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HS2 should not prioritise re-negotiating contracts, says construction boss

Leo Quinn, who is stepping down later this year, said there was "no contractor in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ that could actually have a balance sheet to deliver something of that size"

HS2 was first proposed in 2009(Image: PA)

The chief executive of a construction company involved in the Old Oak Common station project has suggested that HS2 should concentrate on delivery rather than renegotiating its contracts.

This comes after a damning report from the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) last month deemed HS2 Ltd's contracts as "unacceptable to the public purse" and stressed the "imperative" need for the project to deliver on promises to renegotiate them, as reported by .

Despite this, MPs have expressed doubts about whether contractors are sufficiently motivated to implement changes that would result in "significant cost savings."

When questioned about the potential restructuring of contracts, Balfour Beatty's outgoing leader Leo Quinn told City AM: "No, not really, the contracts for the time they were written were appropriate."

Quinn pointed out the impracticality of expecting any º£½ÇÊÓÆµ contractor to have the financial capacity to undertake such a massive project, stating, "There's no contractor in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ that could actually have a balance sheet to deliver something of that size, so it has to go back to the Exchequer."

He further commented on the positive aspect of the nation's ability to shoulder such financial responsibility: "Isn't it good news in a way that the balance sheet as a country is able to carry that, because if you had actually put that liability down to all of your contractors, and the cost had overrun the way it's overrun, you wouldn't have a construction industry in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ."

Quinn's remarks seem to cast doubt on HS2's assertions that it can secure more advantageous terms with its contractors, which is a key element of its strategy to control escalating expenses and get the project back on track.

Balfour Beatty, in a joint venture with engineering consultant Systra, is at the helm of constructing HS2's Old Oak Common station and also boasts a significant civil engineering contract for the project's Area North section.