Off-Prem

PaaS + IaaS

UK government spends another £1B on cloud migration and services

New framework set to help public sector orgs move on amid lock-in fears


The UK government has awarded a contract worth up to £1 billion ($1.3 billion) to get tech services companies to help various bodies and departments make the leap to the cloud.

The Crown Commercial Service, a unit of the Cabinet Office, has awarded another chunk of the G-Cloud 14 framework, under which a maximum value of £1 billion could be spent. It is the last award to be made under the new framework for cloud computing and associated services.

The latest award is for Lot 4 of the competition, with 42 suppliers winning places on the framework. It is designed to help UK public sector and third sector organizations transition to cloud software or hosting services. This might include the provision of planning services "to enable customers to move to cloud software and/or hosting services," an official posting said.

Setup and migration are also part of the offering and might involve the process of consolidating and transferring a collection of workloads. Workloads can include emails, files, calendars, document types, related metadata, instant messages, applications, user permissions, compound structure, and linked components. Security services, quality assurance and performance testing, and training also make up part of the offering.

Forty-two companies, including Aire Logic and Version One Solutions, are among the winning bidders. Some familiar companies winning places on the framework are Capgemini, CGI, Ernst & Young, and Deloitte.

The Lot 4 award follows the award of Lots 1 to 3, made in a single announcement last month, with the total expected maximum value of £6.5 billion ($8.2 billion). The competition for these services was launched in February.

G-Cloud 14 is set to replace 13. In April, a government spokesperson told The Register its cloud framework agreements offered the widest range of suppliers for the cloud market, including 5,000 suppliers on G-Cloud 13, with 91 percent of them SMEs.

"Government's Cloud First policy is kept under regular review to ensure it reflects the latest guidance and recommendations and states that organizations should always scrutinize their selection of vendors," they said.

However, The Register also uncovered a document from the Cabinet Office's Central Digital & Data Office (CDDO), which said: "UK government's current approach to cloud adoption and management across its departments faces several challenges," which combined "risk concentration and vendor lock-in that inhibit UK government's negotiating power over the cloud vendors."

Following the July election of a new government, the CDDO is set to move from the Cabinet Office to the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology. ®

Send us news
24 Comments

UK government's cloud strategy: Pay more, get less, blame vendor lock-in?

Home Office's £450M deal with AWS raises questions over competition and aligning department requirements

How the collapse of local cloud provider caused biz continuity issues in UK government

And that was on top of a £17.5M underwriting bill for insolvent UKCloud

Under Trump 2.0, Europe's dependence on US clouds back under the spotlight

Technologist Bert Hubert tells The Reg Microsoft Outlook is a huge source of geopolitical risk

UK court says Chinese operation must sell Scottish chip biz stake without delay

'Satisfied' the risk to national security is 'a real and significant one' that should not be 'prolonged'

UK's new thinking on AI: Unless it's causing serious bother, you can crack on

Plus: Keep calm and plug Anthropic's Claude into public services

US lawmakers press Trump admin to oppose UK's order for Apple iCloud backdoor

Senator, Congressman tell DNI to threaten infosec agreements if Blighty won't back down

Why SAP may be mulling 2030 end of maintenance for legacy ERP

Users' sluggish migration of critical apps mean current deadline not workable, says analyst

Triplestrength hits victims with triple trouble: Ransomware, cloud hijacks, crypto-mining

These crooks have no chill

UK government using AI tools to check up on roadworthy testing centers

Who tests the testers?

Legacy systems running UK's collector are taxing – in more ways than one

Costs for fixing them and keeping them working up by 390%, NAO report reveals

Spending watchdog blasts UK govt over sloth-like progress to shore up IT defenses

Think government cybersecurity is bad? Guess again. It’s alarmingly so

Why does the UK keep getting beaten up by IT suppliers?

Tech and commercial functions need to get in shape for the challenges ahead