
planning work has been undertaken that reliable estimates and delivery
timeframes can be established. The scope, budget and timeframe for the
respecified project was established after nine months of detailed design work,
market place investigation and cost reviews incorporating expert costing
advice. Nevertheless, the revised delivery timeframe of 34 months (as opposed
to 39 weeks for the original project) was exceeded by 27 months and Finance’s
Budget Allocation was increased by 60 per cent. Factors contributing to this
outcome included that, at the time the respecified budget was approved, the
design brief had not been finalised, a concept design had not yet been prepared
and the revised budget included very little in the way of a contingency
allowance for risk.
The second message relates to the importance of managing a project
as a whole when individual agencies have separate budgets for sub-parts that
are interdependent.[10] For the CIIDC project,
Finance was responsible for the facility construction aspect with DOTARS
responsible for most of the infrastructure works necessary to connect the
facility to the services on the Island, as well as for an upgrade of the
Island’s port crane. Early in the project, Finance consulted with DOTARS to
ensure there were sufficient spare parts on the Island for the port crane
(given its importance to project logistics) but Finance (and prior to February
2003, DIMIA) was not involved in DOTARS’ decision-making processes relating to
the construction of the additional port facility at Nui Nui, and the subsequent
procurement of a new crane or the upgrade to the existing pedestal at Flying
Fish Cove (due to the decision to relocate the existing, older, crane to Nui
Nui). For budgetary reasons DOTARS decided to have the crane pedestal upgraded
rather than a new pedestal constructed. The relatively modest initial saving in
capital expenditure was more than offset by the effects on the facility
construction project of the crane begin taken out of service due to the
discovery of major foundation faults in the pedestal.[11]
This example emphasises the importance of a whole-of-government perspective in
such decisions by agencies.
Thirdly, it is important that agencies manage projects by
developing and following delivery strategies that reduce identified risks to
acceptable levels. There are a number of possible approaches to the development
and delivery of Commonwealth capital works projects, each involving different
risks and having advantages and disadvantages. To provide greater cost
certainty given the original project had been respecified partly due to significant
budget increases, Finance’s chosen project delivery strategy was to involve the
main works contract being tendered based on a detailed and developed design,
and the contract being signed based on a completed design.[12]
The strategy was sound but was not followed. Instead, the design and tendering
processes were overlapped and the design was not completed until some time
after the construction contract was signed.[13] The departures from the
planned approach contributed to the project delays and increased costs to the
Commonwealth.
To capture both industry and its own experience in managing
construction projects, Finance has developed a better practice guide to the
delivery of major capital works, which at the time of the audit was being
updated. The first draft of this guide was introduced in July 2005, during the
construction phase of the CIIDC project. Where the guide has adequately
addressed matters identified by this audit as requiring attention, this has
been recognised (in lieu of an ANAO recommendation being made).[14]
ANAO recommendations
Table 5.1 ANAO recommendations, Audit Report No. 43
2008-09
1.
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ANAO recommends that, in future circumstances where
the Department of Finance and Deregulation is delivering capital works
projects that depend upon Commonwealth owned and/or operated infrastructure,
project governance arrangements be developed to manage the risk and cost of
project construction and infrastructure decisions being made in isolation by:
(a) developing a
stronger leadership model that sets out the mutual obligations of each agency
to coordinate decisions of critical importance associated with interdependent
activities; and
(b) adopting a sound
approach to preparation and management of the overall project budget by
comparing design milestone estimates of the cost of works to the overall
budget and subsequently accounting for the final (out-turn) cost.
Agreed response: Finance, DIAC, AGD and DITRDLG
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2.
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ANAO recommends that the Department of Finance and
Deregulation informs the Public Works Committee of the project budget, the
estimate of cost and order of accuracy on which the estimate is based when
providing information to the Committee for projects it is delivering.
Agreed response: Finance, DIAC, AGD and DITRDLG
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3.
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ANAO recommends that the Department of Finance and
Deregulation, prior to committing funds to a major construction contract:
(a) provide
decision-makers with an assessment of any factors that may be reasonably
expected to increase the overall cost to the Commonwealth, or reduce the scope
or quality of the works; and
(b) support spending
authorisation and approval processes by advising decision-makers on the
maximum amount that may become payable under the contract, as well as an
assessment of the most likely cost.
Agreed response: Finance, DIAC, AGD and DITRDLG
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4.
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ANAO recommends that the Department of Finance and
Deregulation promote improved project delivery outcomes by:
(a) providing
decision-makers with a comprehensive assessment of risks and how they can be
managed prior to making any significant departures from the planned project
delivery strategy; and
(b) implementing
strategies aimed at promoting greater collaboration and teamwork between key
consultants (including project managers, cost managers and designers) in
working toward the established project objectives.
Agreed response: Finance, DIAC, AGD and DITRDLG
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5.
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ANAO recommends that the Department of Finance and
Deregulation require its key project management and other advisers to
participate in a post-project review of major construction projects soon
after they are completed so as to identify aspects and processes that have
been particularly successful as well as those where lessons can be learned.
Agreed response: Finance, DIAC, AGD and DITRDLG
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6.
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ANAO recommends that the Department of Finance and
Deregulation:
(a) when seeking
additional funds for its capital works projects, develop budget breakdowns
that clearly identify the elements that are proposed to be revised; and
(b) explicitly recognise
within its internal guidance material the requirement to report significant
project changes, including to the budget, to the Public Works Committee.
Agreed response: Finance, DIAC, AGD and DITRDLG
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The Committee’s review
8.16
The Committee held a public hearing on Wednesday 18 November 2009, with
the following witnesses:
n Australian National
Audit Office (ANAO);
n Attorney-General’s
Department (AGD);
n Department of Finance
and Deregulation (Finance); and
n Department of
Immigration and Citizenship (DIAC).
8.17
The Committee took evidence on the following issues:
n structural
sustainability of the centre;
n transfer of
responsibility for the project to Finance;
n unique nature of the
project;
n cost estimates;
n overlapping of design
and construction phases;
n post-implementation
review; and
n protocols for
whole-of-government contracts.
Structural sustainability of the centre
8.18
The Committee queried whether or not sufficient thought had been given
to the structural sustainability and design of the centre considering the
environmental conditions of the island. Although transport costs had placed
constraints on both the choice of design and materials, Finance maintained that
environmental factors such as salt, humidity and high rainfall had been taken
into account with regard to the selection of materials.[15]
Finance added that the facility had been designed to cope with seismic
activity.
Transfer of responsibility for the project to Finance
8.19
The ANAO report noted that in 2002 DIMIA and DOTARS were given
responsibility for the original CIIDC project.[16] This decision was made
to facilitate a ‘fast-track’ process whereby design and construction could
proceed together.[17] After project estimates
and the timeline escalated, the project was respecified, a more conventional
delivery method adopted and responsibility for the project transferred to
Finance.[18]
8.20
The Committee asked why the project had gone to DIMIA first instead of
directly to Finance. The ANAO told the Committee that at the time it was not
unusual for a department to take on responsibility for its own construction
projects.[19] The ANAO understands
that the increase in the estimated cost of the project and the extended
timeframe led to the decision to transfer the responsibility to Finance ‘in an
endeavour to provide greater cost certainty’.[20]
Unique nature of the project
8.21
The ANAO report referred to the unique nature of the CIIDC project
noting:
… the proposed purpose built permanent facility was
recognised as being the first of its kind and, as such, there was no precedent
upon which cost estimates could be accurately established.[21]
8.22
Finance reiterated this concept throughout the inquiry maintaining:
This project was unique in that it was the first
purpose-designed and built Immigration Detention Centre in Australia, and as
such there were no established benchmarks with which it could be compared.[22]
8.23
The Committee questioned the uniqueness of the project and the lack of
benchmarks considering previous experience setting up and running the Baxter
detention centre. DIAC explained that the CIIDC was unique in the sense that it
had been designed as an immigration reception and processing centre rather than
an immigration detention centre:
We take clients all the way through from reception to health,
identity and security all within the centre premises. On the mainland we have
different arrangements and that certainly makes it unique.[23]
Cost estimates
8.24
The Committee queried why cost estimates could not have been more
accurate for the project considering the expertise and experience available
across Australia. Finance affirmed that it had drawn on professional
consultants during the cost estimate process but maintained that the project
still faced a unique set of circumstances:
The unique nature of this project was delivering a detention
facility in the environmental conditions evident at Christmas Island. There was
no basis upon which they could draw for estimating the sort of variance that
you might get for delivering a complex project on Christmas Island. The order
of accuracy that they can impart in those estimates is constrained by that lack
of data.[24]
8.25
The Committee asked the Audit Office for its opinion on the estimates
process and the resulting shortfall. The ANAO identified the budget as the
problem rather than the estimates. The budget was insufficient:
From our perspective, the estimates for some time had been
saying ‘You won’t be able to design and construct this project within the
budget.’ So the estimates had a degree of accuracy to them. The budget was the
problem. Trying to get it within budget was where the problems were arising.[25]
8.26
The ANAO added that the time frame caused further problems:
… because the time frames were so short, the department went
to tender before its own strategy said it probably should have. Therefore you
had a less mature design on which people were pricing, and that then led to
further cost increases.[26]
Overlapping of design and construction phases
8.27
With regard to the time frame, the ANAO noted that the design for the
respecified project was to be prepared in four stages with a ‘hold point’ after
each stage where design work would stop until DIMIA approved each stage.[27]
This process would cause some delay during the design phase but would forestall
more costly delays during the construction phase.[28]
The ANAO found that this strategy had not been followed and this had directly
contributed to the escalation of costs and time.[29]
8.28
The Committee questioned why Finance had abandoned the original delivery
method and decide to overlap the design and construction phases of the project.
Finance claimed that it was under time pressure from DIMIA to complete the
facility and this had led to the decision.[30] The Committee asked for
clarification as to the nature of those time pressures.
8.29
Finance reiterated that the pressure came from the urgency to complete
the facility.[31] DIAC explained that
pressure had been generated because the project was already well behind
schedule when it was respecified and handed over to Finance to complete.[32]
Under further questioning, DIAC confirmed that it had sufficient space in
existing facilities to cope with demand and had not immediately utilised the
CIIDC when it was completed.[33]
Post-implementation review
8.30
The ANAO noted the importance of a post-implementation review of
construction projects to determine whether or not the project has achieved the
expected business benefits.[34] Additionally the ANAO
recommended that Finance conduct a post-project review to ‘identify aspects and
processes that have been particularly successful as well as those where lessons
can be learned’.[35]
8.31
The Committee noted that no post-implementation review of the CIIDC
project had been conducted at the time of the audit and asked Finance if a ‘lessons
learned’ review had been undertaken to determine what should or should not be
done to ensure better outcomes for future construction projects. Finance told
the Committee there had been no formal, lessons learned review of the CIIDC but
that, as a direct result of the difficulties encountered with this project, the
Department has introduced a two-stage Cabinet approval process[36],
the Gateway Review[37] process and developed
internal best practice guidelines.[38] These include a Post
Occupancy Evaluation (POE) and a Lessons Learned workshop:
The purpose of the POE is to ensure that project is working
as intended, and the users are operating the facility(ies) as expected. The
Lessons Learned workshop aims to identify positive and negative project
experiences and outcomes, with a view to improving future project outcomes.
Process improvements that are identified through these activities are
incorporated within the Better Practice Guide.[39]
Recommendation 13
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The Committee recommends that the Department of Finance and
Deregulation (Finance) provide to the Joint Committee of Public Accounts and
Audit (JCPAA) the results to date of the implementation of the Post Occupancy
Evaluation process and the Lessons Learned workshops as soon as such
information is available.
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8.32
The Committee is aware that the ANAO undertook a review of the initial
implementation of the two-stage process and the Gateway Review process during
Audit No. 20 2008-09 Approval of Funding for Public Works. The Committee
understands that at that time the two processes had not been in operation for
any length of time and it was difficult to determine their effectiveness in
improving cost estimates and risk management of construction projects.
8.33
The Committee notes that an audit into the Administration of the Gateway
Review Process is listed as a potential audit on the Audit Work Program
for 2010-11. Considering the dependence being placed on the two-stage process
and the Gateway Review process to mitigate risk in future Commonwealth
construction projects the Committee recommends:
Recommendation 14
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The Committee recommends that the Australian National Audit
Office (ANAO) undertake an audit into the effectiveness of the implementation
of the two-stage Cabinet approval process and the Gateway Review process in
mitigating risk for Commonwealth construction projects since their
introduction.
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Protocols for whole-of-government contracts
8.34
The ANAO noted the difficulties experienced by the CIIDC project due to
lack of leadership and coordination between the three agencies involved.[40]
Despite a whole-of-project budget, decisions were taken by the three agencies
independently leading to unacceptable budget overruns.[41]
The ANAO recommends that in future governance arrangements be implemented for
similar projects that provide a stronger leadership model, better coordination
and milestones to track costs.[42]
8.35
The Committee asked what steps had been taken to implement this
recommendation. Finance told the Committee that it has included lead agency
arrangements in its Better Practice Guide that will be distributed to all its
agencies.[43]
Conclusion
8.36
The Committee recognises that it is difficult at this distance to
apportion blame but is gravely concerned at the mismanagement of Commonwealth
funds for this project. The Committee is particularly concerned by the
substantial discrepancy between the initial cost estimate and final cost of the
project and apparent failure to identify significant risk factors in the
project.
8.37
The Committee feels that more could have been done during the planning
stage to develop a realistic estimate of the cost of the project and is not
satisfied with the argument that the uniqueness of the project led to such
serious miscalculation of costs and risks.
8.38
The Committee notes that Finance has taken positive steps to implement the
two-stage approval process, the Gateway Review process and develop a Better
Practice Guide to address the shortcomings identified throughout the design,
planning and construction of the CIIDC. The Committee urges all government
departments to ensure project governance arrangements and a strong leadership
model are in place for whole-of-government contracts.