UK Government G-Cloud

This page is about the UK Government cloud computing initiative. For the interstellar entity see G-Cloud.

The UK Government G-Cloud is an initiative targeted at easing procurement by public-sector bodies in departments of the United Kingdom Government of commodity information technology services that use cloud computing.[1] The G-Cloud consists of:

The service began in 2012, and had several calls for contracts.[2] By May 2013 there were over 700 suppliers—over 80% of which were small and medium enterprises.[3] £18.2 million (US$27.7 million) of sales were made by April 2013.[4] With the adoption of Cloud First policy in UK in late February 2014 [5] the sales have continued to grow, reportedly hitting over £50M in February 2014.[6] These are based on procurement of some 1,200 providers and 13,000 services, including both cloud services and (professional) specialist services as of November 2013.[7]

Overview

Cloud computing caused a significant change in the way information systems can be delivered. Given this, the UK Government initiated the G-Cloud programme of work to deliver computing based capability (from fundamental resources such as storage and processing to full-fledged applications) using cloud computing.[8]

G-Cloud established framework agreements with a large number of service providers; and lists those services on a publicly accessible portal known as the Digital Marketplace. Public Sector organisations can call off the services listed on the Digital Marketplace without needing to go through a full tender process.

After plans were announced in March 2011, the government aimed to shift 50% of new government IT spending to cloud based services by 2015.[9] Furthermore, the government established a "Cloud First" approach to IT, mandating that central government purchases IT services through the cloud unless it can be proven that an alternative is more cost effective.[3][10][11]

In June 2013 G-Cloud moved to become part of Government Digital Service (GDS) with the director Denise McDonagh moving to be CTO of the Home Office. Tony Singleton, COO of GDS, took over as director of G-Cloud.[12][13]

Framework agreements

Calls

G-Cloud had several calls for contract to establish framework agreements.

Major US vendors Amazon Web Services (AWS) and Google were initially excluded by the UK government in 2012 (G-Cloud 3)[14] but AWS has since been added in 2013 (G-Cloud 4).[15]

Following hints by the head of the programme, GDS chief operating officer Tony Singleton, that the call for G-Cloud 4 would be open by the "end of July",[16] the G-Cloud 4 call opened on the 6 August 2013.[2] The blog entry also stated that the tendering process has been improved, with the use of the Government Procurement Service.

G-Cloud stated it expects to make calls roughly every three to six months, but with no fixed frequency.[17] Contract calls are listed on the Government Contract Finder website.[18]

In April 2013 the G-Cloud V call for framework contracts was listed as starting in March 2014.[19] G-Cloud V opened on 25 February 2014.[20]

The press noted the name of the G-Cloud call for framework agreements moved from suffixing the call with Roman numerals (G-Cloud I, II and III) to using the Arabic numeral 4.[21]

Classifications

Suppliers define the service that they are offering as part of the framework agreement, and those details will be made available in the Digital Marketplace. These details include such things as Business Impact Level[22] (e.g. IL2) that the service is accredited for, and how users will be on-boarded and off-boarded. In particular is the requirement to enable users to leave the service (off-board) if they wish to move to a different provider of the same service.

Services are classified into:

Digital Marketplace (previously CloudStore)

The Digital Marketplace is a publicly accessible, searchable database of services offered under G-Cloud. The first service was offered in February 2012.[23] Following criticism of the original CloudStore interface, CloudStore was substantially reworked by May 2013.[24] In 2014, the Government Digital Service announced [25] it would be replacing the CloudStore with a new platform called the "Digital Marketplace", currently in beta. The Digital Marketplace aims to integrate the Digital Services framework in 2015 and ultimately other framework contracts.[26] Services can be searched by free text search as well as by continual narrowing of the field using various search criteria such as business impact level supported, cost, deployment model (e.g. Public Cloud, Private Cloud).[27]

Procurement

The Digital Marketplace procurement processes handle selection and procurement of services. They do not replace internal processes for securing funds. However, assuming funds are available, procurement from the Digital Marketplace does not require a full tender or mini-competition.[28]

Accreditation

Services offered on the Digital Marketplace can be accredited by the Communications-Electronics Security Group (CESG) Pan Government Accreditation Service as appropriate for use across government for data up to a specified Business Impact Level.[29] As of July 2013 only 72 services achieved Pan Government Accreditation out of about 7,000 available on the Digital Marketplace.[30]

References

  1. Margaret Rouse (October 2012). "G-cloud (government cloud)". Search Cloud Computing. Retrieved 26 September 2013.
  2. 1 2 Peter Middleton (6 August 2013). "G-Cloud 4 Now Open". G-Cloud blog. Retrieved 26 September 2013.
  3. 1 2 "Public sector told to buy IT through the cloud as G-Cloud iii goes live". Public Service. 7 May 2013. Archived from the original on 31 July 2013. Retrieved 26 September 2013.
  4. Gary Flood (22 April 2013). "U.K. Government CloudStore Sales Spike 300% In March". Information Week. Retrieved 26 September 2013.
  5. https://www.gov.uk/government/news/government-adopts-cloud-first-policy-for-public-sector-it
  6. https://digitalmarketplace.blog.gov.uk/2013/10/18/another-milestone-for-g-cloud-over-50million-in-sales-reached/
  7. https://www.gov.uk/how-to-use-cloudstore
  8. The G-Cloud Programme
  9. "UK government may miss cloud computing targets". BBC News. 17 May 2012. Retrieved 26 September 2013.
  10. Gov tech buyers told to buy from CloudStore first
  11. Government Adopts Cloud First Strategy As G-Cloud 3 Goes Live
  12. G-Cloud director stands down as programme moves to GDS
  13. Lonely G-Cloud wanders in search of crowd o'er UK.gov vales and hills
  14. Tom Brewster (27 November 2012). "Amazon And Google Denied G-Cloud Entry ‘As Clouds Not Government Ready’". Tech Week Europe. Retrieved 26 September 2013.
  15. Tom Jowitt (30 October 2013). "G-Cloud 4 Goes Live With Amazon Web Services". Tech Week Europe. Retrieved 17 December 2014.
  16. G-Cloud – ready for the next phase
  17. "Applying to G-Cloud", G-Cloud web site, 19 August 2013, retrieved 26 September 2013
  18. Contracts Finder, UK Government
  19. "G-Cloud Services V". 10 April 2013. Retrieved 26 September 2013.
  20. https://digitalmarketplace.blog.gov.uk/2014/02/25/g-cloud-5-open/
  21. What did the Romans ever do for G-Cloud?
  22. HMG IA Standard No. 1 – Technical Risk Assessment (PDF)
  23. "Cloudstore: Government launches public sector app store". BBC News. 20 February 2012. Retrieved 26 September 2013.
  24. Peter Middleton (4 May 2013). "CloudStore". CloudStore blog. Retrieved 26 September 2013.
  25. "Moving from CloudStore to Digital Marketplace". UK Cabinet Office. 18 August 2014. Retrieved 12 December 2014.
  26. "What’s new in the Digital Marketplace". UK Cabinet Office. 25 November 2014. Retrieved 12 December 2014.
  27. "CloudStore". Official web site. Retrieved 26 September 2013.
  28. "How to buy". G-Cloud web site. UK Government. Retrieved 26 September 2013.
  29. Pan Government Accreditation Service, CESG
  30. "Pan Government Accreditation status", G-Cloud web site, 23 July 2013, retrieved 26 September 2013
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