I wish to provide a further update to Parliament on the Ajax equipment project being delivered as part of the armoured cavalry programme.
Health and safety
Extensive work has been undertaken on the health and safety aspects of the noise and vibration concerns raised on Ajax. The report is being undertaken independently of the Ajax delivery team by the Ministry of Defence’s director of health and safety.
While the report has not yet been concluded it is apparent that vibration concerns were raised before Ajax trials commenced at the armoured trials and development unit in November 2019. In December 2018, an army safety notice introduced restrictions on use in relation to vibration and identified that, in the longer term, a design upgrade was needed to reduce vibration.
I will publish the health and safety report once it is finalised, which will contain a full timeline in relation to health and safety issues. Key themes likely to emerge from the report will include:
The importance of having a culture that gives safety equal status alongside cost and schedule.
The overlapping of demonstration and manufacturing phases added complexity, technical risk and safety risk into the programme.
The value of having strong risk governance for complex projects that promotes access to expert technical advice on safety issues.
Independent certification and assurance of land environment capability should be adopted and modelled on best practice elsewhere in Defence.