HC Deb 28 January 1992 vol 202 cc499-501W
Mr. Butler

To ask the Secretary of State for Transport if he is now in a position to announce his decision on the recommendation put to him by the board of the Tees and Hartlepool port authority concerning the sale of its undertaking.

Mr. Rifkind

Yes. In my answer to a question from my hon. Friend the Member for Stockton, South (Mr. Devlin) on 18 December I said that I had written to the chairman of THPA to say that I was minded to give my formal consent to the sale of the authority's successor company—Tees and Hartlepool Port Authority Ltd.—to Teesside Holdings Ltd. as soon as I was able to do so; and that this would be possible only after the scheme of transfer submitted by the authority under section 9(1) of the Ports Act 1991 and the order providing for a levy on disposals of land to be made under section 17 of the Act had come into effect. The former took effect on 30 December 1991 and the latter on 16 January.

Since I gave my answer to my hon. Friend's question on 18 December, a number of representations have been put to me concerning the sale, notably by Mr. John Hackney, the chief executive of THPA and chairman of the THPA Consortium plc, and by the hon. Member for Middlesbrough (Mr. Bell), who have sought to persuade me that I should withhold my consent to the THPA board's recommendation concerning the sale of the port. I have considered the matters which have been put before me very carefully, including taking counsel's advice. I have concluded that there is nothing in them which would justify my taking a different decision from the one I was minded to take in December. I am satisfied that the THPA board conducted the sale of its undertaking properly, and fully in accordance with the procedure agreed with my Department. In so far as it has been represented to me that the advice of THPA's professional advisers was misleading to the THPA consortium, I am satisfied that it was proper advice and should not have given rise to any misapprehension on the part of the consortium. I am further satisfied that the board evaluated the final bids which it received in accordance with the objectives of sale agreed between THPA and myself and that it did not apply any additional or different objectives of sale. These objectives were: In assessing the merits of competing offers, the Board of the Authority will have particular regard to the desirability of encouraging the disposal to managers and staff of the whole or a substantial part of the equity share capital of its privatised undertaking. The Board will seek the best open market price for its undertaking having regard to its desire to ensure that after privatisation the undertaking should continue to operate in ways which are beneficial to the local economy. To that end the Board will look closely at the background and business plans of prospective purchasers to satisfy itself that they are directed to the maintenance of a viable, competitive port operation; to the maintenance of the port as a separate entity with day-to-day management and control located in Teesside; and to the need for proposals for the use of THPA's assets to be for the development of the port business or for the promotion of developments which are locally beneficial.

Among the matters drawn to my attention was the statement in the Teesside Holdings' bid that an existing member of the THPA board and a leading local solicitor, neither of whom was named, would be appointed to the Teesside Holdings' board. It was suggested that this created a potential conflict of interest on the THPA board in the consideration of the bids. Each of the non-executive members of the THPA board and their legal adviser have confirmed that they received no approach on this matter from 3i, whose nominees on the Teesside Holdings' board the directors would be; and Teesside Holdings has similarly confirmed that it made no such approach. I am satisfied that no conflict of interest arose in the THPA board's consideration of the bids.

I have also considered representations concerning Humberside Holdings and other companies associated with the Holloway family. Humberside Holdings, which is itself owned in part by Powell Duffryn and in part by the Holloway family, holds an equal share with Powell Duffryn and 3i in the equity share capital of Teesside Holdings Ltd. Mr. John Holloway is the intended chief executive of Tees and Hartlepool Port Authority Ltd. I have found nothing in the evidence put before me concerning either Mr. John Holloway or Humberside Holdings which would make it proper for me to withhold my consent to the proposed sale to Teesside Holdings Ltd.

I am now writing to the chairman of THPA giving my consent to the sale of the authority's undertaking to Teesside Holdings Ltd. I should like to place on record my appreciation of the patience which the chairman and members of the THPA Board have shown during the delay in my reaching a final decision caused by the need for me to consider these representations.