Select committee ends interest in Bombardier decision
- Published

A Bombardier delegation travelled to Westminster on the day of the hearing
The Transport Select Committee has said it will not look any further at a decision to deny Derby train maker Bombardier the Thameslink contract.
The transport minister and Bombardier bosses attended a hearing in September after the government picked Siemens as its preferred bidder.
However now the committee has decided against considering the matter further.
The firm's hopes of forcing a U-turn now lie with a possible National Audit Office report or a judicial review.
Labour MP Louise Ellman, chairman of the committee, said the hearing had been useful in raising concerns about the procurement process which led to Bombardier losing the £1.4bn deal.
She added Transport Secretary Phillip Hammond had told the hearing he would help find other work for the train maker.
Select committees have no direct powers to force a rethink but are considered very influential.
The National Audit Office is still considering whether to carry out a full review into the deal and Derby City Council is working with union Unite on a possible judicial review.
Bombardier announced 1,400 job cuts in the wake of the decision and is still considering the future of its Litchurch Lane plant.
- Published12 September 2011
- Published7 September 2011
- Published16 June 2011