Trust the Evidence

Share this post

Smokescreen Part 12

trusttheevidence.substack.com

Smokescreen Part 12

- Selective Surge Capacity - dealing with the problems of waste, fraud and profiteering

Carl Heneghan
and
Tom Jefferson
Jan 16, 2024
60
Share this post

Smokescreen Part 12

trusttheevidence.substack.com
10
Share

The House of Commons Public Accounts Committee reported that of the £12bn spent on personal protective equipment (PPE) in 2020-21, £9bn was wasted due to inflated prices or shoddy equipment.

Share

Eight hundred seventeen million items costing £673m were defective; some were counterfeit; some PPE was so bad it couldn’t even be given away.  The government had so much PPE it had to burn £4 billion of unused items; two commercial waste companies were appointed to burn 15,000 pallets monthly.  

In March 2022, when the pandemic panic was subsiding, and the omicron wave had passed, The Department of Health & Social Care was still dealing with the fallout of its panicked procurement decisions. The National Audit Office reported it still had 176 active contracts “with an estimated £2.7 billion at risk."

In January 2023, the Financial Times reported nearly £15 billion had been wasted, and the continuing storage costs and disposal of unused PPE stood at £319 million.  The Mail reported the cost of storing pandemic PPE in warehouses had soared to £770,000 per day - 13.2billion items of PPE were still in storage. 

Because the government was concerned it was losing the narrative, it released a Covid PPE media fact sheet stating it continues “to sell, donate, repurpose and recycle excess PPE in the most cost-effective way, as well as seeking to recover costs from suppliers wherever possible to ensure taxpayer value for money.”

In July  2023, the House of Commons Committee of Public Accounts investigated the PPE Medpro awarding of contracts during the pandemic.

PPE Medpro, a private company, was awarded valuable contracts through a High Priority Lane referral by Baroness Michelle Mone. The company was established on May 12, 2020, and was awarded its first contract worth £81 million on June 12th of the same year. The contract was for the supply of 210 million face masks. A second contract worth £122 million was awarded to the company a couple of weeks late, on June 26th, for the supply of sterile surgical gowns.

The Department received tenders from companies with varying track records, some without any history of delivering PPE. Insufficient time and resources were available to reflect on each offer properly, and the High Priority Lane prioritised conflicts of interest.

So, how will the government ensure good value for money in a pandemic, ensuring it isn't ripped off, doesn’t burn dodgy and unused PPE, and spends outrageous amounts of taxpayers' money?

In a parliamentary Government PPE Contracts Debate, Will Quince, The Minister of State, Department of Health and Social Care, said, "at the beginning of the pandemic, only 1% of PPE used in the UK was produced here.”

Years of buying PPE at the lowest price resulted in nearly all of this vital equipment being sourced from overseas, primarily China. The added costs of shipping it, the environmental disaster of burning it, and the profiteering require a long-term commitment to home manufacturing of PPE.  

Like all good ideas, someone has already thought of it: Gateshead NHS Trust was the first to make its own masks, and 250 jobs were created in Northampton to manufacture high-quality PPE. 

We find it strange that the “UKHSA holds retainer contracts with Berkshire and Surrey Pathology Service and University Hospitals Plymouth laboratories which could support surge testing as required”. This text is from a letter to the Science Technology and Innovation and Health and Social Care Committees chair dated 29 September 2023.

UKSA, or presumably its predecessor, Public Health England (PHE), made extensive use of surge capacity testing during the Covid 19 pandemic, and it is prepared to invest in the infrastructure for testing but not apparently for PPE manufacturing. Why?

Awarding companies or middlemen with no prior experience lucrative leads to waste, fraud and profiteering. Home-based manufacturers should be incentivised to provide surge capacity times of increased demand. Eliminating the middleman would save billions in times of need while maintaining the supply of high-quality equipment.

Trust the Evidence is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support our work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

 






60 Likes
·
7 Restacks
60
Share this post

Smokescreen Part 12

trusttheevidence.substack.com
10
Share
10 Comments
Share this discussion

Smokescreen Part 12

trusttheevidence.substack.com
Elizabeth Hart
Writes Vaccination is political
23 hrs ago

Billions of pounds stolen in the fake pandemic - where is the outrage?

Where are the criminal charges?

The UK led on this debacle, with the AstraZeneca vaccine started off and running in at least January 2020 - against what exactly? A killer disease that didn’t kill most people.

And the rest of the world pulled into this scam.

The perpetrators have their archaic honours and many are still in situ.

And now ‘Disease X’ on the agenda with the World Economic Forum, those crooks doubling down to pull the scam again! How much influence do they have in the UK Government…and Opposition?

See here - Michel Demare, Chair of the Board of AstraZeneca, and Tedros of the WHO - preparing for Disease X

You could not make it up…because they’re making it up!

https://www.weforum.org/events/world-economic-forum-annual-meeting-2024/sessions/preparing-for-a-disease-x/

Expand full comment
Like (15)
Reply
Share
Robert Dyson
Writes Falling Ray
22 hrs ago

No polite words to describe these massive benefit frauds where the scammers seem to get away with it.

Expand full comment
Like (10)
Reply
Share
8 more comments...
Top
New
Community
The Lockdown files message is clear: we must never again suppress democracy by giving power to power-hungry people.
Read the piece on the Sunday Express and Sir Graham Brady MP’s comment
Mar 5, 2023 • 
Carl Heneghan
 and 
Tom Jefferson
187
Share this post

The Lockdown files message is clear: we must never again suppress democracy by giving power to power-hungry people.

trusttheevidence.substack.com
26
Breaking news: His Majesty’s Government is not going to investigate excess deaths
It’s called democracy
May 27, 2023 • 
Tom Jefferson
178
Share this post

Breaking news: His Majesty’s Government is not going to investigate excess deaths

trusttheevidence.substack.com
17
Still Open Season on Scientists
The New York Times responds.
Mar 22, 2023 • 
Tom Jefferson
 and 
Carl Heneghan
163
Share this post

Still Open Season on Scientists

trusttheevidence.substack.com
30

Ready for more?

© 2024 Carl Heneghan
Privacy ∙ Terms ∙ Collection notice
Start WritingGet the app
Substack is the home for great writing

Create your profile

undefined subscriptions will be displayed on your profile (edit)

Skip for now

Only paid subscribers can comment on this post

Already a paid subscriber? Sign in

Check your email

For your security, we need to re-authenticate you.

Click the link we sent to , or click here to sign in.