The Crown Commercial Service (CCS) has announced its final legal panel, worth up to £820m, with a total of 30 law firms making the cut – including three that did not have roles on the previous panel.
This year saw a shake-up to the formula, with the former legal services, rail legal services, and trade law panels replaced by a single panel to cover more than 60 legal specialisms.
The panel will be used by all central government departments, and was created by CCS in partnership with the Government Legal Department, the Department for Business and Trade and the Department for Transport.
It will run for three years, with the option to extend by a further 12 months, and is currently due to end on 29 September 2028. The previous panels were in place from 2021.
This year, the panel has been divided into five separate lots, with Lot 4, covering trade law, split into three separate sub-categories: trade and investment negotiations, international trade disputes and international investment disputes.
The remaining lots are core legal services (Lot 1), major projects and complex advice (Lot 2), finance and high risk/innovation (Lot 3) and rail legal services (Lot 5).
The estimated maximum value of each lot ranges from £275m for core legal services to £30m for trade and investment negotiations.
Which firms won roles?
While the rail legal services lot contains the same firms from the 2021 rail panel, the other panels include notable changes.
Most significant is the new international investment disputes lot, worth £90m, which has no analogue in the 2021 trade panel.
Among the seven firms appointed to this lot are A&O Shearman, Eversheds Sutherland and Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer.
A&O Shearman did not appear on the previous panel at all. Eversheds Sutherland and HSF Kramer, meanwhile, did not appear on the previous trade panels, but were each appointed to the 2021 panel under other categories.
HSF Kramer has further broadened its portfolio of government work with appointments to four lots in total, with showings in major projects and complex advice, finance and high risk/innovation, and international investment disputes, in addition to its existing place in the rail legal services.
As well as A&O Shearman, Trowers & Hamlins and Brodies also won roles on the panel after not being included in 2021, with one lot for each firm.
Of the returning firms, Dentons has been awarded a place on six of the seven lots, the most of any other firm. TLT, Ashurst and Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer were appointed to four lots each, while Burges Salmon, DLA Piper, Hogan Lovells and Clifford Chance were each appointed to three lots.
Among the firms not reappointed to any lot are BCLP, McDermott Will & Schulte, WilmerHale, Simmons & Simmons, and Howes Percival.
A number of internationally headquartered firms were also taken off of this year’s trade panel.
In addition, the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority (NDA) has also announced its new £5m legal panel earlier this week. The NDA is a non-departmental public body which leads the clean-up of hazardous materials and highly-radioactive waste at the UK’s earliest nuclear sites. The panel will run for one year and five months, until the end of March 2027.
Nine firms were awarded spots: Addleshaw Goddard, Burges Salmon, Dentons, DLA Piper, DWF, Gowling WLG, Mills & Reeve, Pinsent Masons and TLT.
Crown Commercial Service panel:
Lot 1: Core legal services
- Bevan Brittan
- Brodies
- Browne Jacobson
- Burges Salmon
- Consortium DAC Beachcroft and Sharpe Pritchard
- Dentons
- DLA Piper
- DWF Law
- Gowling WLG
- Mills & Reeve
- TLT
- Trowers & Hamlins
Lot 2: Major projects and complex advice
- Addleshaw Goddard
- Ashurst
- Burges Salmon
- Dentons
- DLA Piper
- Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer
- Hogan Lovells
- Mills & Reeve
- Pinsent Masons
- TLT
Lot 3: Finance and high risk/innovation
- Ashurst
- Clifford Chance
- Dentons
- DLA Piper
- Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer
- Hogan Lovells
- Slaughter & May
Lot 4a: Trade and investment negotiations
- Clifford Chance
- Dentons
- Fieldfisher
- Hogan Lovells
- TLT
- White & Case
Lot 4b: International trade disputes
- Baker McKenzie Switzerland
- Clifford Chance
- Sidley Austin
- TLT
- Van Bael & Bellis
- White & Case
Lot 4c: International investment disputes
- A&O Shearman
- Ashurst
- Dentons
- Eversheds Sutherland
- Fieldfisher
- Freshfields
- Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer
- Steptoe International
Lot 5: Rail legal services
- Addleshaw Goddard
- Ashurst
- Burges Salmon
- Dentons
- Eversheds Sutherland
- Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer
- Linklaters
- Osborne Clarke

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