Engineering, Consulting & Financing

    Water Engineering Services

    Multi-discipline engineering firms, process, civil, mechanical, electrical, and controls, for water infrastructure.

    170 providers

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    Te-Tech Process Solutions logo

    Te-Tech Process Solutions

    United Kingdom

    Te-Tech Process Solutions is a provider of traditional products and advanced process technologies for water and wastewater treatment. Our products cater for a range of client needs from standardised products to bespoke applications designed to meet the exacting needs of the client’s process. Our in-house capability includes process, mechanical and electrical design, off-site manufacture and assembly, MCC and Control Panel Manufacture and System Integration. Our extended services include digital engineering, service and maintenance, operational support and real time control. Advanced technology and innovation are at the core of our business enabling us to provide high quality, efficient solutions to our clients. Our business is founded upon 4 key areas of expertise: WATER & WASTEWATER TREATMENT Te-Tech deliver established water and wastewater products and processes, including: te-cyc TM: Cyclic activated sludge ‘Macrofloc’ biological wastewater treatment te-saf TM: Packaged submerged aerated filters te-ion TM: Advanced oxidation technology for water and wastewater treatment te-mem TM: Advanced membrane filtration te-mbr TM: Package advanced membrane filtration te-sewpas TM: Airlift sludge removal plant te-uv TM: UV disinfection AUTOMATION CONTROL & TECHNOLOGY Our MCC and control panels are provided into multiple sectors including process and water, marine, oil & gas, energy, nuclear, defence and building services. Our capabilities include: MCCs LV Switchboards Local Control Panels Software System Integration DIGITAL ENGINEERING Te-Tech utilise cutting edge digital technologies to provide innovative solutions to our client’s problems. Our digital engineering services support the whole life cycle of our clients’ assets from conceptual design, through design for manufacture and assembly (DfMA), installation on site, final commissioning, operation and maintenance and decommissioning at the end of the asset’s life. Our in-house software capability provides clients with the visualisation tools to precisely view and interrogate designs in a virtual world to minimise clashes, delays or abortive activities and to ensure that the delivered assets are acceptable to operators in the real world. Our BIM capability ensures our products and technologies create assets that are fit for the future and our virtual reality technology allows our teams and clients to fully immerse themselves in the design, optimisation and operation of our solution prior to manufacturing. Our asset optimisation capability helps clients get the best performance out of their assets, by integrating real time control and using data driven insight we can ensure the sustainability and efficiency of asset performance across its lifecycle. Our virtual environment shows the equipment in operation, with liquids moving and plant turning on/off according to the actual system control philosophy. This is an invaluable tool for HAZOPS, ALM and remote training of operators before the plant is constructed – reducing risk and time on site OFF-SITE MANUFACTURING & ASSEMBLY Te-Tech’s off-site manufacture and assembly capability provides standard products and engineered solutions to the water and wastewater sector, oil and gas and energy industries. Its primary focus is on solutions which are designed for manufacture and assembly DfMA; reducing on site construction time, reducing carbon footprint and minimising risk. At our Southampton based headquarters we have over 1000 sq. metres of internal manufacturing space as well as external areas for assembly and storage of larger materials and manufactured components. We design, manufacture and assemble to a range of different standards including CE/CA marking, EXC2 Structural Steel, BS and ASME welding procedures. Our strength within Te-Tech culminates in our integrated service, offering the complete process solution package, from digital design, automation and control through to off-site manufacture and on site assembly.

    Treatment Process Technologies
    Contractors
    Trant Engineering Ltd logo

    Trant Engineering Ltd

    United Kingdom

    Trant provide high quality engineering and project delivery services to the municipal & industrial process & water treatment markets in the UK and Internationally. We have 60 years’ experience in the successful delivery of complex water, wastewater and process treatment solutions for the main UK process & water companies. We develop innovative, cutting edge process and water solutions using advanced technology. Working closely with our technology partner SFC Umwelttechnik, we are able to utilise proven advanced technology resulting in optimal solutions for our water and process industry clients in the UK and internationally. Our in-house design teams understand the stringent regulatory challenges faced by our clients and ensure that efficiency, resilience and sustainability are factored into all design solutions. Our design studio use the latest software including BIM, augmented and virtual reality to develop and detail high tech treatment process outputs. Our control & automation and offsite manufacturing & assembly facilities enable us to provide full in-house capability from project conception through to commissioning.

    Networks - Sewerage
    Accreditations
    Ward & Burke Construction Ltd logo

    Ward & Burke Construction Ltd

    United Kingdom

    Ward & Burke is an Engineering Organisation delivering and operating infrastructure, primarily sanitary services infrastructure, on a turnkey design, build and operate basis. Engineering disciplines encompass: civil, structural, mechanical, electrical, environmental, process, automation & control. Since our formation in 2001, we have been focused on delivering integrated solutions from design through to construction and commissioning stages. Our work is delivered directly by our in-house team of construction professionals. W&B currently has upwards of 1,200 direct employees, to include staff and workforce, working across Ireland, the UK, Canada and the USA. We operate a self-delivery business model where all the significant resources required are available in-house. This includes back office, yard and fabrication facilities strategically located throughout each country; MEICA and civil/structural design capability to include both permanent and temporary works; MEICA and civil/structural construction and delivery teams; commissioning teams and operations teams. Our international workforce prides itself in its ever-evolving commitment to health and safety, research and development, innovation, quality, teamwork, environmental responsibility, and integrity. These values define who we are as a Company, and we strive to reflect these values through our day-to-day work.

    Reservoirs - Raw Water
    Contractors
    Waterco logo

    Waterco

    United Kingdom

    Waterco are engineering and environmental consultants providing design and consultancy services relating to water, drainage and flood risk. We have expertise in engineering and environmental disciplines and are supplemented by a network of specialist independent consultants with extensive experience in major development projects throughout the UK. Our focus is on achieving the optimum solution for our clients, meeting their objectives and adding value to their projects. We have gained a reputation for a friendly, professional and flexible approach since our establishment in 1990. Our Services Water industry infrastructure and non-infrastructure projects Pipelines & Sewerage Water & Wastewater Treatment & Systems Pumping Stations Contingency Planning Security Assessments Asset Management Surge Analysis Hydraulic Modelling Flood Risk Assessment Breach Analysis Coastal & Shoreline Analysis Surface Water Management Sustainable Drainage Systems Natural Flood Management/Catchment Approaches Clients and Partners Our clients and partners include water companies, consultants and contractors. Incorporating their experience and knowledge, we investigate and develop practical designs, to help deliver cost-effective solutions. Geographic Coverage We undertake projects all across the UK, with many of our reporting services being desk-based, travelling to site visits and meetings as required. We have also been involved in international projects such as a major development in Lekki, Nigeria. Accreditations We currently have an ISO 9001 : 2015 accredited Quality Management System; have a BS8555 : 2003 certified Environmental Management System; have design approval in the Water Industry Registration Scheme (WIRS); have maintained Investors in People recognition since 2011 and operate an ICE approved training scheme.

    Designers
    WEW Engineering Ltd logo

    WEW Engineering Ltd

    United Kingdom

    WEW Engineering Ltd is a specialist Consulting Engineering design and management firm focused on sustainable, energy-efficient water and wastewater treatment, including waste-to-energy projects, both industrial and municipal. The company is run by its three founding shareholders, Seamus Crickley, Henk van der Puil, and Tony Mahon, supported by a team of talented engineers and CAD technicians. Our highly professional team comprises specialist Water Chemists, Chartered Engineers, Master Planners, Field Specialists, and 3D CAD Designers. In-house water engineering specialities include chemistry and process design, with integrated mechanical electrical instrumentation and automation engineering services, all available for each project. We are recognised as international experts in this area of Engineering practice. WEW Engineers have been applying cutting-edge technologies in the Water, Energy and Wastewater sectors, both Municipal and Industrial, for over 45 years.

    Project Planning & Surveying
    Contractors
    WISP Global Limited logo

    WISP Global Limited

    United Kingdom

    WISP (Global), are a small dynamic engineering consultancy dedicated to serving the water utility industry in the UK, with a strong focus on sustainability and innovation. Specialising in process unit sizing and modular design, we create tailored innovative solutions to meet our clients' needs. Our team conducts feasibility and treatability studies, evaluating the viability of new projects and treatment methods. Our aim is to guide our clients towards sustainable solutions that align with their goals by considering environmental impact, cost-effectiveness, and technical feasibility. From initial concept to execution and successful project delivery, our team works closely with clients to ensure projects are completed on time, within budget, and to the highest standards. Choose WISP as your trusted partner for water utility engineering solutions that embrace innovation, sustainability, and lasting impact. Together, we’ll build a resilient and sustainable water future.

    Project Planning & Surveying
    Contractors

    Water Engineering Services: Design, Procurement, and Delivery of Water Infrastructure

    Water engineering services encompass the full spectrum of professional and technical services required to plan, design, procure, construct, and commission water and wastewater infrastructure. Services cover feasibility, optioneering, detailed design (civil, mechanical, electrical, instrumentation, and control), CDM (Construction Design and Management Regulations 2015) principal designer duties, procurement support, construction supervision, and commissioning. Principal UK water engineering consultancies: Jacobs (formerly Halcrow and CH2M HILL), Mott MacDonald, Stantec (formerly MWH), WSP, Arcadis, Atkins (SNC-Lavalin), Binnies (Black and Veatch), AECOM, Arup, Hyder Consulting (now WSP), Grontmij (now Sweco), Brown and Caldwell, and Tetra Tech. Procurement frameworks: water company engineering services are typically procured through Alliance or collaborative delivery frameworks (Ofwat incentivises collaborative delivery under the CIRIA Alliancing best practice guide; Anglian Water's @one Alliance; United Utilities' Capital Delivery Alliance; Severn Trent Water's Capital Works Alliance); these multi-year frameworks (typically 5-year AMP periods) procure design, construction, and commissioning services through integrated teams. CDM: Principal Designer (PD) role under CDM 2015 must be appointed for all projects involving more than one contractor; PD coordinates health and safety during pre-construction design phase; Health and Safety File completed at project handover.

    Technical services in water engineering: Hydraulic modelling: InfoWorks WS Pro (water distribution network modelling), InfoWorks ICM (urban drainage and sewerage), EPANET (open-source network analysis), MIKE URBAN (DHI, combined sewer and urban drainage), MIKE SHE (integrated catchment and groundwater), MODFLOW (groundwater flow modelling, USGS); process modelling: GPS-X, BioWin, STOAT (STW process simulation); structural analysis: STAAD.Pro, SAP2000, ABAQUS (FEA for complex structures); geotechnical: Plaxis, Oasys Settle3D; cost estimation: CATO (Civil/commercial Application Tools and Optimization) for water industry elemental cost estimation; NEC4 Target Cost or Lump Sum contract forms dominate UK water industry projects. BIM (Building Information Modelling): Ofwat encourages BIM adoption for AMP7/AMP8 projects; BIM Level 2 (BS EN ISO 19650) is standard for major capital works; Common Data Environment (CDE) used for document control (Asite, Viewpoint, ProjectWise); 3D design models (Autodesk Civil 3D, Plant 3D, Revit; Bentley OpenPlant) reduce clashes and improve construction coordination; digital twin applications emerging for STW process monitoring and optimisation. Environmental services: Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA, Town and Country Planning (Environmental Impact Assessment) Regulations 2017); Habitats Regulations Assessment (HRA, Conservation of Habitats and Species Regulations 2017); Water Framework Directive compliance assessment; Environmental Permit application support; land contamination assessment (Phase 1 desk study, Phase 2 intrusive investigation).

    Capital delivery and project management: major water infrastructure projects (treatment works, tunnels, reservoirs) are delivered under NEC4 (New Engineering Contract, 4th Edition) contract forms; NEC4 Target Cost (Option C) is dominant for complex projects where scope uncertainty exists; NEC4 Engineering and Construction Contract (Option A, Lump Sum) for well-defined civil engineering packages; Employer's Requirements (ER) or Performance Specification issued by water company; contractor designs to performance specification and employer's requirements rather than prescriptive design specification; early contractor involvement (ECI) is increasingly used (NEC4 Option W1 early contractor involvement or two-stage tender with ECI stage); RIBA Plan of Work for building elements (Stages 0 to 7); ICE (Institution of Civil Engineers) Design and Practice Guide for infrastructure projects. UK water industry investment: Ofwat Price Review (AMP periods); AMP7 (2020 to 2025): GBP 51 billion allowed investment across all water companies; AMP8 (2025 to 2030): final determinations issued December 2024; Ofwat's Innovation Fund (GBP 200 million); Water UK Capital Investment Survey published annually. Procurement OJEU thresholds (retained UK public procurement thresholds post-Brexit, Public Contracts Regulations 2015 as amended): works contracts greater than GBP 4,733,252; services contracts greater than GBP 378,660; water sector utilities procurers above threshold must advertise in Find a Tender Service (FTS, replacing OJEU for UK after Brexit).

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What contract forms are used for UK water infrastructure projects?

    The primary contract forms used for UK water infrastructure projects: (1) NEC4 (New Engineering Contract, 4th Edition, 2017): dominant form for water industry since Latham Report (1994) recommended NEC; main options: Option A (Priced Contract with Activity Schedule, lump sum per activity); Option B (Bill of Quantities); Option C (Target Cost with Activity Schedule - risk shared between contractor and employer via pain/gain mechanism; gain share up to agreed cap; most common for treatment works and complex projects); Option E (Cost Reimbursable, used for very high uncertainty projects); NEC4 includes: X clauses for specific requirements (X10 Information Modelling/BIM; X12 Partnering; X15 Limitation of Liability; X20 KPIs); early warning (EW) and compensation event (CE) mechanisms; project manager administers contract; W clauses for dispute resolution (W1 adjudication, W2 arbitration). (2) ICE Conditions (Institution of Civil Engineers): MF/1 (Model Form of General Conditions, used for mechanical and electrical plant contracts); FIDIC (Fédération Internationale Des Ingénieurs-Conseils): Red Book (EPC/turnkey projects, traditional); Yellow Book (plant and design-build); used for overseas projects and some UK private sector work. (3) JCT (Joint Contracts Tribunal): less common in water infrastructure; JCT DB (Design and Build) used for some building works (site offices, welfare facilities) within water projects. (4) Framework Agreements: water companies procure engineering services via multi-year framework agreements (typically 5-year aligned to AMP period); frameworks may be single-supplier or multi-lot; contractors compete through mini-competitions or call-offs within agreed rates.

    What is a hydraulic model and why is it used in water engineering?

    A hydraulic model is a computer simulation of a water distribution network or drainage system that predicts flows, pressures, velocities, and water quality through the pipe network under different operating and demand conditions. Types of hydraulic model: (1) Water distribution network (WDN) model (InfoWorks WS Pro, Bentley WaterGEMS, EPANET): simulates drinking water distribution from treatment works through trunk mains, service reservoirs, and distribution mains to customer connections; uses: leakage management (night flow analysis, pressure management zone design); fire flow analysis (minimum residual pressure 7 m at hydrant during fire demand, BS EN 1717); water quality modelling (chlorine decay, residence time, age); capital planning (main reinforcement, new reservoir sizing); burst prediction; pressure zone redesign. (2) Sewerage and drainage model (InfoWorks ICM, MIKE URBAN): simulates foul water flow through combined or separate sewer networks; uses: hydraulic capacity assessment (peak flow vs pipe capacity; surcharge depth); CSO performance modelling (spill volume, frequency); surface flooding prediction (2D surface overland flow model linked to 1D pipe model); SuDS impact assessment (upstream storage attenuation effect on downstream sewer); capital programme planning (sewer upsizing, storage tank sizing). (3) Groundwater model (MODFLOW, FEFLOW): groundwater flow and contaminant transport; used for groundwater abstraction licence assessment, dewatering design, contaminated land risk assessment. Model calibration: WDN models calibrated against flow meter and pressure logger measurements from field trials (step tests, fire hydrant tests); sewer models calibrated against continuous flow monitoring data from manholes.

    What qualifications do water engineers need in the UK?

    Water engineers in the UK typically hold degrees in civil engineering, environmental engineering, chemical engineering, or mechanical engineering, followed by professional chartership through the relevant institution. Academic routes: BEng or MEng in Civil Engineering (ICE accredited, e.g. University of Sheffield, Newcastle, Loughborough, Southampton); MEng or BEng in Environmental Engineering (CIWEM accredited, e.g. Imperial College, Cranfield); BSc in Environmental Science + MSc in Water and Wastewater Engineering (e.g. Cranfield MSc); alternatively BEng Chemical/Mechanical Engineering + water sector CPD. Professional chartership: ICE (Institution of Civil Engineers): CEng MICE for civil/structural infrastructure engineers in water sector; IEng for incorporated engineers; four competencies assessed: engineering knowledge, design and innovation, technical and managerial leadership, commitment to society; applies to hydraulic engineers, structural engineers, and infrastructure project managers. CIWEM (Chartered Institution of Water and Environmental Management): MCIWEM (CEnv) for water and environmental engineers; directly relevant to drinking water, wastewater, and environmental compliance roles; assessed against 7 CIWEM competency areas. IChemE (Institution of Chemical Engineers): CEng MIChemE for chemical engineers in water treatment (desalination, membrane technology, process engineering); Chartered Engineer via AMIChemE then MIChemE routes. IMechE (Institution of Mechanical Engineers): MIMechE for mechanical engineers in water (pump and HVAC engineering, mechanical design). Typical career path: graduate engineer (3 to 5 years); senior engineer (5 to 10 years, typically CEng); principal/associate (10 to 15 years); technical director (15+ years). Salary ranges (2024, UK): graduate GBP 28,000 to 35,000; CEng 5 years GBP 45,000 to 60,000; associate director GBP 70,000 to 95,000; technical director GBP 90,000 to 130,000+.

    What is CDM and how does it apply to water infrastructure projects?

    CDM (Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015, SI 2015/51) is the primary UK health and safety regulation for construction projects. It applies to all construction work, including water infrastructure (treatment works, pumping stations, pipelines, reservoirs, service reservoirs). Key duty holders under CDM 2015: (1) Client: the organisation commissioning the construction work (water company, developer); must appoint a Principal Designer and Principal Contractor for projects with more than one contractor; notify HSE (F10 notification) for projects lasting more than 30 days with more than 20 simultaneous workers, or more than 500 person-days total; (2) Principal Designer (PD): appointed by client from design phase; must be a designer with control over pre-construction phase; coordinates H&S during design (identify and eliminate or reduce foreseeable construction phase risks through design decisions; ERIC principle: Eliminate, Reduce, Inform, Control); produces pre-construction information (PCI) and contributes to Health and Safety File at project completion; for water projects: CDM PD role held by lead design consultant (Jacobs, Mott MacDonald, WSP, Stantec, etc.); (3) Principal Contractor (PC): appointed by client for construction phase; produces Construction Phase Plan (CPP) before site works start; manages H&S during construction; (4) Designers: all organisations producing design (including specialist M&E designers, equipment suppliers producing installation drawings) must eliminate or reduce H&S risks through their design. Water-specific CDM risks: confined space entry (service reservoirs, pump stations, wet wells, tanks); working at height (chemical dosing platforms, process tanks, elevated pipework); hazardous chemicals (sodium hypochlorite, ferric sulphate, ammonia); asbestos in existing infrastructure; ground contamination on brownfield STW sites.

    Case Study·Water utilities capital delivery
    Challenge

    A water company in Yorkshire needed to deliver a GBP 32 million STW upgrade (new activated sludge lane, P removal, and biogas CHP) within AMP7 constraints. The project had already experienced a 7-month programme delay on an earlier design iteration due to late civil contractor engagement and a HAZOP finding that required a pressure vessel redesign.

    Approach

    The project was re-procured as an NEC4 Option C Target Cost contract with early contractor involvement (ECI) at RIBA Stage 2. Jacobs were retained as lead design consultant and CDM Principal Designer. The HAZOP was completed at detailed design stage (not post-procurement) with all duty holders present. A BIM Level 2 Common Data Environment (Asite) was established at project outset. The main civils contractor (Morgan Sindall Infrastructure) was appointed at RIBA Stage 2 to review constructability.

    Outcome

    The project was delivered 3 months ahead of the revised programme and GBP 1.4 million below the NEC4 target cost; the client's pain/gain share returned GBP 700,000 to the water company. The CDM Health and Safety File was completed and issued to the asset management team at handover. The BIM model was adopted by the water company's GIS team for ongoing asset management. No reportable HSE incidents occurred during construction.

    Questions to Ask Shortlisted Providers

    1. 1

      Which NEC4 contract option are you recommending and what is the rationale for the risk allocation between target cost and lump sum?

      NEC4 Option C (target cost) is appropriate for complex works with significant scope uncertainty; Option A (lump sum) transfers scope risk to the contractor at a premium; understanding the risk allocation logic helps you assess whether the contract form matches your project risk profile.

    2. 2

      At what RIBA stage will the main contractor be appointed and what early contractor involvement (ECI) activities are proposed before contract execution?

      Contractors appointed at RIBA Stage 2 can identify buildability issues before design is fixed; late appointment (RIBA Stage 4 or 5) means design changes that emerge during construction are compensation events at day-rate cost.

    3. 3

      How will the CDM Principal Designer role be managed and at what point will the HAZOP and SIL assessment be completed?

      HAZOP findings after procurement can require expensive equipment redesign; completing the HAZOP at RIBA Stage 3 before equipment selection and vendor enquiry ensures that any safety-driven changes are incorporated into the tender specification.

    4. 4

      What BIM Level 2 deliverables are required and how will the as-built model be handed over for integration with our GIS and asset management system?

      A BIM model locked in a proprietary format that cannot be imported into the water company's Maximo or ArcGIS environment is of little value; the Common Data Environment protocol and model handover format must be agreed before detailed design.

    5. 5

      How are the Ofwat AMP8 TOTEX efficiency incentives and ODI performance commitments built into the engineering services contract KPIs?

      Engineering consultants who are not remunerated against totex outcomes have no financial incentive to value-engineer or optimise; aligning consultant fee incentives with the water company's Ofwat regulatory performance commitments is the defining feature of modern alliance frameworks.

    What Drives Cost in This Category

    Programme certainty and procurement route

    An NEC4 Option C target cost with ECI typically costs 5 to 10 percent more in consultant and contractor overhead than a traditional lump-sum tender, but reduces the risk of compensation events that routinely add 15 to 30 percent to the final account on complex water infrastructure.

    Ground investigation and geotechnical uncertainty

    Ground investigation for a new STW tank foundation on a brownfield site costs GBP 50,000 to 150,000; inadequate investigation that leads to unforeseen ground conditions (soft clay, made ground, contamination) is the single most common cause of cost overrun on water infrastructure projects.

    Planning consent and Environmental Impact Assessment

    A major STW expansion triggering EIA (Town and Country Planning (EIA) Regulations 2017) adds 9 to 18 months to the programme and GBP 80,000 to 250,000 in consultant fees; Habitats Regulations Assessment (HRA) for sites near SACs or SSSIs adds a further 3 to 6 months.

    M&E equipment lead times and supply chain risk

    Post-2020 supply chain disruption extended lead times for submersible pumps (16 to 26 weeks), control panels (20 to 36 weeks), and membrane diffusers (12 to 20 weeks); projects that do not place long-lead equipment orders at RIBA Stage 3 risk programme delays that trigger NEC4 compensation events and Ofwat ODI penalties.

    Key Regulations & Standards

    CDM 2015 (SI 2015/51) Principal Designer Duty

    All water infrastructure projects involving more than one contractor must have a CDM Principal Designer appointed from design inception; the PD must produce pre-construction information (PCI), coordinate H&S in the design, and contribute to the Health and Safety File at project completion; HSE F10 notification is required for notifiable projects (30 days+ with 20+ simultaneous workers).

    NEC4 Contract Forms and Ofwat Regulatory Framework

    Ofwat encourages collaborative NEC4 delivery for AMP8 capital works; NEC4 Option C Target Cost with pain/gain sharing aligns contractor incentives with the water company's totex efficiency targets; early warning (EW) and compensation event (CE) mechanisms must be operated correctly to preserve the collaborative contract intent.

    Town and Country Planning (EIA) Regulations 2017

    New or significantly extended water treatment works (Category 10 infrastructure development, Schedule 2 EIA Regulations) may require Environmental Impact Assessment; a screening request to the local planning authority is required before design commences to determine whether an EIA is needed; failure to screen before commencing design can invalidate planning applications.

    FIDIC / NEC4 for RAPID Strategic Water Resource Projects

    Multi-company strategic water resource projects assessed through the RAPID (Regulators Alliance for Progressing Infrastructure Development) process may use FIDIC Yellow Book or NEC4 EPC-type contract forms for the delivery phase; Ofwat, EA, and NRW review RAPID submissions jointly and set programme milestones that feed into AMP8 Final Determination commitments.