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Theaward-winningmagazinefrom
theAnglianWater@oneAlliance
Issue23•April2015
All onboard!
Collaborating at the
AMP6 induction event.
Pages 12 and 13.
What no water?
Teams rise to the
challenge. Page 4.
Findoutaboutourtunnellingchallengein
MarketHarborough.Page5
Digging deep for
our customers
02
Welcome to our new look one
magazine, which has not only been
refreshed to reflect some of the
strategies we are adopting across
the @one Alliance during AMP6,
but is also now an award winner,
taking away one of the top prizes
at the recent Institute of Internal
Communications (IoIC) awards.
It still retains plenty of interesting and
exciting stories and features about what
is happening across the @one Alliance;
however, we’ve listened to what you said
in the recent reader survey and have
included more projects and site-based
views on stories, such as in our feature
on the Caistor St Edmunds incident
on page 4.
In this spring issue, we also report
on how we performed in AMP5,
hitting our targets and coming up with
some innovative ideas which we’ll
be developing throughout AMP6
and beyond.
We find out how a tricky tunnelling
project in Market Harborough really
engaged the community, especially the
pupils at a local school.
We catch up with Richard George,
Head of Operations, who tells us why the
Injury Free Environment (IFE) approach
to health and safety is so important for all
colleagues to adopt, and discover
the benefits ofTotex and how the
Blue Box gives visibility across the
AMP6 programme.
We meet the Continuous Improvement
team and find out how they can help
colleagues across the @one Alliance with
their projects.
Please remember that oneis your
magazine, so if you have any stories or
pictures that you would like to see in the
next edition, I’d love to hear from you.
Please give me a call on 01733 414 108
or email gTuffs@anglianwater.co.uk
GrantTuffs, Customer and
Communications Manager.
We put ourselves up against it – in terms of the
amount of work that had to be done in the last
few months – but yet again teams have worked
incredibly hard to deliver a successful year-end.
We have efficiently and effectively delivered
more than 850 projects between April 2010
and April 2015, with no more than two or three
outstanding and being completed as I write
this introduction.
We have hit our base targets and stretch
targets for efficiency, which means we will deliver
a positive financial programme pool for our
partner companies.These are really good results,
given how tough the affordability challenge was
in AMP5. Don’t forget we have fronted up to and
achieved affordability targets of between 20 and
30 per cent over the five years.
We’ve been saying for some time that ‘carbon’
has been the defining target in AMP5.We hit
our 50 per cent reduction in embodied carbon
Your @one Alliance Health and Safety Passport is valid for four
and a half years, so if yours has expired – or if you are new to
the organisation – you’ll need to go through an induction or
refresher course to get a new one.
Etton, our former training centre, is closing at the end of April,
so the new location for training is the College of West Anglia
in Wisbech.
The college boasts a new state-of-the-art Technology Centre,
housing superb facilities for engineering and construction, plus
an excellent classroom environment and an improved experience
for all delegates attending the induction.
“We not only delivered over 850
projects for AnglianWater, but
if we look at AMP5 overall, we
have met the required efficiency
and cost targets in a challenging
environment,”said Keith Blair,
Head of Commercial and
Performance.
“The new commercial
model has worked with a
reduced fee and a target cost
arrangement which has driven
outperformance and delivered
benefits to both AnglianWater
and the partners. It just goes to
show what can be achieved by
adopting a collaborative, open
book, transparent, cross-partner
environment and by all working
together to a common goal.”
Efficiencies
The 50 per cent carbon
efficiencies were delivered, which
at the beginning of AMP5 would
have seemed like one of the
hardest challenges we’ve faced.
“It just shows what we can
hope to achieve in AMP6, when
we want to make a further 10 per
cent carbon saving,”said Keith.
We developed our standard
This newsletter is printed on Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) paper, which means it
comes from responsible sources that support the conservation of forests and wildlife,
while helping people to lead better lives.
Performance
476Km
142,794tonnes
ofrenewedor
newmainslaid.
51.9%ofembodiedcarbonsavedforthewholeAMP
902
2 3 4 5
projectsthrough
Gateway5
AFRfortherolling
12-monthperiod.
0.05
Rising to the challenge
Make sure you get your
passport to safety
great shape!
Haveyougot
newsforus?
halfway through this year and we’ve maintained that
position ever since.We now know that a lot of the
efficiency we have delivered has come from driving
carbon out of our solutions.
Our approach and our progress on carbon reduction
is recognised throughout the industry and our peers
are genuinely taken aback at the progress we’ve made.
We’ve embraced the carbon challenge, demonstrating
to the industry that reducing carbon reduces costs.
I’m proud of our track record and the achievements
we’ve made in AMP5.They’ve given us a great platform
to tackle the challenges awaiting us in AMP6.
Because the two programmes of work have
overlapped, there hasn’t been time to stop and
reflect on what we’ve achieved, so I’d like to take this
opportunity to really thank everyone for their hard
work, commitment and enthusiasm over the last
five years.
Dale Evans
Director @one Alliance
So we’ve reached the end of the AMP5 programme and I am
incredibly proud of what we have achieved over the past five
years – and how we have finished the AMP period.
To book your place, contact the People Development team on
01733 414 316 or email imwc-induction@anglianwater.co.uk
product capabilities and off-site
building, which has enabled us
to be innovative in delivering
large projects such as Cambridge
more quickly and efficiently –
and we adopted this method
of construction more as AMP5
went on.
Safety
“The introduction of product
lifecycle management (PLM)
on some projects has proved a
great benefit in not only helping
to design and construct the
projects in an efficient and safe
manner, but to demonstrate the
end product to AnglianWater’s
operational staff before it is built,”
said Keith.
We implemented a new‘plan
for stage’process, which has
provided a focus for all interested
parties and stakeholders to
efficiently identify plan and agree
what is required at each stage of
the project.
We have also fully embraced
AnglianWater’s‘Risk andValue’
process, where at every single
stage of a project we stand back
and assess if we have done it the
best way and look at how we
can do things better. It’s all about
looking at the way we do things
differently and has led to us
achieving significant efficiencies
throughout the AMP.
Delivering
We also delivered 80 per cent of
value of procurement via our new
capital cost management system
(CCMS).This has resulted in 80 per
cent of the value of everything
that was bought being procured
through AnglianWater directly.
“All of the above were
milestone achievements
throughout AMP5 and will be
further developed in AMP6
to build on the success they
achieved in AMP5,”explained
Keith.
Ontrack
“If we look at delivery and gain
share for our partners, we have
ended AMP5 in a very positive
situation and on an excellent
footing. However, there’s room
for improvement in AMP6 and we
want to do it all again but better
and better.
If we meet the efficiency
challenges, we’ll be on track to
deliver AMP6 within Anglian
Water’s and the @one Alliance
partners’aspirations.”
We’ve crossed the finishing line in
The @one Alliance ended AMP5 on an excellent footing, meeting the challenges
and targets that we were tasked with between 2010 and 2015, and achieving new
ways of working that will be taken on board in AMP6.
“The introduction
of product lifecycle
management (PLM)
on some projects has
proved a great benefit
in not only helping to
design and construct the
projects in an efficient
and safe manner, but
to demonstrate the
end product to Anglian
Water’s operational
staff before it is built.”
KeithBlair,HeadofCommercial
andPerformance
Richard George
Date of issue: 01/04/15
In case of emergency please contact:
Work Safely Induction
Produced by Publications (S-511) – 01904 479 500
1
£14million
belowaffordabilityfor
projectspostGateway2.
54.4%(38,281tonnes)inthelastrolling12months.
56.2%(14,604tonnes)ofoperationalcarbonsavedforAMP5with
Year5figures88%(2,058tonnes)saved.
propertiesoffof
theDG5flooding
register.
201
C02
fast facts
one Issue 23 • April 20152 oneIssue 23 • April 2015 3
While AnglianWater’s customers in Market Harborough’s town centre carried on with their daily lives, just
several metres below their feet an enormous manned tunnelling machine was boring through the earth as
part of a £1.5 million flood alleviation scheme to reduce the risk of surface water flooding in the town.
The Tunnel Boring Machine (TBM) was
lowered into a six-metre drill pit, which was
then driven on a 100-metre, laser-guided
journey under the town’s streets by
@one Alliance Tunnel Boring Machine
operator Jamie Warren, one of only a few
people in the country qualified to operate
this machine.
Two tunnels were drilled beneath the town’s
streets to make space for a new surface water
sewer pipe, which was laid behind theTBM as
it travelled.
AnglianWater and the @one Alliance
worked alongside Harborough District
Council, the Highways Authority and business
representatives in the town to plan the
work and minimise disruption to the public
and customers, and also liaised with the
Environment Agency and the RiverWelland
Trust for consent to work in the river.
Project Engineer Nick Randall said:
“Undertaking a major tunnelling operation in
such a restricted working area in the middle
of a busy town centre was challenging as we
wanted to minimise disruption to the public
and maintain access to local businesses.
We also had to shut one of the main roads
through the town centre, which leads to one
of the main car parks.
“This scheme was also important in order
to hit ourYear 5 Ofwat obligation to remove
properties from the DG5 flooding register.
“However, it has been a real success,
showing the benefits of putting in time and
effort for substantial, well-thought-out public
relations. Considering the location and the
type of work being undertaken, we had very
few complaints. As long as the public are
well informed in advance of a project and
understand the need for the work, they are
more patient with the disruption.”
Children from local schools were invited to
name one of the tunnelling machines, and
10-year-old Frazer, a pupil from Market
Harborough Church of England
School, came up with the winning
moniker,‘Diglet’.
In February, Frazer’s class was
invited to the site to see‘Diglet’
unveiled, as well as learning
about engineering and the
project itself.
“The children
seemed to really
enjoy seeing
Diglet and
learning about
the work we’re
doing and why,”
said Nick.
“Giving the drill a name has proved really
popular with the team working on the
project. All of us just call it Diglet rather than
a drill as we would on most similar projects.
The name is incredibly catchy.
“Hopefully we’ve inspired the children
and who knows, maybe some will go on to
be engineers of the future.”
Customer and Communications
Manager, GrantTuffs, added:
“This was a great example
of community
engagement in a
potentially difficult
setting. It was great to
involve schoolchildren,
to see what we do in
their community.”
Pullingtogethertohelp
Fastfacts
• The scheme was started in
November 2014 and finished
in March.
• The affordability cost was
£1,411,000; the solution cost was
£1,356,000.
• Tier two and tier three suppliers
involved included:
	 Randall Surveys LLP
	 XylemWater Solutions UK Ltd
	 Ham Baker Adams Ltd
	 Savills (UK) Ltd
“Undertaking a major tunnelling operation in such a restricted working
area in the middle of a busy town centre was challenging as we wanted to
minimise disruption to the public and maintain access to local businesses.”
Nick Randall, Project Engineer.
‘Boring’project isfloodedwithgreatresponsesfrom
our customers
At a time of year that should
be relaxing and full of cheer, an
incident like this can cause real
upset and inconvenience to so
many families.
The water treatment works
went down on 28 December,
and as the damaged main was
six metres beneath waterlogged
ground, it was clear from the
start that this was going to
require a large mobilisation
of colleagues and partners, as
swiftly as possible.
However, with a total of 220
people rolling their sleeves up
to help – including 170 working
on site – the burst was brought
under control within a day, with
colleagues working throughout
the night.
Karl Beaton, Design Manager,
explained:“The first I heard of
it was when I saw it on the local
news. As I walked into work
the next morning, Engineering
Manager Mark Froggatt invited
me to go along to the site, to
see how we could help. Teams
from Kier, Barhale and MWH
were already working alongside
Anglian Water Operations to fit
a replacement pipe, but Mark
and I wanted to offer support
from a design and engineering
perspective.
“When we got there, we
worked together with the guys
to secure a temporary pipeline.
The work was very exacting, so
Mark and I offered additional
technical advice to help the
process run as smoothly as
possible. We worked through
the day and into the night, until
finally, at 2am, we finished.
It was the end of the day for
Mark and me, but some of the
guys working on the pipeline
stayed on. Their dedication and
commitment to getting the line
fixed, and restoring normality
to the families affected, was
second to none.”
Mark agreed:“The success at
Caistor St Edmunds is testament
to the professionalism of the
team. It really is a pleasure
to work with people who
understand the role they play,
and how it fits into the bigger
picture of what they need to
achieve as a team. Everyone was
on the same page that day and
the process was quite organic
– very quickly, we became a
well-oiled machine, working
together to get the job done.
“As Karl says, we were there
for that bit of extra guidance
and to help make sure that
everything was done as safely
and efficiently as possible. I love
my job – it makes me very proud
to see the sheer hardiness of the
guys we have on site, and the
effort they put in to what they
do. There is no doubt that the
Caistor incident would not have
been fixed so quickly if it wasn’t
for them.”
At the very end of December 2014, a water treatment works that supplies 5,000
homes in Caistor St Edmunds, rural Norfolk, went down. However, thanks to a group
of dedicated @one Alliance colleagues and some of our partners and suppliers,
it wasn’t long before the burst was under control.
Mark Badcock, Foreman (Barhale):
“Although there were three teams working on site, there was a
real sense of everyone pulling together for the same cause. Realising
so many people were without water was our motivation to get the
job done.”
Jake Paul: Open Cut Ganger (Barhale):
“There were no dramas – we all knew what we had to do and just
got on with it. It helped that we all had the same work ethic to do
the best job as efficiently as possible.”
TerryWoods: General Foreman (Barhale):
“I can sum up the atmosphere on site in three words: Great team
spirit. We worked through the night to secure a temporary fix
before the incident escalated, and we were still smiling by the end
of it!”
the community
one Issue 23 • April 20154 5oneIssue 23 • April 2015
As we start out on our exciting expedition into
AMP6, onemeets the @one Alliance Management
Team (AMT) to find out what they think are the key
challenges for AMP6 – and how we can meet those
challenges to make the next five years a success.
Dale Evans, Director @one Alliance
Ihavebeenwiththe@oneAlliancesinceourinceptionin2004.AMP6willbemythirdregulatoryperiodasthe
@oneAllianceDirector,andtheopportunitiesforustokeepsettingnewbenchmarksforourindustryseemasgreatasever.
We have set ourselves up for a strong start to AMP6 – we have worked to align with the outcomes in AnglianWater’s
business plan and the new Outcome Delivery Incentives (ODIs); the @one Alliance partners have worked together to
develop a strong delivery plan, and we already have over £150 million of AMP6 work underway.
There’s much to do, but we’ve made a good start to what will be an exciting AMP.
Richard George, Head of Operations
This is a new team that brings together construction, health and safety, commissioning, DAMs and aftercare to
provide coordinated and consistent support to delivery teams, driving together to hit the efficiencies we need.
Having come from a construction and commercial background and spent years in another high-performance driven
culture, I’m really enjoying the @one Alliance, working with the other operations teams, and I’m looking forward to the
challenges ahead.
We’ll be building on the great work in AMP5 to create integrated and efficient delivery teams involving all
stakeholders – from the start of a project pre-DM1, and including Anglian Water Operations – to make sure that the
output and product deliver for them consistently. We have all the right ingredients for a really successful AMP.
Craig Repton, Programme Area Manager Infrastructure
I’ve worked in the infrastructure utility sector for 26 years and joined the @one Alliance in May 2012 from my‘home’
organisation, Balfour Beatty. I have overall accountability and responsibility for the successful delivery of bothWater and
Water Recycling Infrastructure, ensuring that the outcomes and outputs are met for all parties concerned within the
@one Alliance.
During AMP6 our focus must be on meeting our objectives, giving confidence to our client by delivering on our
promises, and looking after our people ensuring everyone goes home safe.
My key initiatives are to embrace the great work done within the @one Alliance to date and create a delivery model
that is best for task that consistently delivers outperformance, reduces waste and maximises efficiency.We have a great
opportunity to create an environment where people feel valued and engaged.


James Crompton, Programme Area Manager Water Non-Infrastructure
I have worked for the @one Alliance for five and a half years and have been a member of the AMT during this time. My
partner company is AnglianWater Asset Delivery.
I am extremely passionate about delivery and high performance. I want to exploit what we have learnt about build
off-site, production management and design and really build and excel on these principles so all of the @one Alliance
can achieve success in AMP6.
For me, the biggest challenges in AMP6 are around ensuring all of our delivery strategies are consistently fit
for purpose, appropriate and exploit all the key initiatives to the full.We need to ensure we always run at
maximum efficiency.
Ian Hutchinson, Programme Area Manager Water Recycling Non-Infrastructure
I am new to the @one Alliance, having worked overseas for the past seven years. My partner company is MWH.
I am particularly excited about working in the @one Alliance and meeting the challenges and opportunities that
AMP6 brings us.
I am passionate about getting the best out of people and developing a safe, positive working environment where
people feel empowered to challenge the status quo.
AMP6 is going to take a great effort from all of us if we are going to exceed the efficiency challenge but during
my short time here, I have been constantly surprised by what we can all achieve when we work together.
John Podmore, Business Improvement Manager
I am brand new to the AMT, having only started with the @one Alliance in January 2015. My parent company is
Balfour Beatty.
I have over 10 years’experience of living and breathing the end-to-end leadership challenges of change – and the
business functionality that supports it – and an enthusiastic, dynamic, pragmatic and delivery-focused leadership
approach to production management and continuous improvement.
I think the biggest challenges we face in AMP6 are making sure that all our people are, and remain, the central focus
throughout the journey of change, and delivering the Business Plan efficiencies confidently and credibly year-on-year.
Tracey Goddard, Organisational Development Manager
I joined the @one Alliance in October and was appointed to the AMT in January. I am responsible for the PeopleTeam,
Communication and Customer.
I’ve been with MWH for almost 20 years. Before joining the @one Alliance, I led MWH’s AMP6 Design and Construct
bids for a number of client frameworks, including MWH’s bid for @one Alliance Integrated MainWorks Capital
framework, and have managed several transition and cultural change programmes within the water industry.
Organisational development is about changing and strengthening our @one Alliance and its capability, creating the
right culture and environment for delivering our AMP6 programme.
To achieve this, I see three key challenges: ensuring we have the right people, improving the way that we
communicate and embedding customer-centric behaviours and a service culture into everything we do.
Keith Blair, Head of Commercial and Performance
I am new to the AMT, having joined in September 2014 when I took over from John Karolski, and I am a director for
Turner &Townsend.
I have over 35 years’experience in the construction industry, during which I have built an extensive commercial
knowledge from managing projects and programmes across a number of sectors.
The biggest challenges for AMP6 are bringing about a step change in commercial performance that is applied
consistently across the whole of the @one Alliance.The improvement is in two parts – firstly, in improving the
commercial function to be more efficient and making decisions that are risk based on making the right commercial
choice; secondly, in bringing commercial awareness to the front of people’s minds throughout the @one Alliance so
that everybody is commercially aware of the impact of their decisions and actions.
Mark Froggatt, Engineering Manager
I joined the @one Alliance five years ago and I’ve been a member of the AMT for nearly two and a half years. My home
organisation is MWH.
I wish to continue to nurture a desire for excellence in design, building a team who challenge what and how we
deliver to ensure we offer the best and most efficient solution.
We need to constantly challenge ourselves to be more efficient. In the past few years, we have radically changed
how we deliver and AMP6 needs even more innovation.
The biggest challenge for AMP6 is to avoid changing everything – far from it.We need to look at what we do as a
leading organisation, as we do things well – but it just needs to be done better.
The AMP6 approach needs to combine strengthening what we do well to make it even better, with some radical
challenges in other areas.This makes for an exciting time ahead.
The team leading the way on our AMP6 adventure
one Issue 23 • April 20156 oneIssue 23 • April 2015 7
On the map
The @one Alliance was mandated
to protect 12 operational water
sites in the Lincoln Supply Region
under the Security and Emergency
Measures Direction Operational
Water Programme.
The SEMD solutions consisted of the
installation of new security fencing with
perimeter intruder detection systems and
new security kiosks, along with security-
rated building hardening products.
The works varied in size and
complexity, ranging from a new
1.3km-long security fence and CCTV
system at ElshamWaterTreatment
Works, to minor civils and security-rated
hatch cover installation at Burnham
Water Reservoir.
Working collaboratively with Supply
Manager Jon Pawson and his operational
team, we relocated sample pumps at
Retford into a previously unused building,
undertaking improvement works not
only to protect the pumps, but to provide
a solution that will increase the lifetime of
the existing assets.
The construction team, led by Colin
Horrocks, worked extremely hard in
tough conditions through the winter
months to deliver the programme to an
excellent standard, outperforming the
targets the team were set.
Combined embodied carbon is
forecast at 239 tCO2
e against a baseline
of 1,270 tCO2
e with the operational
carbon forecast at 2.0 tCO2
e against a
baseline of 211 tCO2
e.This produces a
huge reduction of 81 per cent and 99
per cent respectively.
Forecast out-turn cost for the work
is currently £2,277,000 against an
approved solution cost of £2,612,000
and affordability of £4,468,000.
The installation works have been
completed and output claimed ahead
of the 31 March 2015 obligation date.
SEMD Operational Water Programme – Elsham
DeliveredbytheSEMDteam
Louth Eastgate DG5 flood alleviation scheme
Water Recycling Infrastructure
A major DG5 flood alleviation scheme to
protect homes from flooding in Louth,
Lincolnshire, was started early August
2014 with a £1.2 million investment.
Twenty-one properties were identified
at locations in Eastgate as being affected
by flooding on the DG5 register.The
flooding was due to local incapacity of
the trunk sewer serving Eastgate and
exacerbated by downstream surcharge.
Consent was obtained from the
Environment Agency (EA) to install a
new combined sewer overflow to the
river Lud. Following extensive hydraulic
modelling and consultations with the
EA, the team managed to successfully
agree a final solution and gain consent
to discharge screened flows to the river.
The final solution option included a
new CSO (combined sewer overflow)
chamber with a 10m long weir, from
the existing surcharged trunk sewer
into 68m of new 900mm outfall sewer
discharging to the river. As part of the EA
agreement to discharge to the river, we
were tasked with reducing spills in other
areas of the town to cause no detriment.
A new pump station with 25m3
storage
was proposed to reduce existing CSO
spills upstream of
our new CSO.
The main
construction
challenges were
building such a
large CSO structure
on a busy highway,
which forms
one of the main
entrances into
the town.Works
were carefully
planned with
extensive public
engagement such as press
releases, radio and local news. Local
residents were kept informed and
business owners were visited face to
face.The work was planned to avoid
disrupting the Christmas trading period.
Work started in August 2014 and
continued until spring 2015, breaking
from 1 December until the NewYear to
avoid the Christmas trading period. In
agreement with the Highways Agency,
work resumed on 13 February and the
team is aiming to complete the scheme
in early May 2015.
Clacton Water Recycling Centre
Water Recycling Non-Infrastructure
The water recycling centre at Clacton
(Holland Haven) has been a failing
works for a while, and AnglianWater
have been working closely with the
Environment Agency to ensure that
they are fully briefed and agreed with
the improvements and timescales to
the works.
The @one Alliance were challenged
in August 2014 to deliver a scheme that
gave the works resilience against the
seasonal and fluctuating flows by the end
of AMP5.The project team worked closely
with Operations and Local Delivery from
AnglianWater and the supply chain
to identify the root causes, risks and
solutions needed.
The whole team was unified in
developing solutions that would be best
for the works within the timescale. By
engaging early with suppliersWaveneys
and MaxWright, they were able to plan
the design effectively and reduce delivery
timescales and cost.
The team used 3D scanning to help
design the replacement pumps and new
aeration pipework.This provided an
accurate model developed without the
need for taking the assets out of service
or man-entry.This, in turn, reduced the
man-hours required and removed the
requirement for confined space entry.
Work included replacing pumps,
improving the forward flow to
treatment and inlet screening reliability.
The team also remodelled and
redesigned the aeration tank systems,
implemented a new poly dosing
system, improved the ferric dosing
capability and installed McKinney
and Stamford baffles to the two final
settlement tanks, which is a first on an
AnglianWater asset.
The scheme was delivered to
programme and to budget, with the
team working closely together to
achieve the successful outcome.
InSeptember2014,anemergencyrepair
wascarriedouttoaburstonasix-inch
concretewatermaininLowerBoddington.
Asaresult,thevillagesofUpperandLower
Boddingtonexperiencednowaterandlow
pressureacrossthenetwork.
Oneofthede-pressurisationsamples
showedthepresenceofcoliforms.
Resamplesweretaken,andsomeofthose
containedpresumptivee-coli,soa‘Boil
Water’noticewasissuedtopropertiesin
UpperBoddington.
Localisedre-chlorinationwascarriedout
withinthenetworkandtransientloggers
installedtodiscoverwhathadcaused
theburst.Somebiologicalre-growthwas
identifiedandthiswasputdowntolow
chlorineresidualsattheextremitiesof
thenetwork.
Therootcauseofthesupply
interruptionswastransienteffectsonthe
networkcausedbyfixedspeedpumpsat
ThorpeLodgeBooster.
Anemergencyteamwasformedto
provideasolutiontothelowchlorine
residualwithinthenetwork.Theprojecthit
thegroundrunningwithteammembers
havingexperienceddeliveringsimilar
urgentschemessuchasKirbyCane.
Theprojectteamidentifiedthatthe
hypochlorite-dosingunitinstalledat
CranwellfortheCentralLincs
Truckmainwasuseableand
theplanwastore-locatethisatDeanshanger
Reservoir,alongwithanammoniasulphate
plantavailablefromNewspring.
Thedesignfortheinstallationofallthis
equipmentwascompletedinlessthan
fourweeks,allowingtheprojectteamto
commenceonsiteintheNewYear.The
projectteamworkedcollaborativelywith
AnglianWaterOperations,whohelpeddesign
andimplementthesolution.
Theonsiteconnectionstotheexisting
largediametermainsweredeepandinvolved
severalnighttimeshutdowns,withcareful
planningandtimelycustomerengagement.
Theemergencyresponsecouldnothave
beendoneinsuchashortperiodwithout
excellentcollaborationbetweenthe@one
AllianceandAnglianWaterOperations.
Thescheme,valuedat£1,400,000,was
designedinfourweeksanddeliveredand
commissionedin12weeks.
Theembodiedcarbonis101tCO2
eagainsta
targetof108tCO2
e.
Buckingham Public Water Supply Zone
Water Non-Infrastructure
Lincoln
Grantham
Peterborough
Thetford
Braintree
Ely
King’s Lynn
Hillington
Thorpe Wood House
Norwich
Great
Ellingham
Great Yarmouth
Lowestoft
Ipswich
Colchester
Basildon
Cambridge
Moxhill
Milton Keynes
Northampton
Daventry
Huntingdon
Grimsby
Having completed more than 850 projects during AMP5, with many already planned in the
programme for AMP6, here’s a snapshot of some of the recent projects on the map.
Old Stratford
Water Infrastructure
The existing water supplies into Milton Keynes are almost
at capacity, so a new 4.8km main is required to meet the
proposed growth of up to an additional 28,000 houses by
2026. It will also provide security of supply in the event of
failure of the existing 27-inch concrete main from the west.
F&BTrenchless Solutions Ltd carried out two, 60m auger
bores to allow the main to be sliplined under the river
and Calverton Road.The pit was created in a community
park, and was drilled in both directions at a depth of
approximately 6m.
The new main starts at the Old Stratford booster station.
However, this site is now landlocked by commercial and
housing development, so there is no route out of the
booster site readily available for conventional mainlaying
techniques.
The solution was to pipe jack 115m under the
development site using a 2.5m long digger shield with
hydraulic arm and four rams, which pushed a series of
1,200mm concrete sleeves along the route.This then
allowed the 900mm pipe to be sliplined through the duct.
Laying a 4.5km pipeline, predominantly in fields during
the winter months, was always going to be a challenge,
but it was compounded by a large section of the route being
in the flood plain. In order to work safely and efficiently, the
last 800m will be completed in the summer, once the land
has dried out.The main will be commissioned once this last
section has been completed.
The affordability was £2,933,000; the solution cost
is £3,755,178, with the six-month construction period
(October-March) extended to July 2015.The GW3 embodied
carbon was calculated as1685 tCO2
e, against a baseline
figure of 2010 tCO2
e.
The designer was BSP Associates with
F&BTrenchless Solutions Ltd carrying out
the auger bore and pipe jack work.
8 9oneIssue 23 • April 2015 oneIssue 23 • April 2015
Balfour Beatty is a specialist business within the global Balfour Beatty Group.
They work with major energy and water providers within the UK and Ireland
to create the vital infrastructure essential for modern life.
With a head office in Sheffield, Balfour Beatty employs around 2,500
people and they joined the @one Alliance in 2004.
They enjoy the collaborative culture of the @one Alliance and the
knowledge sharing that drives innovative solutions for the sector.
www.balfourbeatty.com
Infrastructure specialist Barhale works UK-wide across the water,
transport, energy and waste sectors, providing design, construction and
maintenance services.
The company employs around 800 people and has its head office
inWalsall,West Midlands, as well as regional offices in Glasgow, Leeds,
Peterborough andWatford.They also provide specialist services in
tunnelling, steel fabrications and construction consumables distribution
and support.
Barhale is a proud partner of AnglianWater, having previously worked
with the organisation on a number of projects prior to joining the
@one Alliance in 2004. www.barhale.co.uk
Grontmij is a leading European company in the consulting and engineering
industry with world-class expertise in the fields of energy, highways and
roads, sustainable buildings and water. Grontmij’s leading principle is
Sustainability by Design and this enables their professionals to support
clients in developing the built and natural environment.
Established in 1915, Grontmij is listed on the NYSE Euronext stock
exchange.The company ranks among Europe’s largest engineering
consultancies and has a presence in the Netherlands, France, Denmark,
Sweden, Belgium, United Kingdom, Germany, Poland,Turkey and China.
Grontmij employ approximately 7,000 professionals around the world.
In the UK, Grontmij employs around 700 people across three business
lines of water and energy, planning and design and transportation and
mobility.They have 11 UK offices, including the head office in Leeds.
Grontmij, who joined the @one Alliance at the start of AMP4, are proud of
the part they have played in helping the @one Alliance achieve success and
they look forward to the challenge of building on this as the @one Alliance
seeks enhanced ways of thinking and working in order to deliver the AMP6
strategic outcomes. www.grontmij.co.uk
Mott MacDonald Bentley (MMB) was formed between JN Bentley and Mott
MacDonald in 1999 to specifically offer a fully-integrated feasibility, design,
construction and commissioning service.
With a focus on delivering long-term programmes of work, MMB
appreciates that a strategic focus, effective communication and flexibility in
different models of working are important to support a trusted relationship
with their clients.
Their approach is based on thinking differently about projects:
innovation and collaboration is central to the way they operate.
Close integration between design, contract management and site teams,
but also with client partners, subcontractors and other contract partners, is
core to MMB’s success. www.jnbentley-mmb.co.uk
MWH Global is dedicated to‘Building a BetterWorld’.
As specialists in water, natural resources and transportation, MWH
employees use innovative ideas and technology to help solve complex
infrastructure and environmental challenges.This work is built on a nearly
200-year history during which MWH has delivered services from initial
planning and design through construction, start-up and operations.
Today, MWH employs more than 7,000 experts, including engineers,
consultantsandconstructionprofessionalsin35countriesonsixcontinents.
Each of these experts is committed to serving global communities through
sustainable development and project delivery.
MWH is a private, employee-owned company headquartered in
Broomfield, Colorado. www.mwhglobal.com
Skanska is one of the world’s 10 largest construction and project
development companies, employing 53,000 employees in Europe, the US
and Latin America, with headquarters in Stockholm, Sweden.
In the UK, Skanska employs 5,200 people to deliver major construction
and asset management projects across both the public and private sectors.
As part of the @one Alliance for AMP6 Skanska will carry out the design
of non-infrastructure schemes such as treatment works for both clean water
and water recycling across the Anglian region. www.skanska.com
Partnerships
bode well for the future
You’ll know all about your‘home organisation’, but what about the other partners in the @one Alliance
going forward into AMP6? onegets a‘nutshell’view of who they are and what they do. Colleagues at the @one Alliance,
including all the site teams, have
a very strong awareness of
the need to operate in a safe
environment. Our principle is
“we work safely or not at all”,
supported by an underlying belief
that everyone has a right to go
home safe and well.
This awareness was
demonstrated in AMP5’s safety
record, with an average accident
frequency rate (AFR) of 0.05
against the target of 0.1.
“However, even though the
AMP5 safety stats look positive,
we can never rest on our laurels.
The reality is that we have still
had some accidents, including
four RIDDORs (reportable injuries)
since October 2013 – this is four
too many,”said Richard George,
@one Alliance Head of
Operations.
“Those colleagues injured
– including those with minor
injuries such as cuts or bruises –
are a real concern to us and prove
a strong motivation for us never
to become complacent when it
comes to health and safety.”
So for AMP6, the @one Alliance
has introduced Injury Free
Environment (IFE) to keep stretching
us to achieve ever-safer working
environments.
“IFE is a separate initiative to
health and safety – although they do
work together,”explained Richard.
“It’s a behavioural safety
programme with a personal
commitment, and promoting the
concept of caring for each other in a
potentially dangerous environment.
“The crucial difference in the IFE
approach to health and safety is that
it starts with individuals – on site,
in offices, even when driving or at
home,”added Richard.
“Its purpose is to elevate the
awareness of safety and health in all
our teams: to make this personal and
important to individuals, and allow
everyone to start their own journey
to an injury-free environment.
“We are in the process of building
the programme for AMP6 and it will
include elements of wellbeing, as
well as safety.”
An IFE Steering Group, chaired by
our director Dale Evans, has been
established, with a dedicated IFE
Coordinator, Michael Doyle,
and a number of IFE Champions
across the business, driving
the programme.
To make sure everyone is
on board with IFE, orientation
sessions will be taking place, and
everyone can expect an invitation
as we move through the first few
months of AMP6.
“We hope that the IFE
programme will help take our
commitment to health and
safety to a whole new level of
understanding and achievement,”
said Richard.
“Everybody has the right to
return home safely from work –
this is a key principle for Anglian
Water, the @one Alliance and all
the partners.”
Ecologist James Gilbert, who is part of
the @one Alliance’s Enabling team, has
come up with an innovative idea that
will help us achieve some of Anglian
Water’s key customer outcomes.
His idea – a biodegradable tree
guard – not only benefits the
environment, but also supports
AnglianWater’s zero waste goal, is a
cost-effective solution and keeps sites
looking like customers might expect.
James, who submitted his idea to
Think Space, AnglianWater’s online
tool where people share innovative
ideas, said: “I visit numerous sites and
often see landscaped areas littered
with plastic tubing from the standard
plastic guards that were previously
used on AnglianWater sites. Once the
trees have established and outgrown
the guards, no plan is actioned to clear
the plastic left behind.”
The biodegradable tree guard –
which has since been used by Scouts
and Guides who helped help plant a
200-metre hedgerow atWhitlingham
Water Recycling Centre in Norfolk
– will now be a standard product/
specification used on every
capital scheme.
Digging in
with an environmental idea
health & safety
Taking a personal approach to
Natural innovation: James Gilbert, Ecologist.
“Those colleagues
injured – including
those with minor
injuries such as cuts
or bruises – are a
real concern to us
and prove a strong
motivation for us
never to become
complacent when it
comes to health and
safety.”
Richard George,
@one Alliance
Head of
Operations.
@one IFE: Making
health and safety
personal, relevant and
important: ensuring
our journey to living
in an injury-free
environment.
AnglianWater Asset Delivery is the AnglianWater team represented
in the @one Alliance. AnglianWater Asset Delivery provides skills and
services than span across the whole Capital Delivery process. Unique
services include modelling, commissioning, construction assurance and
commercial assurance.
These are complemented by other core competencies such as strong
project management, performance management, enabling activities and
technical design and standards.
They are proud to be a key delivery partner to AnglianWater and enjoy
working in the @one Alliance. www.anglianwater.co.uk
one Issue 23 • April 201510 oneIssue 23 • April 2015 11
AnglianWaterandthe@oneAlliancebelieve
thatacomprehensiveinductionprocessiskey
topreparingourpeopleforthesignificantly
differentAMP6approachtodeliveringprojects.
Keith Blair, Head of
Commercial and Financial
Performance, who leads the
Commercial initiative:
“Everyone has a role
to play in being more
commercially aware of
what they do and how to
be more efficient and
drive that value for money
we need.”
Stephen Kennedy, Meps:“It gives us an understanding of what AnglianWater and the
@one Alliance want to be and the meaning of the new initiatives. It enables us to see how we
can work together to achieve what they want. It’s also a great opportunity to meet people
and gain an understanding of the reorganisations as they are taking place.”
BobWarren, GPS PE Pipe Systems: “I think it helps that we can show people our products. It’s
good to be hands-on and meet people face to face.”
“The next stage of the Onboarding journey is for people to be involved in the High
PerformingTeams programme,”explained David Newsome.
“This is ongoing at the moment, with the IPLs trialling the programme. IPLs are
ensuring that the initiative efficiencies are being applied to their projects.The IT-based
platform continues to be developed, and this will help new starters understand the
processes and tools necessary to do their job in the most effective way.”
Here’swhatsomeofthosewhoattendedthoughtoftheevent:
Richard George, Head of
Operations, who leads the
Industrialised Construction
initiative:
“We need to get involvement
of all the construction teams as
early as we can in the design
and development process. If
we can get a programme team
to find out what we are doing,
the end user will understand
what it is we are trying to build
and buy into that early.”
Aidan Hickey, AMP6 Programme
Manager, who leads the
Programme Management
initiative:
“We have got fantastic
visibility for our AMP6
programme.We need to
‘plan before we do’and use
the opportunities to create
our delivery strategies for
our programme in advance
of us kicking the work off.
The more planning we do,
the more effective we are
going to be.”
Chris Candlish, Supply Chain
Manager, who leads the
Sustainable Procurement
initiative:
“We need to work
cohesively together in the
@one Alliance, and with
our supply chain.We need
to look at how we unlock
value, how we outperform,
and work as one really
big team.”
SUPPLY AND DELIVER
IT’S ALL ABOUT YOUAll onboard for the AMP6 adventure!
Andy Brown, Head of Sustainability, AnglianWater:“Love Every Drop is about
delivering a sustainable business into the future.There are challenging
targets and aspirations set by our customers over the next five years
and beyond, and the only way of meeting those challenges
is to really work together through the spirit of innovation
and collaboration.”
As such, a one-day AMP6 Onboarding event, repeated over five days in January at
the Kingsgate Centre in Peterborough, saw more than 500 @one Alliance employees,
colleagues from Anglian Water and our supply chain partners brought together to
discover the @one Alliance and Anglian Water’s plans for AMP6 and the exciting
challenges that lie ahead.
The morning involved interesting and informative presentations on Anglian
Water’s Love Every Drop strategy, the Totex (total expenditure) approach to the
money spent on an asset throughout its lifetime, and the new AMP6 delivery and
governance process.
There were also a number of lively activities that engaged people with the key
messages underpinning the new AMP period, including a Lego challenge and a task
relating to Anglian Water’s customer outcomes.
David Newsome, one of the organisers of the day, said:“Feedback received from
delegates showed they enjoyed the day and found it informative. We had a clear aim,
which was to ensure that the event was interactive, engaging and fun. People with
different types of professions and backgrounds attended the event and particularly
enjoyed the participation aspect of the day.”
So what are the next steps in the Onboarding process?
John Podmore, Business
Improvement Manager, who
leads the Production initiative:
“Production aligns to five
key messages linking to the
customer outcomes – work
smarter, not harder; identify
the keys to unlock value;
solve today’s problems for
a better tomorrow; lead by
example and people are
the active ingredient to
continuous improvement.”
GrantTuffs, Customer and
Communications Manager,
who leads the Customer
initiative:
“We need to encourage
our people to keep our
customers informed
throughout the duration
of a project. Keeping them
engaged means that we
can deliver great service.”
Tracey Goddard, Organisational
and Development Manager, who
leads the People initiative:
“We’re looking to develop and
strengthen the @one Alliance –
the new organisation and
new roles become
opportunities for people to
develop and grow within
the business.We want
people to ask us questions
and make sure they are fully
engaged and comfortable
with that process.”
Mark Froggatt, Engineering
Manager, who leads the
Benefit by Design initiative:
“We all have a starring
role in AMP6.You don’t
have to be a genius to
come up with a good
idea – you just need the
wherewithal to raise a
good idea.”
TAKING THE
INITIATIVETheafternoonsessioninvolvedinteractive
standshighlightingthebenefitsofthe
eightinitiativesthatwillhelpustodeliver
theefficiencysavingsweneedtomeetin
AMP6.onespoketotheinitiativeleads
tofindoutwhatthesemeantoeveryone
workingatthe@oneAlliance:
Andy Flowerday, @one Alliance Board Member and Managing
Director of Barhale: “Look forward and enjoy it – AMP6 is
a challenge to revel in, rather than one to worry about.”
Someofourtiertwosupplychainpartnersattendedtheevent,including
GPSPEPipeSystems,Meps,MCL,HaighandREDPublications.Someof
themsharedtheirthoughtswithus:
VernonIngham,WRIQualityCoordinator:“It was an exiting and clearly delivered message,
outlining the focus needed to meet the challenge of the new AMP.The AnglianWater AMP6
programme ensures we continue to move forward as leaders in the water industry.”
KerryLeyland,WRNICloseoutCoordinator:“The day was very interactive and engaging.”
PaulWood,SiteManager,WRNI:“From a site-based opinion, it’s important that we continue in the
way we do things and by portraying and reflecting the AnglianWater approach, as well as our
own company’s attitude towards the environment in which we work.”
SarahCharman,PeopleDevelopmentSupport:“The highlight of the day was the Benefit by Design
initiative and especially the way the @one Alliance is using technology to aid projects.”
one Issue 23 • April 201512 oneIssue 23 • April 2015 13
Short for‘total expenditure’,Totex, which the water industry economic regulator Ofwat
is introducing in AMP6, is a combination of capital (Capex) and operational (Opex) costs
and refers to the total investment in an asset throughout its lifespan.
During AMP5, the @one Alliance
met its efficiency targets and
delivered a huge number of projects
for AnglianWater – and now, in
AMP6, we want to do things even
better. And in order to do this, we
need to continually improve our
business processes.
“The aim of the Continuous
Improvement team is to provide
everyone in the @one Alliance
with the resources, expertise and
dedicated end-to-end, project-
focused support to help realise
the efficiency challenges and
objectives,”explained Business
Improvement Manager,
John Podmore.
“Through the Production
initiative, we aim to provide a
centralised function for all the other
initiatives and the programme
areas to eliminate waste,
improve processes and promote
a collaborative approach to
improvement; therefore positively
contributing towards the major cost
drivers of AMP6.”
Customerfocused
The Continuous Improvement
team has gone through its own
transformation programme
over the last three months and
Innovation
There are great opportunities
with the implementation
ofTotex: it benefits the
@one Alliance by encouraging
innovative thinking and
sustainable solutions, it benefits
our client AnglianWater as it
offers the opportunity for more
economic solutions to deliver
outcomes, and ultimately it
should benefit our customers
by driving efficiency to help
lower bills.
Efficiencies
Graham Fulton,Totex
Programme Leader, said:“We
know bringing Opex and Capex
together can drive efficiencies for
AMP6 and beyond. It means we
can collectively do the right thing
for our assets, our customers and
our business.”
There are some key elements
toTotex: clear leadership and
setting consistent business
goals, collaboration and
working together internally and
externally, turning data into
better business information
and making true whole life
value decisions.
As part of theTotex strategy,
the‘blue box’pilot scheme was
A‘new and improved’carbon and water footprinting
modeller has been developed for AMP6.This will
help us to support AnglianWater in reducing our
carbon and water footprint and save money by
understanding carbon and water in design.
The modeller will help engineers identify designs
that are low in embodied and operational carbon,
now comprises Production
Managers, Assistant Production
Managers and a newly formed
role of Production Improvement
Technician – providing a healthy
mix of experience, expertise and
enthusiasm, with a clear customer-
focused mind-set and capability
across a wide range of improvement
disciplines.
“We are effectively starting from
scratch to build up confidence
in our process and approach,”
explained John.
Backtobasics
“The period prior to the start of
AMP6 provided the opportunity
to understand what the business
actually needs and wants from a
continuous improvement function.
It was clear that we needed to
go back to basics and focus our
approach on what people need
to deliver the business plan.The
messages we received back were
loud and clear – we need your
expertise and support, but we
need to see and understand the
value you provide.”
Delivering
The team’s main challenge is to
make sure that all individuals
and teams in the @one Alliance
are, and remain, the central
focus throughout the journey of
delivering the efficiency targets.
“This involves breaking down
the process of continuous
improvement into easy to
understand process steps – a
method of operation if you like
– that we all can use effectively,”
explained John.
“From initial engagement,
through to the realisation of
benefits for individuals and
teams in order to meet the
@one Alliance targets, we can
provide the tools and techniques to
identify waste, solve problems and
help lead change through every
transformational step.
“This is all underpinned by
training, coaching and mentoring
activities we will provide to enable
people to proactively improve
through the AMP6 journey.”
Success for the Continuous
Improvement team will be realised
through the physical delivery
of projects from beginning to
end, continued engagement
opportunities from people across
the @one Alliance, and positive
referrals and enquiries to establish
new improvement projects.
Collaboration
“Our reward and recognition, which
is what motivates and drives us on,
will come from simply seeing the
improvements we have helped
develop and deliver integrated
collaboratively within the @one
Alliance,”said John.
“The progress we have already
achieved over the last few months
is extremely exciting.The initial
feedback received – and‘pull’
created – from both the Integrated
Project Leaders (IPLs) and the
Initiative Leads, is telling us that we
are moving in the right direction:
a clear motivator to continuously
improve ourselves.
“There is still a long way
to go, but through our initial
change process we are aiming to
provide an enthusiastic, dynamic,
pragmatic and delivery-focused
team approach to production
management and continuous
improvement.”
Meet the team tasked with
improving our businessCost-effective solution
Next top model(ler)
“The progress
we have already
achieved over the
last few months
is extremely
exciting. The initial
feedback received
is telling us that
we are moving in
the right direction:
a clear motivator
to continuously
improve ourselves.”
JohnPodmore,
Business
Improvement
Manager.
Fastfacts
• The team’s fresh approach
to continuous improvement
is based around some of
the key principles of project
management – planning,
delivery, benefits realisation
and communication – all
underpinned by a clear drive
towards developing a High
PerformingTeam structure.
• Each project they deliver is
categorised at the start based
on complexity, priority, benefits
realisation, collaboration and best
practice transfer, offering the best
possible value-added support
within exacting timescales.
• The team is developing an
@one Alliance manual for
continuous improvement,
supported by an internal training
and development programme
that will be rolled out as part of
project delivery to everyone in
the @one Alliance.
The Continuous Improvement team is on hand
to help every team and individual in the
@one Alliance to realise their key objectives and
meet the key efficiency challenges in AMP6 and
beyond. onespoke to them to find out more about
what they do – and how they can help you.
Formoreinformation,pleasecontact
DavidRileyon07921095796,email
driley3@anglianwater.co.uk,orphone
AnnaTotterdellon07889589675or
emailaTotterdell@anglianwater.co.uk
which will help meet the Love Every Drop goals,
outcomes and outcome delivery incentives (ODIs).
Look out for the release of the new modeller this
month and sign up to one of the communication and
training events about how to use the modeller.These
will be running throughout the AnglianWater region
once the modeller has been released.
which lasts a lifetime
Graham Fulton,Totex
Programme Leader.
From left to right: Kirsty-Ann Cairns, David Newsome, HollyWilson, Nyree Stanley,
Mike Betts, John Podmore, Dodie Honisett, BrendanTully and Lynne Hamilton.
“Weknowbringing
OpexandCapex
togethercandrive
efficienciesforAMP6
andbeyond.Itmeans
wecancollectivelydo
therightthingforour
assets,ourcustomers
andourbusiness.”
Programme Management,
AnglianWater Services, said:
“The blue box process is now
embedded at the heart of
Asset Management with a fully
resourced team focused on
developing solution strategies
for the delivery routes.
Collaboration
“Working collaboratively
with delivery routes and the
operational parts of Anglian
Water, theTotex approach
has enabled solutions that
challenge historic approaches
to capital delivery, resulting in
efficiencies and reducing the
risk to AnglianWater.
“As the Blue Box process
andTotex thinking develops
during the coming year, more
innovative and operational
solutions will be identified
driving greater efficiencies.”
developed by AnglianWater
in collaboration with the
@one Alliance to discover how
we evaluate business risks and
find the best whole life value
solution strategies.The initial
success of the pilot has meant it’s
become a permanent feature of
how we will operate in AMP6.
Optioneering
“The blue box defines the
solution strategy, then the
preferred solution gets identified
downstream after undertaking
more detailed analysis and
‘optioneering’with the business,”
explained Graham.
“However, it challenges
traditional thinking and
behaviour, so it’s not been a
straightforward change and
it will take time to turn
things around.”
Paul Harrison, Head of
•FROM
NEED
IDENTIFICATION THROUGH TO
DE
LIVERY•
AMP6THEWAYFORWARD
WE NEED
YOUTO MAKE
THE WHEELS
TURN
DM0
DM1
YOU
DELIVERY
SOLUTION
STRATEGY S
ELECTION
SOLUTION
STRATEGY DE
VELOPMENT
OPTIMISATIO
N
PR
IORITISATI
ON
RI
SK EVALUATI
ON
RI
SK INITIATI
ON
THE JOURNEY
HAS BEGUN
one Issue 23 • April 201514 oneIssue 23 • April 2015 15
Your
fundraising
During AMP5, colleagues at the
@one Alliance raised around £12,000
forWaterAid. However, this doesn’t
include our involvement and support
for AnglianWater’s mainWaterAid
events such as the annualWaterAid
Ball, Rutland Regatta, Race Night
and other events, all of which add
hundreds of thousands of pounds to
that figure.
So congratulations to everyone
who either took part in one of the
fundraisers or sponsored a colleague
who did – you really have made a
difference to people’s lives.
There are many moreWaterAid
events scheduled for 2015 and
beyond and we hope to smash that
total in AMP6.
But where do the funds end up,
and what does it mean for those
people the charity helps?
We take clean and accessible
drinking water and flushing toilets for
granted, but there are many people in
the world who don’t have this luxury.
WaterAid’s work is helping to
change the lives of thousands of
people in Africa who don’t have
access to clean or running water
or sanitation.
Take the case of a village in Uganda,
whereWaterAid funded a borehole
to be constructed to pump clean
water. Previously, the villagers only
had a murky swamp from which to
Congratulations to Stuart Collins,
Contract Administrator in the
Finance and Performance team,
who has gained membership of
the Royal Institute of Chartered
Surveyors (RICS).
Stuart,whohasworkedforthe
@oneAllianceforfiveyears,saysthat
hehasalwayshadaspirations
tobecomechartered,whichhe
achievedthroughhardworkandalot
ofstudyinganddedicationoveran
18-monthperiod.
Stuartsaid:“Goingforaprofessional
qualificationtakesalotofhardwork
andself-motivation;it’snoteasy,
butisworthitwhenyouachievea
successfuloutcomeasit’sarecognised
worldwidequalification.”
Your feedback shows that you
enjoy perusing the pages of one
magazine – and now it’s proven to
be an award-winning read.
onetook the top prize of Class
Winner at this year’s IoIC Central
and North Awards, beating off
tough competition from the likes
of NorthumbrianWater and
EDF Energy.
We work hard to make sure
that oneis closely aligned to the
Ahoy there, all you hearty @one Alliance crews –
it’s time to dust off your paddles in preparation for
the ninth Rutland Regatta.
The event, which is being held on Rutland
Water on 18 June, offers you the chance to raise
an Armada (or team) together and raise funds for
WaterAid. Last year’s event raised a whopping
£49,000, so this year we want to smash that total.
@one Alliance partners, AnglianWater
employees and suppliers can mingle and cheer on
their teams from the shoreline, or battle it out on
Colleagues
celebrate
There’s only onewinner
ReadyfortheRegatta?
Nicole Synan, from AnglianWater, who visited
aWaterAid project in Uganda last year to see
how funds raised were being put to good use.
We are the champions: Editor GrantTuffs (left) and Andy Douse,
Director of RED Publications (right), accept the award.
access their water, so they are very
proud of their pump and are now
responsible for the borehole’s
maintenance. More importantly,
this clean water helps keep them –
and their livestock – healthy.
strategy of the @one Alliance and
the judges agreed, saying:“The
goals and strategy are really well
defined. It’s good to see that the
majority of readers want more.”
one’seditor, Customer and
Communication Manager Grant
Tuffs, said:“I’m delighted to see
how successful the magazine is and
I’m looking forward to its future
success, especially with its refreshed
new look.”
the water in a number of racing activities.
Get your engineering thinking caps on to
come up with a design for a plastic bottle boat, or
gather your colleagues together for the popular
kayak and raft building races. If your sea legs have
deserted you, there are plenty of land-based
activities for you and your team to have a go at.
Therearecountlessmorestorieslikethis.Formoreinformation,visit
www.wateraid.org.ukwhereyoucandonatemoney,orkeepaneyeoutfor
fundraisingeventsaroundthe@oneAlliance.
makes a difference!
Letusknowifyouhaveachievedaprofessionalaccreditationorifyouare
undertakingacareerdevelopmentcourse.PhoneGrantTuffson01733414108or
emailgTuffs@anglianwater.co.uk
Togetyourteaminvolved,orforfurtherdetails,pleasecontactCarolineBrown,CarlyKellardor
BobbySamelak-PainatAnglianWaterRutlandR@anglianwater.co.uk
Meanwhile,hats
offtoTechnicalDeliveryManager
EmmanuelIwuamadi,whohas
becomeamemberofTheInstitution
ofCivilEngineers(ICE).
Emmanuel,whohasworkedfor
the@oneAllianceforfouryears,said:
“Beingchartereddemonstratesthat
youareprofessionallycompetent
througheducation,trainingand
practice.Withthiscomesthebenefit
ofimprovedcareerprospects,earning
powerandrecognitionofexpertise.
“Myengineeringknowledgeand
professionalskillgivesmetheabilityto
lead,manageandmakeindependent
judgementstosuccessfullydealwith
dailywork-relatedissues.”
News flashes
To celebrateWorldWater Day
in March, colleagues inThorpe
Wood House took part in a fun
quiz night and raffle, organised
by Philip Steer, CADTechnician
and Michelle Holt, Closeout
Manager. A whopping £366
was raised, so thank you to
everyone who got involved.
In April, 570 guests, including
many @one Alliance
colleagues, partner companies
and suppliers, enjoyed a‘night
at the movies’at the annual
Anglian
Water
WaterAid
Ball, raising
a record
breaking
£410,000!
one Issue 23 • April 201516

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V8-one-April_2015-magazine

  • 1. Theaward-winningmagazinefrom theAnglianWater@oneAlliance Issue23•April2015 All onboard! Collaborating at the AMP6 induction event. Pages 12 and 13. What no water? Teams rise to the challenge. Page 4. Findoutaboutourtunnellingchallengein MarketHarborough.Page5 Digging deep for our customers
  • 2. 02 Welcome to our new look one magazine, which has not only been refreshed to reflect some of the strategies we are adopting across the @one Alliance during AMP6, but is also now an award winner, taking away one of the top prizes at the recent Institute of Internal Communications (IoIC) awards. It still retains plenty of interesting and exciting stories and features about what is happening across the @one Alliance; however, we’ve listened to what you said in the recent reader survey and have included more projects and site-based views on stories, such as in our feature on the Caistor St Edmunds incident on page 4. In this spring issue, we also report on how we performed in AMP5, hitting our targets and coming up with some innovative ideas which we’ll be developing throughout AMP6 and beyond. We find out how a tricky tunnelling project in Market Harborough really engaged the community, especially the pupils at a local school. We catch up with Richard George, Head of Operations, who tells us why the Injury Free Environment (IFE) approach to health and safety is so important for all colleagues to adopt, and discover the benefits ofTotex and how the Blue Box gives visibility across the AMP6 programme. We meet the Continuous Improvement team and find out how they can help colleagues across the @one Alliance with their projects. Please remember that oneis your magazine, so if you have any stories or pictures that you would like to see in the next edition, I’d love to hear from you. Please give me a call on 01733 414 108 or email gTuffs@anglianwater.co.uk GrantTuffs, Customer and Communications Manager. We put ourselves up against it – in terms of the amount of work that had to be done in the last few months – but yet again teams have worked incredibly hard to deliver a successful year-end. We have efficiently and effectively delivered more than 850 projects between April 2010 and April 2015, with no more than two or three outstanding and being completed as I write this introduction. We have hit our base targets and stretch targets for efficiency, which means we will deliver a positive financial programme pool for our partner companies.These are really good results, given how tough the affordability challenge was in AMP5. Don’t forget we have fronted up to and achieved affordability targets of between 20 and 30 per cent over the five years. We’ve been saying for some time that ‘carbon’ has been the defining target in AMP5.We hit our 50 per cent reduction in embodied carbon Your @one Alliance Health and Safety Passport is valid for four and a half years, so if yours has expired – or if you are new to the organisation – you’ll need to go through an induction or refresher course to get a new one. Etton, our former training centre, is closing at the end of April, so the new location for training is the College of West Anglia in Wisbech. The college boasts a new state-of-the-art Technology Centre, housing superb facilities for engineering and construction, plus an excellent classroom environment and an improved experience for all delegates attending the induction. “We not only delivered over 850 projects for AnglianWater, but if we look at AMP5 overall, we have met the required efficiency and cost targets in a challenging environment,”said Keith Blair, Head of Commercial and Performance. “The new commercial model has worked with a reduced fee and a target cost arrangement which has driven outperformance and delivered benefits to both AnglianWater and the partners. It just goes to show what can be achieved by adopting a collaborative, open book, transparent, cross-partner environment and by all working together to a common goal.” Efficiencies The 50 per cent carbon efficiencies were delivered, which at the beginning of AMP5 would have seemed like one of the hardest challenges we’ve faced. “It just shows what we can hope to achieve in AMP6, when we want to make a further 10 per cent carbon saving,”said Keith. We developed our standard This newsletter is printed on Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) paper, which means it comes from responsible sources that support the conservation of forests and wildlife, while helping people to lead better lives. Performance 476Km 142,794tonnes ofrenewedor newmainslaid. 51.9%ofembodiedcarbonsavedforthewholeAMP 902 2 3 4 5 projectsthrough Gateway5 AFRfortherolling 12-monthperiod. 0.05 Rising to the challenge Make sure you get your passport to safety great shape! Haveyougot newsforus? halfway through this year and we’ve maintained that position ever since.We now know that a lot of the efficiency we have delivered has come from driving carbon out of our solutions. Our approach and our progress on carbon reduction is recognised throughout the industry and our peers are genuinely taken aback at the progress we’ve made. We’ve embraced the carbon challenge, demonstrating to the industry that reducing carbon reduces costs. I’m proud of our track record and the achievements we’ve made in AMP5.They’ve given us a great platform to tackle the challenges awaiting us in AMP6. Because the two programmes of work have overlapped, there hasn’t been time to stop and reflect on what we’ve achieved, so I’d like to take this opportunity to really thank everyone for their hard work, commitment and enthusiasm over the last five years. Dale Evans Director @one Alliance So we’ve reached the end of the AMP5 programme and I am incredibly proud of what we have achieved over the past five years – and how we have finished the AMP period. To book your place, contact the People Development team on 01733 414 316 or email imwc-induction@anglianwater.co.uk product capabilities and off-site building, which has enabled us to be innovative in delivering large projects such as Cambridge more quickly and efficiently – and we adopted this method of construction more as AMP5 went on. Safety “The introduction of product lifecycle management (PLM) on some projects has proved a great benefit in not only helping to design and construct the projects in an efficient and safe manner, but to demonstrate the end product to AnglianWater’s operational staff before it is built,” said Keith. We implemented a new‘plan for stage’process, which has provided a focus for all interested parties and stakeholders to efficiently identify plan and agree what is required at each stage of the project. We have also fully embraced AnglianWater’s‘Risk andValue’ process, where at every single stage of a project we stand back and assess if we have done it the best way and look at how we can do things better. It’s all about looking at the way we do things differently and has led to us achieving significant efficiencies throughout the AMP. Delivering We also delivered 80 per cent of value of procurement via our new capital cost management system (CCMS).This has resulted in 80 per cent of the value of everything that was bought being procured through AnglianWater directly. “All of the above were milestone achievements throughout AMP5 and will be further developed in AMP6 to build on the success they achieved in AMP5,”explained Keith. Ontrack “If we look at delivery and gain share for our partners, we have ended AMP5 in a very positive situation and on an excellent footing. However, there’s room for improvement in AMP6 and we want to do it all again but better and better. If we meet the efficiency challenges, we’ll be on track to deliver AMP6 within Anglian Water’s and the @one Alliance partners’aspirations.” We’ve crossed the finishing line in The @one Alliance ended AMP5 on an excellent footing, meeting the challenges and targets that we were tasked with between 2010 and 2015, and achieving new ways of working that will be taken on board in AMP6. “The introduction of product lifecycle management (PLM) on some projects has proved a great benefit in not only helping to design and construct the projects in an efficient and safe manner, but to demonstrate the end product to Anglian Water’s operational staff before it is built.” KeithBlair,HeadofCommercial andPerformance Richard George Date of issue: 01/04/15 In case of emergency please contact: Work Safely Induction Produced by Publications (S-511) – 01904 479 500 1 £14million belowaffordabilityfor projectspostGateway2. 54.4%(38,281tonnes)inthelastrolling12months. 56.2%(14,604tonnes)ofoperationalcarbonsavedforAMP5with Year5figures88%(2,058tonnes)saved. propertiesoffof theDG5flooding register. 201 C02 fast facts one Issue 23 • April 20152 oneIssue 23 • April 2015 3
  • 3. While AnglianWater’s customers in Market Harborough’s town centre carried on with their daily lives, just several metres below their feet an enormous manned tunnelling machine was boring through the earth as part of a £1.5 million flood alleviation scheme to reduce the risk of surface water flooding in the town. The Tunnel Boring Machine (TBM) was lowered into a six-metre drill pit, which was then driven on a 100-metre, laser-guided journey under the town’s streets by @one Alliance Tunnel Boring Machine operator Jamie Warren, one of only a few people in the country qualified to operate this machine. Two tunnels were drilled beneath the town’s streets to make space for a new surface water sewer pipe, which was laid behind theTBM as it travelled. AnglianWater and the @one Alliance worked alongside Harborough District Council, the Highways Authority and business representatives in the town to plan the work and minimise disruption to the public and customers, and also liaised with the Environment Agency and the RiverWelland Trust for consent to work in the river. Project Engineer Nick Randall said: “Undertaking a major tunnelling operation in such a restricted working area in the middle of a busy town centre was challenging as we wanted to minimise disruption to the public and maintain access to local businesses. We also had to shut one of the main roads through the town centre, which leads to one of the main car parks. “This scheme was also important in order to hit ourYear 5 Ofwat obligation to remove properties from the DG5 flooding register. “However, it has been a real success, showing the benefits of putting in time and effort for substantial, well-thought-out public relations. Considering the location and the type of work being undertaken, we had very few complaints. As long as the public are well informed in advance of a project and understand the need for the work, they are more patient with the disruption.” Children from local schools were invited to name one of the tunnelling machines, and 10-year-old Frazer, a pupil from Market Harborough Church of England School, came up with the winning moniker,‘Diglet’. In February, Frazer’s class was invited to the site to see‘Diglet’ unveiled, as well as learning about engineering and the project itself. “The children seemed to really enjoy seeing Diglet and learning about the work we’re doing and why,” said Nick. “Giving the drill a name has proved really popular with the team working on the project. All of us just call it Diglet rather than a drill as we would on most similar projects. The name is incredibly catchy. “Hopefully we’ve inspired the children and who knows, maybe some will go on to be engineers of the future.” Customer and Communications Manager, GrantTuffs, added: “This was a great example of community engagement in a potentially difficult setting. It was great to involve schoolchildren, to see what we do in their community.” Pullingtogethertohelp Fastfacts • The scheme was started in November 2014 and finished in March. • The affordability cost was £1,411,000; the solution cost was £1,356,000. • Tier two and tier three suppliers involved included: Randall Surveys LLP XylemWater Solutions UK Ltd Ham Baker Adams Ltd Savills (UK) Ltd “Undertaking a major tunnelling operation in such a restricted working area in the middle of a busy town centre was challenging as we wanted to minimise disruption to the public and maintain access to local businesses.” Nick Randall, Project Engineer. ‘Boring’project isfloodedwithgreatresponsesfrom our customers At a time of year that should be relaxing and full of cheer, an incident like this can cause real upset and inconvenience to so many families. The water treatment works went down on 28 December, and as the damaged main was six metres beneath waterlogged ground, it was clear from the start that this was going to require a large mobilisation of colleagues and partners, as swiftly as possible. However, with a total of 220 people rolling their sleeves up to help – including 170 working on site – the burst was brought under control within a day, with colleagues working throughout the night. Karl Beaton, Design Manager, explained:“The first I heard of it was when I saw it on the local news. As I walked into work the next morning, Engineering Manager Mark Froggatt invited me to go along to the site, to see how we could help. Teams from Kier, Barhale and MWH were already working alongside Anglian Water Operations to fit a replacement pipe, but Mark and I wanted to offer support from a design and engineering perspective. “When we got there, we worked together with the guys to secure a temporary pipeline. The work was very exacting, so Mark and I offered additional technical advice to help the process run as smoothly as possible. We worked through the day and into the night, until finally, at 2am, we finished. It was the end of the day for Mark and me, but some of the guys working on the pipeline stayed on. Their dedication and commitment to getting the line fixed, and restoring normality to the families affected, was second to none.” Mark agreed:“The success at Caistor St Edmunds is testament to the professionalism of the team. It really is a pleasure to work with people who understand the role they play, and how it fits into the bigger picture of what they need to achieve as a team. Everyone was on the same page that day and the process was quite organic – very quickly, we became a well-oiled machine, working together to get the job done. “As Karl says, we were there for that bit of extra guidance and to help make sure that everything was done as safely and efficiently as possible. I love my job – it makes me very proud to see the sheer hardiness of the guys we have on site, and the effort they put in to what they do. There is no doubt that the Caistor incident would not have been fixed so quickly if it wasn’t for them.” At the very end of December 2014, a water treatment works that supplies 5,000 homes in Caistor St Edmunds, rural Norfolk, went down. However, thanks to a group of dedicated @one Alliance colleagues and some of our partners and suppliers, it wasn’t long before the burst was under control. Mark Badcock, Foreman (Barhale): “Although there were three teams working on site, there was a real sense of everyone pulling together for the same cause. Realising so many people were without water was our motivation to get the job done.” Jake Paul: Open Cut Ganger (Barhale): “There were no dramas – we all knew what we had to do and just got on with it. It helped that we all had the same work ethic to do the best job as efficiently as possible.” TerryWoods: General Foreman (Barhale): “I can sum up the atmosphere on site in three words: Great team spirit. We worked through the night to secure a temporary fix before the incident escalated, and we were still smiling by the end of it!” the community one Issue 23 • April 20154 5oneIssue 23 • April 2015
  • 4. As we start out on our exciting expedition into AMP6, onemeets the @one Alliance Management Team (AMT) to find out what they think are the key challenges for AMP6 – and how we can meet those challenges to make the next five years a success. Dale Evans, Director @one Alliance Ihavebeenwiththe@oneAlliancesinceourinceptionin2004.AMP6willbemythirdregulatoryperiodasthe @oneAllianceDirector,andtheopportunitiesforustokeepsettingnewbenchmarksforourindustryseemasgreatasever. We have set ourselves up for a strong start to AMP6 – we have worked to align with the outcomes in AnglianWater’s business plan and the new Outcome Delivery Incentives (ODIs); the @one Alliance partners have worked together to develop a strong delivery plan, and we already have over £150 million of AMP6 work underway. There’s much to do, but we’ve made a good start to what will be an exciting AMP. Richard George, Head of Operations This is a new team that brings together construction, health and safety, commissioning, DAMs and aftercare to provide coordinated and consistent support to delivery teams, driving together to hit the efficiencies we need. Having come from a construction and commercial background and spent years in another high-performance driven culture, I’m really enjoying the @one Alliance, working with the other operations teams, and I’m looking forward to the challenges ahead. We’ll be building on the great work in AMP5 to create integrated and efficient delivery teams involving all stakeholders – from the start of a project pre-DM1, and including Anglian Water Operations – to make sure that the output and product deliver for them consistently. We have all the right ingredients for a really successful AMP. Craig Repton, Programme Area Manager Infrastructure I’ve worked in the infrastructure utility sector for 26 years and joined the @one Alliance in May 2012 from my‘home’ organisation, Balfour Beatty. I have overall accountability and responsibility for the successful delivery of bothWater and Water Recycling Infrastructure, ensuring that the outcomes and outputs are met for all parties concerned within the @one Alliance. During AMP6 our focus must be on meeting our objectives, giving confidence to our client by delivering on our promises, and looking after our people ensuring everyone goes home safe. My key initiatives are to embrace the great work done within the @one Alliance to date and create a delivery model that is best for task that consistently delivers outperformance, reduces waste and maximises efficiency.We have a great opportunity to create an environment where people feel valued and engaged. 
 James Crompton, Programme Area Manager Water Non-Infrastructure I have worked for the @one Alliance for five and a half years and have been a member of the AMT during this time. My partner company is AnglianWater Asset Delivery. I am extremely passionate about delivery and high performance. I want to exploit what we have learnt about build off-site, production management and design and really build and excel on these principles so all of the @one Alliance can achieve success in AMP6. For me, the biggest challenges in AMP6 are around ensuring all of our delivery strategies are consistently fit for purpose, appropriate and exploit all the key initiatives to the full.We need to ensure we always run at maximum efficiency. Ian Hutchinson, Programme Area Manager Water Recycling Non-Infrastructure I am new to the @one Alliance, having worked overseas for the past seven years. My partner company is MWH. I am particularly excited about working in the @one Alliance and meeting the challenges and opportunities that AMP6 brings us. I am passionate about getting the best out of people and developing a safe, positive working environment where people feel empowered to challenge the status quo. AMP6 is going to take a great effort from all of us if we are going to exceed the efficiency challenge but during my short time here, I have been constantly surprised by what we can all achieve when we work together. John Podmore, Business Improvement Manager I am brand new to the AMT, having only started with the @one Alliance in January 2015. My parent company is Balfour Beatty. I have over 10 years’experience of living and breathing the end-to-end leadership challenges of change – and the business functionality that supports it – and an enthusiastic, dynamic, pragmatic and delivery-focused leadership approach to production management and continuous improvement. I think the biggest challenges we face in AMP6 are making sure that all our people are, and remain, the central focus throughout the journey of change, and delivering the Business Plan efficiencies confidently and credibly year-on-year. Tracey Goddard, Organisational Development Manager I joined the @one Alliance in October and was appointed to the AMT in January. I am responsible for the PeopleTeam, Communication and Customer. I’ve been with MWH for almost 20 years. Before joining the @one Alliance, I led MWH’s AMP6 Design and Construct bids for a number of client frameworks, including MWH’s bid for @one Alliance Integrated MainWorks Capital framework, and have managed several transition and cultural change programmes within the water industry. Organisational development is about changing and strengthening our @one Alliance and its capability, creating the right culture and environment for delivering our AMP6 programme. To achieve this, I see three key challenges: ensuring we have the right people, improving the way that we communicate and embedding customer-centric behaviours and a service culture into everything we do. Keith Blair, Head of Commercial and Performance I am new to the AMT, having joined in September 2014 when I took over from John Karolski, and I am a director for Turner &Townsend. I have over 35 years’experience in the construction industry, during which I have built an extensive commercial knowledge from managing projects and programmes across a number of sectors. The biggest challenges for AMP6 are bringing about a step change in commercial performance that is applied consistently across the whole of the @one Alliance.The improvement is in two parts – firstly, in improving the commercial function to be more efficient and making decisions that are risk based on making the right commercial choice; secondly, in bringing commercial awareness to the front of people’s minds throughout the @one Alliance so that everybody is commercially aware of the impact of their decisions and actions. Mark Froggatt, Engineering Manager I joined the @one Alliance five years ago and I’ve been a member of the AMT for nearly two and a half years. My home organisation is MWH. I wish to continue to nurture a desire for excellence in design, building a team who challenge what and how we deliver to ensure we offer the best and most efficient solution. We need to constantly challenge ourselves to be more efficient. In the past few years, we have radically changed how we deliver and AMP6 needs even more innovation. The biggest challenge for AMP6 is to avoid changing everything – far from it.We need to look at what we do as a leading organisation, as we do things well – but it just needs to be done better. The AMP6 approach needs to combine strengthening what we do well to make it even better, with some radical challenges in other areas.This makes for an exciting time ahead. The team leading the way on our AMP6 adventure one Issue 23 • April 20156 oneIssue 23 • April 2015 7
  • 5. On the map The @one Alliance was mandated to protect 12 operational water sites in the Lincoln Supply Region under the Security and Emergency Measures Direction Operational Water Programme. The SEMD solutions consisted of the installation of new security fencing with perimeter intruder detection systems and new security kiosks, along with security- rated building hardening products. The works varied in size and complexity, ranging from a new 1.3km-long security fence and CCTV system at ElshamWaterTreatment Works, to minor civils and security-rated hatch cover installation at Burnham Water Reservoir. Working collaboratively with Supply Manager Jon Pawson and his operational team, we relocated sample pumps at Retford into a previously unused building, undertaking improvement works not only to protect the pumps, but to provide a solution that will increase the lifetime of the existing assets. The construction team, led by Colin Horrocks, worked extremely hard in tough conditions through the winter months to deliver the programme to an excellent standard, outperforming the targets the team were set. Combined embodied carbon is forecast at 239 tCO2 e against a baseline of 1,270 tCO2 e with the operational carbon forecast at 2.0 tCO2 e against a baseline of 211 tCO2 e.This produces a huge reduction of 81 per cent and 99 per cent respectively. Forecast out-turn cost for the work is currently £2,277,000 against an approved solution cost of £2,612,000 and affordability of £4,468,000. The installation works have been completed and output claimed ahead of the 31 March 2015 obligation date. SEMD Operational Water Programme – Elsham DeliveredbytheSEMDteam Louth Eastgate DG5 flood alleviation scheme Water Recycling Infrastructure A major DG5 flood alleviation scheme to protect homes from flooding in Louth, Lincolnshire, was started early August 2014 with a £1.2 million investment. Twenty-one properties were identified at locations in Eastgate as being affected by flooding on the DG5 register.The flooding was due to local incapacity of the trunk sewer serving Eastgate and exacerbated by downstream surcharge. Consent was obtained from the Environment Agency (EA) to install a new combined sewer overflow to the river Lud. Following extensive hydraulic modelling and consultations with the EA, the team managed to successfully agree a final solution and gain consent to discharge screened flows to the river. The final solution option included a new CSO (combined sewer overflow) chamber with a 10m long weir, from the existing surcharged trunk sewer into 68m of new 900mm outfall sewer discharging to the river. As part of the EA agreement to discharge to the river, we were tasked with reducing spills in other areas of the town to cause no detriment. A new pump station with 25m3 storage was proposed to reduce existing CSO spills upstream of our new CSO. The main construction challenges were building such a large CSO structure on a busy highway, which forms one of the main entrances into the town.Works were carefully planned with extensive public engagement such as press releases, radio and local news. Local residents were kept informed and business owners were visited face to face.The work was planned to avoid disrupting the Christmas trading period. Work started in August 2014 and continued until spring 2015, breaking from 1 December until the NewYear to avoid the Christmas trading period. In agreement with the Highways Agency, work resumed on 13 February and the team is aiming to complete the scheme in early May 2015. Clacton Water Recycling Centre Water Recycling Non-Infrastructure The water recycling centre at Clacton (Holland Haven) has been a failing works for a while, and AnglianWater have been working closely with the Environment Agency to ensure that they are fully briefed and agreed with the improvements and timescales to the works. The @one Alliance were challenged in August 2014 to deliver a scheme that gave the works resilience against the seasonal and fluctuating flows by the end of AMP5.The project team worked closely with Operations and Local Delivery from AnglianWater and the supply chain to identify the root causes, risks and solutions needed. The whole team was unified in developing solutions that would be best for the works within the timescale. By engaging early with suppliersWaveneys and MaxWright, they were able to plan the design effectively and reduce delivery timescales and cost. The team used 3D scanning to help design the replacement pumps and new aeration pipework.This provided an accurate model developed without the need for taking the assets out of service or man-entry.This, in turn, reduced the man-hours required and removed the requirement for confined space entry. Work included replacing pumps, improving the forward flow to treatment and inlet screening reliability. The team also remodelled and redesigned the aeration tank systems, implemented a new poly dosing system, improved the ferric dosing capability and installed McKinney and Stamford baffles to the two final settlement tanks, which is a first on an AnglianWater asset. The scheme was delivered to programme and to budget, with the team working closely together to achieve the successful outcome. InSeptember2014,anemergencyrepair wascarriedouttoaburstonasix-inch concretewatermaininLowerBoddington. Asaresult,thevillagesofUpperandLower Boddingtonexperiencednowaterandlow pressureacrossthenetwork. Oneofthede-pressurisationsamples showedthepresenceofcoliforms. Resamplesweretaken,andsomeofthose containedpresumptivee-coli,soa‘Boil Water’noticewasissuedtopropertiesin UpperBoddington. Localisedre-chlorinationwascarriedout withinthenetworkandtransientloggers installedtodiscoverwhathadcaused theburst.Somebiologicalre-growthwas identifiedandthiswasputdowntolow chlorineresidualsattheextremitiesof thenetwork. Therootcauseofthesupply interruptionswastransienteffectsonthe networkcausedbyfixedspeedpumpsat ThorpeLodgeBooster. Anemergencyteamwasformedto provideasolutiontothelowchlorine residualwithinthenetwork.Theprojecthit thegroundrunningwithteammembers havingexperienceddeliveringsimilar urgentschemessuchasKirbyCane. Theprojectteamidentifiedthatthe hypochlorite-dosingunitinstalledat CranwellfortheCentralLincs Truckmainwasuseableand theplanwastore-locatethisatDeanshanger Reservoir,alongwithanammoniasulphate plantavailablefromNewspring. Thedesignfortheinstallationofallthis equipmentwascompletedinlessthan fourweeks,allowingtheprojectteamto commenceonsiteintheNewYear.The projectteamworkedcollaborativelywith AnglianWaterOperations,whohelpeddesign andimplementthesolution. Theonsiteconnectionstotheexisting largediametermainsweredeepandinvolved severalnighttimeshutdowns,withcareful planningandtimelycustomerengagement. Theemergencyresponsecouldnothave beendoneinsuchashortperiodwithout excellentcollaborationbetweenthe@one AllianceandAnglianWaterOperations. Thescheme,valuedat£1,400,000,was designedinfourweeksanddeliveredand commissionedin12weeks. Theembodiedcarbonis101tCO2 eagainsta targetof108tCO2 e. Buckingham Public Water Supply Zone Water Non-Infrastructure Lincoln Grantham Peterborough Thetford Braintree Ely King’s Lynn Hillington Thorpe Wood House Norwich Great Ellingham Great Yarmouth Lowestoft Ipswich Colchester Basildon Cambridge Moxhill Milton Keynes Northampton Daventry Huntingdon Grimsby Having completed more than 850 projects during AMP5, with many already planned in the programme for AMP6, here’s a snapshot of some of the recent projects on the map. Old Stratford Water Infrastructure The existing water supplies into Milton Keynes are almost at capacity, so a new 4.8km main is required to meet the proposed growth of up to an additional 28,000 houses by 2026. It will also provide security of supply in the event of failure of the existing 27-inch concrete main from the west. F&BTrenchless Solutions Ltd carried out two, 60m auger bores to allow the main to be sliplined under the river and Calverton Road.The pit was created in a community park, and was drilled in both directions at a depth of approximately 6m. The new main starts at the Old Stratford booster station. However, this site is now landlocked by commercial and housing development, so there is no route out of the booster site readily available for conventional mainlaying techniques. The solution was to pipe jack 115m under the development site using a 2.5m long digger shield with hydraulic arm and four rams, which pushed a series of 1,200mm concrete sleeves along the route.This then allowed the 900mm pipe to be sliplined through the duct. Laying a 4.5km pipeline, predominantly in fields during the winter months, was always going to be a challenge, but it was compounded by a large section of the route being in the flood plain. In order to work safely and efficiently, the last 800m will be completed in the summer, once the land has dried out.The main will be commissioned once this last section has been completed. The affordability was £2,933,000; the solution cost is £3,755,178, with the six-month construction period (October-March) extended to July 2015.The GW3 embodied carbon was calculated as1685 tCO2 e, against a baseline figure of 2010 tCO2 e. The designer was BSP Associates with F&BTrenchless Solutions Ltd carrying out the auger bore and pipe jack work. 8 9oneIssue 23 • April 2015 oneIssue 23 • April 2015
  • 6. Balfour Beatty is a specialist business within the global Balfour Beatty Group. They work with major energy and water providers within the UK and Ireland to create the vital infrastructure essential for modern life. With a head office in Sheffield, Balfour Beatty employs around 2,500 people and they joined the @one Alliance in 2004. They enjoy the collaborative culture of the @one Alliance and the knowledge sharing that drives innovative solutions for the sector. www.balfourbeatty.com Infrastructure specialist Barhale works UK-wide across the water, transport, energy and waste sectors, providing design, construction and maintenance services. The company employs around 800 people and has its head office inWalsall,West Midlands, as well as regional offices in Glasgow, Leeds, Peterborough andWatford.They also provide specialist services in tunnelling, steel fabrications and construction consumables distribution and support. Barhale is a proud partner of AnglianWater, having previously worked with the organisation on a number of projects prior to joining the @one Alliance in 2004. www.barhale.co.uk Grontmij is a leading European company in the consulting and engineering industry with world-class expertise in the fields of energy, highways and roads, sustainable buildings and water. Grontmij’s leading principle is Sustainability by Design and this enables their professionals to support clients in developing the built and natural environment. Established in 1915, Grontmij is listed on the NYSE Euronext stock exchange.The company ranks among Europe’s largest engineering consultancies and has a presence in the Netherlands, France, Denmark, Sweden, Belgium, United Kingdom, Germany, Poland,Turkey and China. Grontmij employ approximately 7,000 professionals around the world. In the UK, Grontmij employs around 700 people across three business lines of water and energy, planning and design and transportation and mobility.They have 11 UK offices, including the head office in Leeds. Grontmij, who joined the @one Alliance at the start of AMP4, are proud of the part they have played in helping the @one Alliance achieve success and they look forward to the challenge of building on this as the @one Alliance seeks enhanced ways of thinking and working in order to deliver the AMP6 strategic outcomes. www.grontmij.co.uk Mott MacDonald Bentley (MMB) was formed between JN Bentley and Mott MacDonald in 1999 to specifically offer a fully-integrated feasibility, design, construction and commissioning service. With a focus on delivering long-term programmes of work, MMB appreciates that a strategic focus, effective communication and flexibility in different models of working are important to support a trusted relationship with their clients. Their approach is based on thinking differently about projects: innovation and collaboration is central to the way they operate. Close integration between design, contract management and site teams, but also with client partners, subcontractors and other contract partners, is core to MMB’s success. www.jnbentley-mmb.co.uk MWH Global is dedicated to‘Building a BetterWorld’. As specialists in water, natural resources and transportation, MWH employees use innovative ideas and technology to help solve complex infrastructure and environmental challenges.This work is built on a nearly 200-year history during which MWH has delivered services from initial planning and design through construction, start-up and operations. Today, MWH employs more than 7,000 experts, including engineers, consultantsandconstructionprofessionalsin35countriesonsixcontinents. Each of these experts is committed to serving global communities through sustainable development and project delivery. MWH is a private, employee-owned company headquartered in Broomfield, Colorado. www.mwhglobal.com Skanska is one of the world’s 10 largest construction and project development companies, employing 53,000 employees in Europe, the US and Latin America, with headquarters in Stockholm, Sweden. In the UK, Skanska employs 5,200 people to deliver major construction and asset management projects across both the public and private sectors. As part of the @one Alliance for AMP6 Skanska will carry out the design of non-infrastructure schemes such as treatment works for both clean water and water recycling across the Anglian region. www.skanska.com Partnerships bode well for the future You’ll know all about your‘home organisation’, but what about the other partners in the @one Alliance going forward into AMP6? onegets a‘nutshell’view of who they are and what they do. Colleagues at the @one Alliance, including all the site teams, have a very strong awareness of the need to operate in a safe environment. Our principle is “we work safely or not at all”, supported by an underlying belief that everyone has a right to go home safe and well. This awareness was demonstrated in AMP5’s safety record, with an average accident frequency rate (AFR) of 0.05 against the target of 0.1. “However, even though the AMP5 safety stats look positive, we can never rest on our laurels. The reality is that we have still had some accidents, including four RIDDORs (reportable injuries) since October 2013 – this is four too many,”said Richard George, @one Alliance Head of Operations. “Those colleagues injured – including those with minor injuries such as cuts or bruises – are a real concern to us and prove a strong motivation for us never to become complacent when it comes to health and safety.” So for AMP6, the @one Alliance has introduced Injury Free Environment (IFE) to keep stretching us to achieve ever-safer working environments. “IFE is a separate initiative to health and safety – although they do work together,”explained Richard. “It’s a behavioural safety programme with a personal commitment, and promoting the concept of caring for each other in a potentially dangerous environment. “The crucial difference in the IFE approach to health and safety is that it starts with individuals – on site, in offices, even when driving or at home,”added Richard. “Its purpose is to elevate the awareness of safety and health in all our teams: to make this personal and important to individuals, and allow everyone to start their own journey to an injury-free environment. “We are in the process of building the programme for AMP6 and it will include elements of wellbeing, as well as safety.” An IFE Steering Group, chaired by our director Dale Evans, has been established, with a dedicated IFE Coordinator, Michael Doyle, and a number of IFE Champions across the business, driving the programme. To make sure everyone is on board with IFE, orientation sessions will be taking place, and everyone can expect an invitation as we move through the first few months of AMP6. “We hope that the IFE programme will help take our commitment to health and safety to a whole new level of understanding and achievement,” said Richard. “Everybody has the right to return home safely from work – this is a key principle for Anglian Water, the @one Alliance and all the partners.” Ecologist James Gilbert, who is part of the @one Alliance’s Enabling team, has come up with an innovative idea that will help us achieve some of Anglian Water’s key customer outcomes. His idea – a biodegradable tree guard – not only benefits the environment, but also supports AnglianWater’s zero waste goal, is a cost-effective solution and keeps sites looking like customers might expect. James, who submitted his idea to Think Space, AnglianWater’s online tool where people share innovative ideas, said: “I visit numerous sites and often see landscaped areas littered with plastic tubing from the standard plastic guards that were previously used on AnglianWater sites. Once the trees have established and outgrown the guards, no plan is actioned to clear the plastic left behind.” The biodegradable tree guard – which has since been used by Scouts and Guides who helped help plant a 200-metre hedgerow atWhitlingham Water Recycling Centre in Norfolk – will now be a standard product/ specification used on every capital scheme. Digging in with an environmental idea health & safety Taking a personal approach to Natural innovation: James Gilbert, Ecologist. “Those colleagues injured – including those with minor injuries such as cuts or bruises – are a real concern to us and prove a strong motivation for us never to become complacent when it comes to health and safety.” Richard George, @one Alliance Head of Operations. @one IFE: Making health and safety personal, relevant and important: ensuring our journey to living in an injury-free environment. AnglianWater Asset Delivery is the AnglianWater team represented in the @one Alliance. AnglianWater Asset Delivery provides skills and services than span across the whole Capital Delivery process. Unique services include modelling, commissioning, construction assurance and commercial assurance. These are complemented by other core competencies such as strong project management, performance management, enabling activities and technical design and standards. They are proud to be a key delivery partner to AnglianWater and enjoy working in the @one Alliance. www.anglianwater.co.uk one Issue 23 • April 201510 oneIssue 23 • April 2015 11
  • 7. AnglianWaterandthe@oneAlliancebelieve thatacomprehensiveinductionprocessiskey topreparingourpeopleforthesignificantly differentAMP6approachtodeliveringprojects. Keith Blair, Head of Commercial and Financial Performance, who leads the Commercial initiative: “Everyone has a role to play in being more commercially aware of what they do and how to be more efficient and drive that value for money we need.” Stephen Kennedy, Meps:“It gives us an understanding of what AnglianWater and the @one Alliance want to be and the meaning of the new initiatives. It enables us to see how we can work together to achieve what they want. It’s also a great opportunity to meet people and gain an understanding of the reorganisations as they are taking place.” BobWarren, GPS PE Pipe Systems: “I think it helps that we can show people our products. It’s good to be hands-on and meet people face to face.” “The next stage of the Onboarding journey is for people to be involved in the High PerformingTeams programme,”explained David Newsome. “This is ongoing at the moment, with the IPLs trialling the programme. IPLs are ensuring that the initiative efficiencies are being applied to their projects.The IT-based platform continues to be developed, and this will help new starters understand the processes and tools necessary to do their job in the most effective way.” Here’swhatsomeofthosewhoattendedthoughtoftheevent: Richard George, Head of Operations, who leads the Industrialised Construction initiative: “We need to get involvement of all the construction teams as early as we can in the design and development process. If we can get a programme team to find out what we are doing, the end user will understand what it is we are trying to build and buy into that early.” Aidan Hickey, AMP6 Programme Manager, who leads the Programme Management initiative: “We have got fantastic visibility for our AMP6 programme.We need to ‘plan before we do’and use the opportunities to create our delivery strategies for our programme in advance of us kicking the work off. The more planning we do, the more effective we are going to be.” Chris Candlish, Supply Chain Manager, who leads the Sustainable Procurement initiative: “We need to work cohesively together in the @one Alliance, and with our supply chain.We need to look at how we unlock value, how we outperform, and work as one really big team.” SUPPLY AND DELIVER IT’S ALL ABOUT YOUAll onboard for the AMP6 adventure! Andy Brown, Head of Sustainability, AnglianWater:“Love Every Drop is about delivering a sustainable business into the future.There are challenging targets and aspirations set by our customers over the next five years and beyond, and the only way of meeting those challenges is to really work together through the spirit of innovation and collaboration.” As such, a one-day AMP6 Onboarding event, repeated over five days in January at the Kingsgate Centre in Peterborough, saw more than 500 @one Alliance employees, colleagues from Anglian Water and our supply chain partners brought together to discover the @one Alliance and Anglian Water’s plans for AMP6 and the exciting challenges that lie ahead. The morning involved interesting and informative presentations on Anglian Water’s Love Every Drop strategy, the Totex (total expenditure) approach to the money spent on an asset throughout its lifetime, and the new AMP6 delivery and governance process. There were also a number of lively activities that engaged people with the key messages underpinning the new AMP period, including a Lego challenge and a task relating to Anglian Water’s customer outcomes. David Newsome, one of the organisers of the day, said:“Feedback received from delegates showed they enjoyed the day and found it informative. We had a clear aim, which was to ensure that the event was interactive, engaging and fun. People with different types of professions and backgrounds attended the event and particularly enjoyed the participation aspect of the day.” So what are the next steps in the Onboarding process? John Podmore, Business Improvement Manager, who leads the Production initiative: “Production aligns to five key messages linking to the customer outcomes – work smarter, not harder; identify the keys to unlock value; solve today’s problems for a better tomorrow; lead by example and people are the active ingredient to continuous improvement.” GrantTuffs, Customer and Communications Manager, who leads the Customer initiative: “We need to encourage our people to keep our customers informed throughout the duration of a project. Keeping them engaged means that we can deliver great service.” Tracey Goddard, Organisational and Development Manager, who leads the People initiative: “We’re looking to develop and strengthen the @one Alliance – the new organisation and new roles become opportunities for people to develop and grow within the business.We want people to ask us questions and make sure they are fully engaged and comfortable with that process.” Mark Froggatt, Engineering Manager, who leads the Benefit by Design initiative: “We all have a starring role in AMP6.You don’t have to be a genius to come up with a good idea – you just need the wherewithal to raise a good idea.” TAKING THE INITIATIVETheafternoonsessioninvolvedinteractive standshighlightingthebenefitsofthe eightinitiativesthatwillhelpustodeliver theefficiencysavingsweneedtomeetin AMP6.onespoketotheinitiativeleads tofindoutwhatthesemeantoeveryone workingatthe@oneAlliance: Andy Flowerday, @one Alliance Board Member and Managing Director of Barhale: “Look forward and enjoy it – AMP6 is a challenge to revel in, rather than one to worry about.” Someofourtiertwosupplychainpartnersattendedtheevent,including GPSPEPipeSystems,Meps,MCL,HaighandREDPublications.Someof themsharedtheirthoughtswithus: VernonIngham,WRIQualityCoordinator:“It was an exiting and clearly delivered message, outlining the focus needed to meet the challenge of the new AMP.The AnglianWater AMP6 programme ensures we continue to move forward as leaders in the water industry.” KerryLeyland,WRNICloseoutCoordinator:“The day was very interactive and engaging.” PaulWood,SiteManager,WRNI:“From a site-based opinion, it’s important that we continue in the way we do things and by portraying and reflecting the AnglianWater approach, as well as our own company’s attitude towards the environment in which we work.” SarahCharman,PeopleDevelopmentSupport:“The highlight of the day was the Benefit by Design initiative and especially the way the @one Alliance is using technology to aid projects.” one Issue 23 • April 201512 oneIssue 23 • April 2015 13
  • 8. Short for‘total expenditure’,Totex, which the water industry economic regulator Ofwat is introducing in AMP6, is a combination of capital (Capex) and operational (Opex) costs and refers to the total investment in an asset throughout its lifespan. During AMP5, the @one Alliance met its efficiency targets and delivered a huge number of projects for AnglianWater – and now, in AMP6, we want to do things even better. And in order to do this, we need to continually improve our business processes. “The aim of the Continuous Improvement team is to provide everyone in the @one Alliance with the resources, expertise and dedicated end-to-end, project- focused support to help realise the efficiency challenges and objectives,”explained Business Improvement Manager, John Podmore. “Through the Production initiative, we aim to provide a centralised function for all the other initiatives and the programme areas to eliminate waste, improve processes and promote a collaborative approach to improvement; therefore positively contributing towards the major cost drivers of AMP6.” Customerfocused The Continuous Improvement team has gone through its own transformation programme over the last three months and Innovation There are great opportunities with the implementation ofTotex: it benefits the @one Alliance by encouraging innovative thinking and sustainable solutions, it benefits our client AnglianWater as it offers the opportunity for more economic solutions to deliver outcomes, and ultimately it should benefit our customers by driving efficiency to help lower bills. Efficiencies Graham Fulton,Totex Programme Leader, said:“We know bringing Opex and Capex together can drive efficiencies for AMP6 and beyond. It means we can collectively do the right thing for our assets, our customers and our business.” There are some key elements toTotex: clear leadership and setting consistent business goals, collaboration and working together internally and externally, turning data into better business information and making true whole life value decisions. As part of theTotex strategy, the‘blue box’pilot scheme was A‘new and improved’carbon and water footprinting modeller has been developed for AMP6.This will help us to support AnglianWater in reducing our carbon and water footprint and save money by understanding carbon and water in design. The modeller will help engineers identify designs that are low in embodied and operational carbon, now comprises Production Managers, Assistant Production Managers and a newly formed role of Production Improvement Technician – providing a healthy mix of experience, expertise and enthusiasm, with a clear customer- focused mind-set and capability across a wide range of improvement disciplines. “We are effectively starting from scratch to build up confidence in our process and approach,” explained John. Backtobasics “The period prior to the start of AMP6 provided the opportunity to understand what the business actually needs and wants from a continuous improvement function. It was clear that we needed to go back to basics and focus our approach on what people need to deliver the business plan.The messages we received back were loud and clear – we need your expertise and support, but we need to see and understand the value you provide.” Delivering The team’s main challenge is to make sure that all individuals and teams in the @one Alliance are, and remain, the central focus throughout the journey of delivering the efficiency targets. “This involves breaking down the process of continuous improvement into easy to understand process steps – a method of operation if you like – that we all can use effectively,” explained John. “From initial engagement, through to the realisation of benefits for individuals and teams in order to meet the @one Alliance targets, we can provide the tools and techniques to identify waste, solve problems and help lead change through every transformational step. “This is all underpinned by training, coaching and mentoring activities we will provide to enable people to proactively improve through the AMP6 journey.” Success for the Continuous Improvement team will be realised through the physical delivery of projects from beginning to end, continued engagement opportunities from people across the @one Alliance, and positive referrals and enquiries to establish new improvement projects. Collaboration “Our reward and recognition, which is what motivates and drives us on, will come from simply seeing the improvements we have helped develop and deliver integrated collaboratively within the @one Alliance,”said John. “The progress we have already achieved over the last few months is extremely exciting.The initial feedback received – and‘pull’ created – from both the Integrated Project Leaders (IPLs) and the Initiative Leads, is telling us that we are moving in the right direction: a clear motivator to continuously improve ourselves. “There is still a long way to go, but through our initial change process we are aiming to provide an enthusiastic, dynamic, pragmatic and delivery-focused team approach to production management and continuous improvement.” Meet the team tasked with improving our businessCost-effective solution Next top model(ler) “The progress we have already achieved over the last few months is extremely exciting. The initial feedback received is telling us that we are moving in the right direction: a clear motivator to continuously improve ourselves.” JohnPodmore, Business Improvement Manager. Fastfacts • The team’s fresh approach to continuous improvement is based around some of the key principles of project management – planning, delivery, benefits realisation and communication – all underpinned by a clear drive towards developing a High PerformingTeam structure. • Each project they deliver is categorised at the start based on complexity, priority, benefits realisation, collaboration and best practice transfer, offering the best possible value-added support within exacting timescales. • The team is developing an @one Alliance manual for continuous improvement, supported by an internal training and development programme that will be rolled out as part of project delivery to everyone in the @one Alliance. The Continuous Improvement team is on hand to help every team and individual in the @one Alliance to realise their key objectives and meet the key efficiency challenges in AMP6 and beyond. onespoke to them to find out more about what they do – and how they can help you. Formoreinformation,pleasecontact DavidRileyon07921095796,email driley3@anglianwater.co.uk,orphone AnnaTotterdellon07889589675or emailaTotterdell@anglianwater.co.uk which will help meet the Love Every Drop goals, outcomes and outcome delivery incentives (ODIs). Look out for the release of the new modeller this month and sign up to one of the communication and training events about how to use the modeller.These will be running throughout the AnglianWater region once the modeller has been released. which lasts a lifetime Graham Fulton,Totex Programme Leader. From left to right: Kirsty-Ann Cairns, David Newsome, HollyWilson, Nyree Stanley, Mike Betts, John Podmore, Dodie Honisett, BrendanTully and Lynne Hamilton. “Weknowbringing OpexandCapex togethercandrive efficienciesforAMP6 andbeyond.Itmeans wecancollectivelydo therightthingforour assets,ourcustomers andourbusiness.” Programme Management, AnglianWater Services, said: “The blue box process is now embedded at the heart of Asset Management with a fully resourced team focused on developing solution strategies for the delivery routes. Collaboration “Working collaboratively with delivery routes and the operational parts of Anglian Water, theTotex approach has enabled solutions that challenge historic approaches to capital delivery, resulting in efficiencies and reducing the risk to AnglianWater. “As the Blue Box process andTotex thinking develops during the coming year, more innovative and operational solutions will be identified driving greater efficiencies.” developed by AnglianWater in collaboration with the @one Alliance to discover how we evaluate business risks and find the best whole life value solution strategies.The initial success of the pilot has meant it’s become a permanent feature of how we will operate in AMP6. Optioneering “The blue box defines the solution strategy, then the preferred solution gets identified downstream after undertaking more detailed analysis and ‘optioneering’with the business,” explained Graham. “However, it challenges traditional thinking and behaviour, so it’s not been a straightforward change and it will take time to turn things around.” Paul Harrison, Head of •FROM NEED IDENTIFICATION THROUGH TO DE LIVERY• AMP6THEWAYFORWARD WE NEED YOUTO MAKE THE WHEELS TURN DM0 DM1 YOU DELIVERY SOLUTION STRATEGY S ELECTION SOLUTION STRATEGY DE VELOPMENT OPTIMISATIO N PR IORITISATI ON RI SK EVALUATI ON RI SK INITIATI ON THE JOURNEY HAS BEGUN one Issue 23 • April 201514 oneIssue 23 • April 2015 15
  • 9. Your fundraising During AMP5, colleagues at the @one Alliance raised around £12,000 forWaterAid. However, this doesn’t include our involvement and support for AnglianWater’s mainWaterAid events such as the annualWaterAid Ball, Rutland Regatta, Race Night and other events, all of which add hundreds of thousands of pounds to that figure. So congratulations to everyone who either took part in one of the fundraisers or sponsored a colleague who did – you really have made a difference to people’s lives. There are many moreWaterAid events scheduled for 2015 and beyond and we hope to smash that total in AMP6. But where do the funds end up, and what does it mean for those people the charity helps? We take clean and accessible drinking water and flushing toilets for granted, but there are many people in the world who don’t have this luxury. WaterAid’s work is helping to change the lives of thousands of people in Africa who don’t have access to clean or running water or sanitation. Take the case of a village in Uganda, whereWaterAid funded a borehole to be constructed to pump clean water. Previously, the villagers only had a murky swamp from which to Congratulations to Stuart Collins, Contract Administrator in the Finance and Performance team, who has gained membership of the Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors (RICS). Stuart,whohasworkedforthe @oneAllianceforfiveyears,saysthat hehasalwayshadaspirations tobecomechartered,whichhe achievedthroughhardworkandalot ofstudyinganddedicationoveran 18-monthperiod. Stuartsaid:“Goingforaprofessional qualificationtakesalotofhardwork andself-motivation;it’snoteasy, butisworthitwhenyouachievea successfuloutcomeasit’sarecognised worldwidequalification.” Your feedback shows that you enjoy perusing the pages of one magazine – and now it’s proven to be an award-winning read. onetook the top prize of Class Winner at this year’s IoIC Central and North Awards, beating off tough competition from the likes of NorthumbrianWater and EDF Energy. We work hard to make sure that oneis closely aligned to the Ahoy there, all you hearty @one Alliance crews – it’s time to dust off your paddles in preparation for the ninth Rutland Regatta. The event, which is being held on Rutland Water on 18 June, offers you the chance to raise an Armada (or team) together and raise funds for WaterAid. Last year’s event raised a whopping £49,000, so this year we want to smash that total. @one Alliance partners, AnglianWater employees and suppliers can mingle and cheer on their teams from the shoreline, or battle it out on Colleagues celebrate There’s only onewinner ReadyfortheRegatta? Nicole Synan, from AnglianWater, who visited aWaterAid project in Uganda last year to see how funds raised were being put to good use. We are the champions: Editor GrantTuffs (left) and Andy Douse, Director of RED Publications (right), accept the award. access their water, so they are very proud of their pump and are now responsible for the borehole’s maintenance. More importantly, this clean water helps keep them – and their livestock – healthy. strategy of the @one Alliance and the judges agreed, saying:“The goals and strategy are really well defined. It’s good to see that the majority of readers want more.” one’seditor, Customer and Communication Manager Grant Tuffs, said:“I’m delighted to see how successful the magazine is and I’m looking forward to its future success, especially with its refreshed new look.” the water in a number of racing activities. Get your engineering thinking caps on to come up with a design for a plastic bottle boat, or gather your colleagues together for the popular kayak and raft building races. If your sea legs have deserted you, there are plenty of land-based activities for you and your team to have a go at. Therearecountlessmorestorieslikethis.Formoreinformation,visit www.wateraid.org.ukwhereyoucandonatemoney,orkeepaneyeoutfor fundraisingeventsaroundthe@oneAlliance. makes a difference! Letusknowifyouhaveachievedaprofessionalaccreditationorifyouare undertakingacareerdevelopmentcourse.PhoneGrantTuffson01733414108or emailgTuffs@anglianwater.co.uk Togetyourteaminvolved,orforfurtherdetails,pleasecontactCarolineBrown,CarlyKellardor BobbySamelak-PainatAnglianWaterRutlandR@anglianwater.co.uk Meanwhile,hats offtoTechnicalDeliveryManager EmmanuelIwuamadi,whohas becomeamemberofTheInstitution ofCivilEngineers(ICE). Emmanuel,whohasworkedfor the@oneAllianceforfouryears,said: “Beingchartereddemonstratesthat youareprofessionallycompetent througheducation,trainingand practice.Withthiscomesthebenefit ofimprovedcareerprospects,earning powerandrecognitionofexpertise. “Myengineeringknowledgeand professionalskillgivesmetheabilityto lead,manageandmakeindependent judgementstosuccessfullydealwith dailywork-relatedissues.” News flashes To celebrateWorldWater Day in March, colleagues inThorpe Wood House took part in a fun quiz night and raffle, organised by Philip Steer, CADTechnician and Michelle Holt, Closeout Manager. A whopping £366 was raised, so thank you to everyone who got involved. In April, 570 guests, including many @one Alliance colleagues, partner companies and suppliers, enjoyed a‘night at the movies’at the annual Anglian Water WaterAid Ball, raising a record breaking £410,000! one Issue 23 • April 201516