Planning

Range Safety, Planning and Monitoring (RSPM)

  • Defence Equipment and Support

UK2: Preliminary market engagement notice - Procurement Act 2023 - view information about notice types

Notice identifier: 2025/S 000-046493

Procurement identifier (OCID): ocds-h6vhtk-051717 (view related notices)

Published 6 August 2025, 12:30pm



Scope

Reference

713161450

Description

The User requires a capability to plan, conduct, and review Dismounted Close Combat (DCC) live-fire tactical training (LFTT) activities at ranges across UK and overseas. The system must enable the creation, submission, authorisation, and secure retention of compliant digital traces, in accordance with Defence Safety Authority (DSA) Regulations 1 and Live Fire Policy 2. It must provide enhanced situational awareness for range safety staff. The system must support After-Action Review (AAR) by integrating historical activity data and allow access via Defence Gateway on both MOD and civilian devices.

Live field firing represents the apex of operational preparation for land forces yet carries persistently high risks of dangerous occurrences and fratricide. Current manual live fire range design and exercise control methods are antiquated and inefficient; they do not optimise Defence Training Estate (DTE) usage or force generation opportunities. They are prone to human error, incapable of genuinely supporting the execution and review phases of training and cannot integrate with complementary technologies or digital modernisation capabilities. Safety incidents and fatalities on ranges are attributed to a combination of causal, contributory and other factors, often stemming from human error, procedural efficiencies, and limitations in equipment and training. The 17 live fire training deaths of UK military personnel and subsequent investigations from Jan 2000 to Mar 2023 are an illustration of these failings.

Modernising range planning and management will enhance the UK's training, improve coherence and deconfliction while maximising DTE usage, improving safety and reducing the risk of the Armed Forces preparing for operations. A software package will apply digital parameters and technology-enabled safety interventions throughout the planning, management, execution and after-action review (AAR) phases of training. It will enable the dynamic management of the Defence range estate to maximise throughput and save lost training time and resources. Modernised range planning, management and conduct will aid in reducing the risk resulting from the Army's key risk to life activity, without the value of the training suffering. The capability will not replace, but support the already inherently Safe Persons, Safe Equipment, Safe Place and Safe Practice as detailed in live-fire SSoW policy.

RSPM seeks to provide:

An efficient range planning and management process: The legacy reversionary methods of planning DCC live-fire activity, whilst considered safe, can be made more efficient.

Situational awareness and enhancing safety of live-fire activity: Incidents and fatalities have occurred during live-fire activity for multiple reasons, often compounding. Situational awareness of range safety staff has been cited as a Contributory Factor, especially at night.

Quantification of lethality: The imperative for the DCC operative is to become more lethal and this begins with the fundamentals of marksmanship training. The aim of live-fire training is to provide a realistic tactical setting to train firers and team leaders in the skills and procedures necessary for operations. This can be shortened into the adage 'Train how we fight'. To garner the most benefit from any live-fire exercise there needs to be feedback, formal and informal to those involved with all stages of the training.

Defence Equipment and Support (DE&S) as part of the MOD, reserves the right and has no obligation to continue with the requirement following Preliminary Market Engagement (PME), and if potential suppliers choose to act on any information received during PME, it is entirely at their own risk.

Total value (estimated)

  • £15,000,000 excluding VAT
  • £18,000,000 including VAT

Above the relevant threshold

Contract dates (estimated)

  • 30 November 2026 to 29 November 2029
  • Possible extension to 29 November 2031
  • 5 years

Main procurement category

Services

CPV classifications

  • 75221000 - Military defence services

Engagement

Engagement deadline

19 September 2025

Engagement process description

The industry engagement day will take place on the 5th of September 2025 at TechUK, London (online attendance option available).

Suppliers who are interested in the RSPM pre-market engagement industry day can sign up via the below link to attend in person or online:

https://www.techuk.org/what-we-deliver/events/mod-industry-day-range-safety-planning-and-management-rspm.html

A pre-pack is available for the event via TeckUK, who will distribute to attendees following event sign up.

The main purpose of the event is to introduce the requirement or problem the Authority is trying to solve, as well as seek advice/assitance to:

- Form the tender approach

- Help shape the final requirements

- Assess project affordability

- Assess whether the project is currently deliverable to desired timelines

- Challenge our assumptions and dependencies.

- Flag technical or delivery risks we might not have covered.


Participation

Particular suitability

Small and medium-sized enterprises (SME)


Procedure

Special regime

Defence and security


Contracting authority

Defence Equipment and Support

  • Public Procurement Organisation Number: PVRL-5831-GLMM

MOD Abbey Wood

Bristol

BS34 8JH

United Kingdom

Contact name: Jack Morgan

Email: jack.morgan208@mod.gov.uk

Website: http://www.contracts.mod.uk

Region: UKK12 - Bath and North East Somerset, North Somerset and South Gloucestershire

Organisation type: Public authority - central government