AMEC

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AMEC is one of Britain's leading engineering project management and consultancy companies, listed on the London Stock Exchange and the FTSE 100. It operates in some 700 locations and 40 countries across the globe and employs over 27,000 people. [1]

Background

AMEC has worked in the nuclear sector since the birth of the industry almost 60 years ago and today employs over 2000 specialists in this field. [2] It says it is "the largest UK private sector supplier of programme management and engineering services to the industry... We ensure the safe and efficient operation of nuclear plants, from concept through to decommissioning. [3]

Clients as of 2012 include Sellafield Limited, OPG, Bruce Power, AWE Aldermaston, Rolls Royce, BAE, and EDF Energy which now incorporates British Energy. Past clients include the British Nuclear Group and UKAEA and a wide range of international nuclear operators'.[2]

One of its main subsidiary companies is AMEC NNC "an international nuclear engineering services company".[4]

People

Nuclear lobbying

Tetra Strategy has provided public affairs consultancy services to AMEC since August 2007, when it won the account previously handled by Good Relations. [5] Tetra told PR Week it would "lobby ministers and officials to ensure that AMEC’s name is in the frame when major public infrastructure projects are discussed" and would lobby on nuclear power as AMEC is a major player in the new build of nuclear power stations in the UK. [6]

On 23 March 2005 AMEC had invited some of Britain's most senior business journalists for breakfast at the St Stephen's Club in Westminster. Speakers at the event included David King, the government chief scientist, Brian Wilson, the former energy minister, and Dipesh Shah, chief executive of the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority, who made a pitch for nuclear energy in order "to stop the lights going out". [7]

A Lucrative Nuclear Waste Clean up

A consortium including AMEC, British Nuclear Group Project Services, NIS Ltd, DGP International, and Weir Strachan & Henshaw was chosen to build a £100 million pound facility at the nuclear plant at Dounreay to treat fast reactor fuel reprocessing wastes. The project is the largest project yet to be undertaken by the Nuclear Decommissioning Agency. [8]

AMEC is also said to have teamed up with the UKAEA and the American company CH2M in order to bid for £56bn worth of clean-up work at Britain's civil nuclear sites. The work, including decommissioning 20 electricity generation, fuel reprocessing and nuclear research sites is said to be valued at £2bn a year.

The AMEC partnership faced fierce competition from British Nuclear Group, which operated BNFL's four sites including Sellafield, as well as a host of foreign companies such as the controversial American company Bechtel, Fluor, and the French firm Cogema. [9]

CH2M Hill is a leading engineering company that has been cited by American Democrats as having a "conflict of interest" in its work in Iraq.[10] Its new president is the former American Department of Energy Assistant Secretary Jessie Roberson. [11]

A conflict of interest on waste and new build?

Also see CoRWM pages on AMEC's role on the supposedly independent committee. AMEC NNC has been acting as CoRWM’s programme manager, as well as managing the discussion at its plenary meetings, organizing its public consultation and procurements procedures as well as its PR company, Luther Pendragon. In fact Luther Pendragon is not contracted to CoRWM at all, but to AMEC NNC.

So here is a nuclear company with a vested interest in new build acting as consultants to the committee that is deciding what to do with nuclear waste, which is one of the last roadblocks in the way of new build. This is admitted by AMEC. In an article entitled “Waste management strategy critical for nuclear new build” Sam Usher from AMEC NNC tells the company’s in house magazine “There is an argument that you shouldn’t build new nuclear power stations if you can’t manage the waste from existing ones”. [12]

AMEC NNC has a vested interest in both decommissioning and nuclear new build, a fact implicitly recognized by AMEC NNC about its CoRWM contract. “This is a high profile contract that puts AMEC at the leading edge of developing nuclear strategy – not only in the waste management industry, but to have an influence on new build”...

At the same time as working for CoRWM, AMEC NNC is promoting is own patented technology for radioactive waste. “One technology that might help with the problem of radioactive waste is GeoMelt®, a propriety AMEC technology”. A paper discussing the GeoMelt technology has even been discussed at CoRWM meetings.

AMEC NNC has a dedicated section on its website talking about “the benefits our history brings to Nuclear New Build” where the company states it “has a skilled, competent and well-balanced workforce committed to supporting the UK Nuclear Industry and we are eagerly looking forward to the opportunity to use our abilities in support of new nuclear plants”. [13] [14]

Dams and pipelines

In 2003, when AMEC announced that it had 99.96% approval for the takeover of the French firm SPIE Batignolles, eyebrows were raised. At the time, SPIE was in the middle of a court case involving bribery allegations in the construction of a controversial dam as part of the Lesotho Highlands Water Project. High ranking officials at the project were imprisoned for taking bribes from multinationals including SPIE and Canada's Acres International.[15]

The dam scheme in southern Africa attracted the attention of environmentalists who claimed that 27,000 people and hundreds of subsistence farming households were affected but had not been properly compensated. The project, which was intended to divert water from Lesotho to South Africa, was first conceived during the Apartheid era when South Africa was subject to international sanctions. To avoid the difficulties of international financiers openly aiding the then-apartheid regime, the project's financial advisers – Chartered WestLB – set up a London-based trust fund through which payments could be laundered.[16]

AMEC was also involved in the construction of the Baku-Ceyhan oil pipeline. Its responsibility in the project was to build a section through a Georgian national park, which produces Borjomi Mineral Water, Georgia's largest export.[17]

It was also part of the consortium that built Britain's first toll motorway – the Birmingham Northern Relief Road. The consortium expects to receive more than £2bn from people using it. The road will destroyed 27 miles of the West Midlands green belt and damaged two SSSIs.[18] AMEC also has an 11 per cent interest in the Cross Israel Highway Concession.

Resources

Website

www.amec.com

Notes

  1. Amec at a Glance, Annual Report and Accounts 2011, accessed August 2012
  2. 2.0 2.1 Nuclear, AMEC Website, Section on Nuclear, accessed 22 June 2012
  3. AMEC Nuclear Brochure, accessed 22 June 2012 (also downloadable from http://www.amec.com/documents/1_about_us/brochures_and_publications/nuclear_brochure.htm) accessed 22 June 2012
  4. AMEC NNC Website
  5. APPC Register Entry for 30 November 2010 to 28 February 2011, and APPC Register Entry for 1 March 2011 to 31 May 2011, APPC Register Entry for 1 Sep 2011 to 30 Nov 2011, APPC Register Entry for 1 Dec 2011 to 29 Feb 2012, APPC Register Entry 1 March to 31 May 2012
  6. PR Week - AMEC drops Good Relations to follow O’Keefe, Tetra Strategy website, acc 10 August 2012
  7. Jonathan Leake and Dan Box, "When PR goes nuclear", New Statesman, 27 May, 2005.
  8. Nuclear News Flashes, 6 January, 2006. Not online.
  9. Michael Harrison, "Amec Alliance Eyes up £56bn Nuclear Clean-up Contracts", The Independent, 17 January, 2006.
  10. Larry Margasak, Lawmakers Cite CH2M Hill Conflict of Interest in Iraq Contract, Denver Post, 18 May, 2004.
  11. Nuclear News Flashes, January 20, 2006. Not online.
  12. In Touch Magazine
  13. AMEC NNC Website The Benefits Our History Brings to Nuclear New Build
  14. AMEC, Shaping the Future: Reactor Technology Services
  15. 'Bribery row mars Amec's ballot win,' Terry Macalister, The Guardian, 06.02.03. See: www.odiousdebts.org/odiousdebts/index.cfm?DSP=content&ContentID=6502. Viewed: 23.01.04
  16. 'Corruption in Southern Africa - Sources and Solutions,' Lori Pottinger, 10.07.00. See: www.irn.org/programs/lesotho/index.asp?id=/programs/lesotho/chatham.01.html. Viewed: 26.01.04
  17. 'Amec: Counter Report 2002,' Friends of the Earth. See: www.foe.co.uk/resource/reports/amec_counter_report_2002.pdf. Viewed: 04.03.04
  18. 'Amec: Counter Report 2002,' Friends of the Earth. See: www.foe.co.uk/resource/reports/amec_counter_report_2002.pdf. Viewed: 04.03.04