The Civil Engineering Contractor August 2018 | Page 36

THOUGHT LEADERS Devil’s in the detail By Eamonn Ryan The construction sector’s Voluntary Rebuilding Programme is showing initial results — but it’s too early to pass judgement. Royal Bafokeng Stadium under construction. A pproval by the Tirisano Trust of business plans relating to arrangements made under the Voluntary Rebuilding Programme (VRP) is imminent, though some of the economic alliances have already started functioning. The actual arrangements were approved in February this year, with the detailed business plans now awaited as to precisely how these arrangements will work in practice. Gregory Mofokeng, chief executive of the Black Business Council in the Built Environment (BBCBE), says it is still “too early” to pass judgement on whether the protocol is a success. He is, however, in the process of 34 - CEC August 2018 lobbying government to ensure the arrangements benefit the entire construction industry rather than just the select few chosen by the seven major construction firms. “This is a highly crucial step in the implementation of the settlement agreement,” says Mofokeng. There are two types of arrangements, based either on turnover or equity. “In respect of economic alliances between the large construction firms and emerging contractors, these await the business plans and Tirisano Trust approval. WBHO and Raubex both have such alliances that are already jointly tendering for projects. However, we are still waiting to see the business plan for each alliance. Companies opting for the equity arrangements, with the exception of Murray & Roberts that already executed its deal a year ago to form Concor, still have two years to conclude their transactions,” explains Mofokeng. The jury is still out on success “We have yet to be convinced of the success of these arrangements. We need the detail of the business plans in the case of alliances, and we have yet to evaluate whether the change in ownership in the Concor