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Manufacturing

Defence firm Babcock’s profits down amid government contract dispute

The group runs Plymouth’s Devonport Dockyard and employs more than 5,000 people in the port city

Part of the huge Babcock operation at Devonport in Plymouth(Image: William Telford)

Defence engineering giant Babcock International Group has reported “excellent progress” despite a Government contract dispute denting its profits.

The group, which runs Plymouth’s Devonport Dockyard and employs more than 5,000 people in the port city, posted revenue of £4.4bn during the year to March - up 8% on the previous 12 months.

Bosses said cash generation of £348.9m during the period - up from £41.8m in the previous financial year - had exceeded expectations. The company has concluded a disposal programme which included a 100m euro sale of its European Aerial Emergency Services business.

However, statutory operating profit plummeted to £45.5m from £226.8m a year earlier. The firm said this was partly down to

The company said in a trading update in April that costs to deliver five ships - which are being designed in Plymouth and built at Rosyth in Scotland - had risen since it was originally awarded the contract by the Ministry of Defence in 2019.

Babcock has said it has been unable to reach agreement with the MoD over who is responsible for the additional costs. A dispute resolution process has commenced, which may lead to an arbitration. The company had said in April the additional costs of the project would need to be reflected in its year-end results.

Babcock has said it has recognised more than £600m of revenue but no profit on the programme. The first of the five ships for the Royal Navy is due to be structurally complete in December, while construction started on the second ship in January.

The board said that when excluding the forecasted loss on the programme, the group made an underlying operating profit of up to £278m during its latest financial year.