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TCS, Cognizant among 5 vendors to bag deal from UK's Network Rail

TCS, Cognizant among 5 vendors to bag deal from UK's Network Rail

Network Rail is the owner (not for dividend) and operator of Britain's railway infrastructure, which includes tracks, signals, tunnels, bridges, level crossings and stations.

UK-based Network Rail has roped in five IT vendors, including Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), Cognizant and Accenture to design, build and manage its IT infrastructure in a deal estimated at 350 million pounds.

Network Rail is the owner (not for dividend) and operator of Britain's railway infrastructure, which includes tracks, signals, tunnels, bridges, level crossings and stations.

"With more than 270 individual IT suppliers, Network Rail manages a variety of systems of varying complexity, including some that were designed as far back as the 1970s. Network Rail has signed framework agreements with five major IT suppliers as it begins to simplify its computing relationships," Network Rail said in a statement.

The new "zero-sum" IT solutions and system integrator framework agreements with Accenture, BAE Systems Detica, Cognizant, CSC and Tata Consultancy Services, it added.

The agreements are designed to allow suppliers to take more ownership of designing, building and implementing IT solutions to support Network Rail, the statement said.

Though financial details of the deal were not disclosed, sources said the deal size is worth over 350 million pounds.

When contacted, Network Rail in an emailed response said, "This is no commitment, zero-sum framework agreement. There is potential for a certain level of money to change hands, but equally, the companies concerned know they may not get that work. We have a mixture of outsourced and in-house IT suppliers. The previous systems integration framework, which this replaces, had 16 suppliers. What this (deal) does is share the delivery risk more equally between Network Rail and our suppliers."

The deal assumes significance as demand for IT services in the European region is almost flat amid economic uncertainties. The region accounts for about 20-30 per cent of the revenues of the Indian IT sector.

"By creating this framework, we will be able to scale more flexibly our resources to meet demand, while retaining our vital assurance role," Network Rail Chief Information Officer Susan Cooklin said.

Published on: Jun 05, 2013, 8:39 PM IST
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