You are here
  • Home
  • >
  • Amey doubles social enterprise spend in 2018

Amey doubles social enterprise spend in 2018

Amey doubles social enterprise spend in 2018

The infrastructure provider and consultancy firm Amey doubled its social enterprise spend in 2018, new figures can reveal.

During the 2018 financial year, Amey spent over £2m across its supply chain on companies who use their profits to create positive social change in communities across the UK and overseas. 

The figure is more than double what was paid in 2017, when £930,000 went to suppliers sharing this ethical purpose.

John Cully, Chief Procurement Officer at Amey said: “We are very proud to have reached such a significant milestone for social enterprise spend. We still have much more we want to achieve but our work is testament to a belief that public services can be delivered with social, environmental and economic benefits at the heart. Not only does working with social enterprises support incredibly worthy causes, it also provides fantastic value to the tax payer, ensuring each public pound invested in infrastructure goes even further.”

A further £1.6million was also spent on social enterprises by Amey’s joint ventures including GEOAmey, KeolisAmey and Amey Sersa, in what was a landmark year for third sector spend.

The increase reflects the diverse range of social enterprises joining Amey’s supply chain, whether suppliers of staff, services or materials. New to Amey for 2018 was WildHearts Office, who through supplying Amey’s office stationery, fund wide ranging initiatives from addressing social mobility in the UK, to supporting gender equality in the developing world.

Kris Bryson, Partnerships Director from WildHearts said: “We are delighted to be working with Amey, transforming an everyday overhead into a social investment. As a direct result of our relationship with Amey, we have transformed over 2,500 lives locally and globally.”

In 2019 Amey will spend c.£1.5bn over 4,500 goods and materials suppliers, services suppliers and subcontractors. Three-quarters of these are SMEs, including social enterprises.

Read our

Latest Issue

Tomorrow's
FM
Awards 2024