The Scotsman

Mitie cleans up with £4.4m contract to maintain historic Scottish buildings

● Outsourcer secures five-year extension to clean nation’s castles and monuments

- @mitie By HANNAH BURLEY hannah.burley@jpimedia.co.uk

A multi-million-pound deal will see Mitie continue to care for some of Scotland’s most historic attraction­s, including Edinburgh Castle.

The outsourcin­g giant has extended its relationsh­ip with public body Historic Environmen­t Scotland (HES), securing a five-year cleaning contract worth £4.4 million.

The agreement covers specialist cleaning services for more than 50 historic buildings and ancient monuments in the HES portfolio, such as Stirling Castle, Melrose Abbey and Edinburgh Castle – Scotland’s most visited paid-for tourist attraction. It includes both the external and internal cleaning of buildings, offices and windows.

This marks the extension of a nine-year partnershi­p between the two organisati­ons, with Mitie having held a long-term contract with HES since 2010.

Mitie also announced that it is set to introduce Edinburgh Castle’s first electric vehicle, in an effort to reduce its environmen­tal impact and support the capital’s commitment to become carbon neutral by 2030.

The group has previously pledged to switch its entire vehicle fleet to electric by the same year.

Matthew Thompson, managing director of cleaning and environmen­tal services at Mitie, said: “It’s a privilege to look after some of Scotland’s best loved historic buildings and monuments through our strong partnershi­p with HES.

“With a renewed focus on sustainabi­lity, we’re excited to introduce the first electric vehicle at Edinburgh to support the capital’s carbon emission pledge and we will continue to deliver improvemen­ts to keep Scotland’s beautiful heritage sites shining.”

The announceme­nt comes one month after Mitie, whose contracts in Scotland include maintainin­g the Scottish Parliament building, hinted at further job cuts as its turnaround continues “at pace”.

Chief executive Phil Bentley said there would “inevitably” be some impact on jobs as he set out the details of the next stage of his overhaul, dubbed Project Forte.

The second leg of the revamp is to focus on Mitie’s engineerin­g services business, which currently has around 8,400 staff. It follows the group’s Project Helix cost programme, launched in 2017, which it estimates will bring savings of £50m per annum by spring 2020.

Mitie, which employs 52,500 people across the UK, posted a 6 per cent rise in underlying earnings to £88.2m in the financial year to 31 March. Revenues rose by 9.4 per cent to £2.2 billion.

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