Renewable Heat Incentive Inquiry

Completed

RHI Inquiry

Chair Sir Patrick Coghlin Judge / Judiciary
Established 01 Jun 2017
Final Report 13 Mar 2020
Commissioned by Northern Ireland Executive

Northern Ireland inquiry into the Renewable Heat Incentive scandal which led to collapse of power-sharing. The flawed scheme cost the public purse nearly £500 million.

Evidence & Impact
The Renewable Heat Incentive Inquiry examined the design and operation of the Northern Ireland Non-Domestic Renewable Heat Incentive scheme, which led to significant overspend of public funds. Sir Patrick Coghlin's report, published in March 2020, made 45 recommendations addressing policy development, governance, ministerial accountability, and civil service capabilities.

The Northern Ireland Executive responded in October 2021, accepting 43 recommendations in full, one in principle, and rejecting one concerning an independent mechanism to assess special advisers' compliance. The Northern Ireland Audit Office (NIAO) has published two progress reports, in June 2022 and October 2024, assessing implementation.

According to NIAO's October 2024 assessment, 29 recommendations (64%) show evidence of completion, while 15 (33%) have no recent updates. Key legislative changes include the Functioning of Government Act 2021, which established statutory requirements for ministerial declarations of interest and gave the Assembly Commissioner for Standards powers to investigate code breaches - addressing a recommendation the Executive had initially rejected.

Significant institutional reforms are documented, including establishment of the Better Business Cases NI framework, the Making a Difference policy guide for officials, revised codes of conduct for ministers and special advisers, and creation of a Raising a Concern framework with trained investigators. The NICS has established a Project Delivery Profession and People & Organisational Development Group to address capability gaps.

However, NIAO identifies several recommendations as 'unlikely to be fully implemented'. These include requirements for regular record-keeping audits, departments reviewing governance systems in practice, and ensuring ministers sufficiently familiarise themselves with legislation. The Department of Finance has indicated it considers existing arrangements sufficient for some recommendations or that further action would be 'disproportionate'.

The evidence indicates substantial structural and procedural changes have been made, particularly in business case processes, policy development guidance, and accountability frameworks. However, implementation of recommendations requiring behavioural or cultural change appears less complete, with NIAO seeking evidence that new guidance is being rigorously applied in practice.
Reforms Attributed to This Inquiry
- Functioning of Government (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (Northern Ireland) 2021 established statutory framework for ministerial declarations of interest and gave NI Assembly Commissioner for Standards powers to investigate ministerial code breaches
- Better Business Cases NI framework (November 2020) redesigned business case approval processes
- Making a Difference policy guide (February 2023) launched to 900+ officials addressing policy development skills and resource assessment
- Revised Ministerial Code of Conduct and Code of Conduct for Special Advisers (January 2020, updated August 2021) covering record-keeping, conflicts of interest, and accountability
- Raising a Concern Policy Framework established with 17 trained investigators through Government Internal Audit and Fraud Investigation Service (GIAFIS)
- Managing Public Money NI updated (November 2023) reinforcing value for money requirements
- Project Delivery Profession established within Northern Ireland Civil Service
- People & Organisational Development Group established (November 2022) to lead fundamental HR reform
Unfinished Business
- Recommendation 28(2) on regular record-keeping audits - DoF confirmed it believes existing arrangements sufficient with no firm commitment to regular audits
- Recommendation 32a on departments reviewing how governance systems work in practice - NIAO found no evidence of specific action
- Recommendation 39 on ensuring Ministers sufficiently read legislation they present - DoF stated it is 'unclear what further actions can be taken'
- Recommendation 9(2) on guidance for handling commercially sensitive information - NIAO found reliance on individual training insufficient
- Recommendation 13 on external board members and Strategic Investment Board engagement - DoF maintains monitoring operational implementation would be 'disproportionate'
- Recommendation 42(1-2) on ministerial responsibilities and Ministers actively questioning advice - current Ministerial Code does not include requirement for Ministers to take active role in questioning official advice
Generated 18 Mar 2026 using claude-opus-4. Assessment is indicative, not authoritative.
2 years, 9 months Duration
£12m Total Cost
63 Witnesses
114 Hearing Days
1,200,000 Documents
656 Report Pages
Government Response

Total Recommendations 45
Data last updated: 15 Oct 2024 · Source
Data verified: 24 Mar 2026 (import)
How to read this

Government Response tracks what the government said it would do (accepted, rejected, etc.).

Full methodology

1 question since Jun 2020
Written Question Renewable Heat Incentive Inquiry: Northern Ireland
Ian Paisley (Democratic Unionist Party)
08 Jun 2020
24 Jan 2017
Inquiry Announced
01 Jun 2017
Inquiry Established
13 Mar 2020
Final Report Published

Recommendations (45)

RHI-1
Accepted
Policy Skills Assessment
Recommendation
A new policy at its earliest stage should be subject to a rigorous process to determine whether the Northern Ireland devolved administration has (or is prepared to assign) the necessary skills and resources to deliver the policy safely and competently. … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Department of Finance published the 'Making a Difference' policy guide in February 2023, which was launched to over 900 officials and addresses skills and resource assessment at the policy's outset (NIAO Second Progress Report, October 2024). While the Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in October 2021, an independent NIAO report in October 2024 found that civil service skills gaps largely remained unaddressed, with the NICS People Strategy 2025-2030 only published in April 2025.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-2
Accepted
Novel Policy Scrutiny
Recommendation
Novel, potentially volatile and untested initiatives should in future be scrutinised thoroughly, well ahead of ministerial and business case approval. The Inquiry commends processes such as a 'starting point Gateway assessment' and, at a suitable point, a 'feasibility signoff' completed … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in full in October 2021, stating some elements were already addressed in existing guidance, including the role of the Senior Responsible Officer and existing Business Case guidance (NI Executive Response, October 2021). The NIAO Second Progress Report (October 2024) assessed the sub-recommendation on pre-approval scrutiny as addressed via updated Gateway assessments, while controls for demand-driven policy are covered by 'Making a Difference' guidance and are assessed as 'likely' to be implemented.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-3
Accepted
Policy Skills Training
Recommendation
As far as practicable, Northern Ireland Civil Service teams working on policies, particularly new and untested initiatives, should be trained and supported so that they have the skills to do the job, not least the ability to model the policy, … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in October 2021, stating that elements were addressed in existing guidance, including the role of the Senior Responsible Officer, Business Case guidance, and the NICS Code of Ethics (Official government response, 2021-10-07). The NIAO's Second Progress Report (October 2024) assessed this recommendation as "Implemented," confirming that policy skills training has been established through the "Making a Difference" guidance and an associated policy skills curriculum.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-4
Accepted
Quality of Ministerial Advice
Recommendation
A lesson from the RHI experience is that action is needed to raise and sustain the quality of advice to Ministers and the clarity with which it is expressed. Options must be properly evaluated and, at the point of formal … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in October 2021, noting that elements were addressed in existing guidance. The Northern Ireland Audit Office (NIAO) Second Progress Report (October 2024) assessed the recommendation as implemented, stating that the quality of ministerial advice has been addressed through the 'Making a Difference' policy guide and associated training for officials.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-5
Accepted
Ministerial Training and Support
Recommendation
One role of Ministers in a democratic system is to decide on policies and they can only do so effectively if they are prepared, in appropriate cases, to question and challenge material put to them in submissions and regulatory impact … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive published revised Guidance for Ministers on their roles and responsibilities in January 2020 and strengthened the Ministerial Code of Conduct to include requirements on conflicts of interest, Special Adviser management, and declarations of interests (NIAO Second Progress Report, October 2024). Ministerial induction and briefing were also provided upon Executive restoration (NIAO Second Progress Report, October 2024). While sub-parts on induction and Private Office resourcing are implemented, the overall ministerial training offer was still assessed as 'likely to be implemented' by the NIAO in October 2024.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-6
Accepted
Special Adviser Role Clarity
Recommendation
(i) Under existing arrangements, Northern Ireland Ministers should be responsible for their Special Advisers. (ii) New or returning Ministers should be invited to convey to the relevant Permanent Secretary, and make transparent to the Department, how the Minister expects his … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Functioning of Government (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (NI) 2021 established Special Adviser accountability in statute, making them subject to the same disciplinary procedures as Northern Ireland Civil Service employees and explicitly making Ministers responsible for their conduct (NI Assembly, December 2021). A revised Special Adviser Code of Conduct was published in January 2020, and Special Adviser role clarity is outlined in Private Office guidance (NIAO Second Progress Report, October 2024).
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-7
Accepted
Special Adviser Induction
Recommendation
There should be a clearly defined induction process for new Special Advisers, shared by the appointing Minister and the relevant Permanent Secretary, in the course of which the structure and work of the relevant Department, the terms of the Special … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Department of Finance reported that induction training was delivered to 9 of 13 Special Advisers between February and March 2024 (NIAO Second Progress Report, October 2024). However, the Northern Ireland Audit Office (NIAO) assessed this recommendation as 'Likely to be Implemented' in October 2024, noting that four Special Advisers had not attended the training at the time of reporting and questioning the overall effectiveness of the induction process.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-8
Accepted
Job-Specific Recruitment
Recommendation
A fundamental shift is needed in the approach used within the Northern Ireland Civil Service with regard to recruitment and selection for government jobs. This must involve an up-front assessment of the skills that are required to fulfil the specific … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Civil Service (NICS) has initiated fundamental HR reform, establishing a People & Organisational Development Group in November 2022 and a Recruitment and Selection Development Group, with a three-year plan (2024-27) under development (NIAO Second Progress Report, October 2024). The NICS People Strategy 2025-2030, published in April 2025, addresses skills gap analysis and competency-based recruitment; however, the Northern Ireland Audit Office (NIAO) noted in October 2024 that recruitment reform was progressing slowly and the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) continued to find recruitment processes inadequate.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-9
Accepted
Commercial Awareness
Recommendation
Commercial and business awareness amongst policy officials, particularly those working in roles relating to the economy of Northern Ireland, must be improved. It is important that the leadership of the Northern Ireland Civil Service also devise and provide clear guidance … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Audit Office (NIAO) reported in October 2024 that commercial awareness training and frontline experience opportunities for policy officials were implemented (NIAO Second Progress Report, October 2024). However, the NIAO also stated that guidance and training on handling commercially sensitive information was stalled, and adequate resourcing of policy teams remained unresolved, leading to an overall assessment that the recommendation was 'Unlikely to be Fully Implemented'.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-10
Accepted
External Consultants Guidance
Recommendation
The Northern Ireland Civil Service should consider what changes are needed to its guidance and practices on the use of external consultants arising from the experience of RHI. Specific recommendations include: (a) that better assessments are needed at the outset … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in October 2021, stating that it was addressed through work including job-specific appointments and piloting the Cabinet Office's 'Commercial Skills Assessment and Development Centre'. However, the NIAO's Second Progress Report (October 2024) noted that guidance on external consultants was being refreshed, but its target publication date had slipped from August 2024 due to competing priorities. No specific new guidance document has been identified as published.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-11
Accepted
Project Management Disciplines
Recommendation
Best practice project and risk management disciplines should be the default practice within the Northern Ireland Civil Service when developing novel and complex policies and managing their implementation. These disciplines can be widely applied and should not be confined only … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Civil Service has established a Project Delivery Profession, set up Senior Responsible Officer, project management, and contract management networks, and made the Gateway Review Process mandatory for projects over £5 million (NIAO Second Progress Report, October 2024). New Programme and Project Management Guidance (FD (DoF) 02/24) was issued in March 2024, establishing best practice project and risk management disciplines as default practice via updated Dear Accounting Officer letters and Orange Book guidance (NIAO Second Progress Report, October 2024). While these disciplines are in place, the Public Accounts Committee's follow-up report found a £3 billion overspend on major capital projects.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-12
Accepted
Invest NI and SIB Collaboration
Recommendation
The leaders of the Northern Ireland Civil Service should work with Invest Northern Ireland and the Strategic Investment Board to consider how both organisations can better contribute their expertise to the work of mainstream Departments, particularly in relation to good … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in October 2021, and the NIAO's Second Progress Report (October 2024) confirmed that working arrangements with Invest Northern Ireland and the Strategic Investment Board are in place and operating as described in guidance. This facilitates their contribution of expertise to mainstream departments.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-13
Accepted
External Expertise on Project Boards
Recommendation
Project boards are an essential element of project management oversight and must include individuals who can challenge and who are not directly responsible for the day-to-day delivery of the project. Such boards, in appropriate circumstances, can benefit greatly from the … Read more
Published evidence summary
While the Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in October 2021, the NIAO's Second Progress Report (October 2024) assessed it as 'unlikely to be fully implemented'. Updated Dear Accounting Officer guidance recommends the inclusion of external board members and Strategic Investment Board engagement, but the Department of Finance maintains that Senior Responsible Officers are accountable for board composition, and monitoring of operational implementation remains inconsistent across departments.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-14
Accepted
Risk Tracking and Reporting
Recommendation
The risks involved in implementation of an initiative must be tracked, re-considered regularly and used to manage, improve and adjust the project in real time. How the risks are being acted upon should be reported to the Project Board and … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in October 2021. The NIAO's Second Progress Report (October 2024) confirmed that risk tracking and reporting requirements have been addressed through updated Orange Book guidance and Dear Accounting Officer letters, establishing the necessary disciplines for managing and reporting project risks.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-15
Accepted
Programme Boards for Sector Coordination
Recommendation
Co-ordination of groups of projects aiming to achieve change in a particular sector – e.g. renewable energy projects – would be stronger through use of high level Programme Boards. Such boards should meet regularly and receive reports of relevant experience … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in October 2021. The NIAO's Second Progress Report (October 2024) confirmed that programme boards for sector coordination are in place and operating, providing a mechanism for stronger coordination of projects within specific sectors.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-16
Accepted
Third Party Governance
Recommendation
Where other government bodies, such as Ofgem, or contractors or other third parties are involved in the implementation of a project, the 'home' Department must retain overall control and overall project management. The governance arrangement between the Northern Ireland Department … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in October 2021. The NIAO's Second Progress Report (October 2024) confirmed that third-party governance arrangements have been addressed through revised guidance, ensuring that the 'home' Department retains overall control and project management when other government bodies or third parties are involved in project implementation.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-17
Accepted
Professional Development
Recommendation
The Northern Ireland Civil Service should take steps to draw on best practice from other jurisdictions to provide more support for professions within the civil service. The Inquiry specifically recommends: (a) the establishment of a project management profession with a … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in October 2021. The NIAO's Second Progress Report (October 2024) confirmed that both sub-parts of the recommendation, concerning drawing on best practice from other jurisdictions and developing improved professional development for finance and economics, have been addressed. This was achieved through the NICS People Strategy and updated training programmes.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-18
Accepted
Inter-Governmental Framework
Recommendation
More generally, we recommend a Northern Ireland government-wide framework for information exchange and, where appropriate, co-operation between the Northern Ireland Civil Service, Whitehall Departments and (where relevant) Departments of other devolved Governments and of the Government of the Republic of … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in October 2021. An inter-governmental information exchange framework has been established, and collaboration is addressed within the 'Making a Difference' guidance (NIAO Second Progress Report, October 2024). A 'Policy Engagement with Neighbouring Administrations' launch event also took place in September 2023 to further this cooperation.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-19
Accepted
Business Case Approval Redesign
Recommendation
The processes within a Department for approving new expenditure and business cases including, where it forms part of that process, the role of Casework Committees, should be thoroughly re-designed to be more rigorous, testing and independent. Such processes should be … Read more
Published evidence summary
The business case and expenditure approval processes were fundamentally reviewed, leading to the redesign of the business case approval process through Better Business Cases NI in November 2020 (NIAO Second Progress Report, October 2024). New business case guidance (FD (DoF) 02/24) was issued in March 2024, alongside updated economic appraisal guidance and Dear Accounting Officer letters in 2024 and 2025 covering expenditure approval procedures (NIAO Second Progress Report, October 2024).
Department of Finance (Primary)
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RHI-20
Accepted
Flexible Expenditure Rules
Recommendation
Public expenditure rules should be sufficiently flexible so that false economies can be avoided. In order to deliver a policy objective, Departments should not be required to choose a more expensive option in overall terms because they cannot use the … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Department of Finance accepted this recommendation in October 2021, noting that public expenditure in Northern Ireland is governed by UK Budgeting rules set by HM Treasury, and stated that a protocol for engagement with HMT was issued (NI Executive Response, October 2021). The NIAO Second Progress Report (October 2024) confirmed that flexible expenditure rules were addressed through updated Managing Public Money NI and business case guidance.
Department of Finance (Primary)
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RHI-21
Accepted
Sceptical Business Case Scrutiny
Recommendation

The Department of Finance's distinctive role in scrutinising business cases should be searching and sceptical, guarding against over-reliance on the assurances offered by the applicant Department.

Published evidence summary
The Department of Finance accepted this recommendation in full in October 2021, stating it was addressed through a review of expenditure approval and business case processes (NI Executive Response, October 2021). The DoF now applies non-standard conditions of approval for complex projects and uses a tailored monitoring approach to demonstrate proactivity (NI Executive Response, October 2021). The NIAO Second Progress Report (October 2024) confirmed that DoF's distinctive scrutiny role for business cases has been maintained and strengthened.
Department of Finance (Primary)
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RHI-22
Accepted
Proactive DoF Monitoring
Recommendation
Particularly where a policy initiative is demand-led, novel, complex and/or likely to be lengthy, consideration should be given to increasing Department of Finance involvement from an early stage and on an ongoing basis, including a more proactive role in monitoring … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Department of Finance accepted this recommendation in full in October 2021, stating that it now applies non-standard conditions of approval for complex projects (NI Executive Response, October 2021). A tailored monitoring approach demonstrates increased proactivity in DoF involvement (NI Executive Response, October 2021). The NIAO Second Progress Report (October 2024) confirmed that proactive DoF monitoring provisions for demand-led, novel, or complex initiatives are in place.
Department of Finance (Primary)
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RHI-23
Accepted
Ministerial Notification of Approval Conditions
Recommendation
Ministers should always be advised of any conditions attached to the approval of a policy or project by the Department of Finance. The Department of Finance should also require, and be kept informed of, regular reviews to ensure compliance with … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Department of Finance accepted this recommendation in full in October 2021, stating that departments confirm Ministerial awareness of conditions applied to expenditure approvals as part of the Annual Assurance Statement (NI Executive Response, October 2021). Non-standard approval letters also include a line advising that Ministers should be made aware (NI Executive Response, October 2021). The NIAO Second Progress Report (October 2024) confirmed that ministerial notification of approval conditions was addressed through revised guidance.
Department of Finance (Primary)
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RHI-24
Accepted
Staff Move Sequencing
Recommendation
Senior managers in the Civil Service must take responsibility for guiding and, where necessary, sequencing the timing of staff moves so that continuity of business is secured. This includes allowing sufficient time for transferring staff to hand over, and discuss … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in full in October 2021, stating it was addressed through job-specific appointments within NICS generalist grades and the piloting of the Cabinet Office's 'Commercial Skills Assessment and Development Centre' (NI Executive Response, October 2021). The NIAO Second Progress Report (October 2024) noted that Senior Civil Service talent management arrangements were implemented from May 2022 and a knowledge transfer template has been in place since October 2019, but a recruitment policy review is ongoing.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-25
Accepted
Ministerial Decision-Making
Recommendation
In light of their legal responsibility to direct and control the Department for which they are responsible, and their democratic accountability to the Northern Ireland Assembly, ministerial decisions should be taken by Ministers (in conjunction with other ministerial colleagues, where … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in full in October 2021, stating it was addressed through revisions to the Ministerial Code of Conduct and the Code of Conduct for Special Advisers (NI Executive Response, October 2021). The NIAO Second Progress Report (October 2024) confirmed that the principle of ministerial decision-making was reinforced in the Pledge of Office and Guidance for Ministers, published in March 2020.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-26
Accepted
Meeting Records
Recommendation
Notes of significant meetings between officials and ministers, particularly those affecting decision-making and spending, must be taken and retained. The responsibility for ensuring this is done should be clearly identified and compliance should be ensured in practice. Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in full in October 2021, stating it was addressed through revisions to the NICS Code of Ethics, Guidance for Ministers, and new corporate guidance for Private Offices (NI Executive Response, October 2021). However, the NIAO Second Progress Report (October 2024) found that the overall position on record keeping has regressed since its 2022 report, with the Audit Office encountering difficulties securing timely access to adequate records during its review.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-27
Accepted
Private Office Record Keeping
Recommendation
Ministers' responses to submissions should be formally and timeously recorded and disseminated to officials by the Minister's Private Office. That responsibility should not be left to policy teams. One clear corollary is the need for a better system to carry … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in full in October 2021, stating it was addressed through new corporate guidance developed for Private Offices and the strengthening of Private Office roles (NI Executive Response, October 2021). Despite the development of Private Office guidance and regrading of roles, the NIAO Second Progress Report (October 2024) found that record keeping for ministerial responses to submissions has regressed and compliance remains poor, with the audit trail absent during verification.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-28
Accepted
Record Keeping Culture and Audit
Recommendation
The culture and practice of record keeping and access to records within the Northern Ireland Civil Service needs to change so that staff responsible for a given area of work have easy access to the analysis and decisions underpinning the … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in October 2021, stating it was addressed through revisions to the NICS Code of Ethics, Guidance for Ministers, and new corporate guidance for Private Offices (Official government response, 2021-10-07). However, the NIAO's Second Progress Report (October 2024) found that while a data-protection and information management hub was launched and HPRM optimisation started, the underlying record-keeping culture change has not occurred, and the electronic information management system review was not adequately addressed. The NIAO assessed the sub-recommendation on regular record-keeping audits as "not likely to be fully addressed" and overall progress as "No Meaningful Progress" (NIAO Second Progress Report, October 2024).
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-29
Accepted
Departmental Finance Functions
Recommendation
The finance function within a Department should exert the necessary authority and capability to fulfil the requirements of 'Managing Public Money Northern Ireland', namely to retain a firm grasp of the organisation's financial position and performance. The Inquiry recommends that … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Department of Finance accepted this recommendation in October 2021, stating it was addressed through the re-establishment of DoF-led Finance Director meetings and the initiation of a review of Managing Public Money Northern Ireland (MPMNI) (Official government response, 2021-10-07). MPMNI was updated in November 2023, and the finance profession was strengthened with enhanced budget holder training (Official government response, 2021-10-07). The NIAO's Second Progress Report (October 2024) assessed this recommendation as "Implemented," noting that departmental finance function requirements were addressed through existing arrangements.
Department of Finance (Primary)
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RHI-30
Accepted
Budget Holder Financial Training
Recommendation
Civil servants who are responsible for holding and monitoring a budget should have to demonstrate core requirements in financial literacy and an understanding of how public spending operates, including what is expected of them according to the core guidance contained … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Department of Finance accepted this recommendation in October 2021, stating it was addressed through the delivery of an online package of Public Expenditure training for budget holders and general-service grades (Official government response, 2021-10-07). Finance training programs have been established, and specialist expertise development is ongoing (Official government response, 2021-10-07). The NIAO's Second Progress Report (October 2024) assessed this recommendation as "Implemented," confirming that budget holder financial training requirements have been addressed.
Department of Finance (Primary)
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RHI-31
Accepted
Value for Money Priority
Recommendation
Any imperative to spend a budget within a given timeframe should not be allowed to take precedence over how that budget is used and the longer term benefits and overall value of such expenditure. Ministers, Special Advisers and the Northern … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in October 2021, noting that public expenditure in Northern Ireland is governed by UK Budgeting rules and that some elements were addressed in existing guidance, including stipulations on public expenditure and the NICS Code of Ethics (Official government response, 2021-10-07). The NIAO's Second Progress Report (October 2024) assessed this recommendation as "Implemented," confirming that the value for money priority over spending imperatives has been addressed through revised guidance.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-32a
Accepted
Governance Systems Review
Recommendation
The checks and balances within a Department designed to catch problems early failed over many years in DETI to identify certain of the risks of the RHI or their materialisation. All Departments would benefit from reviewing how their governance systems … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in October 2021, stating that elements were addressed in existing guidance, including stipulations on public expenditure and the NICS Code of Ethics (Official government response, 2021-10-07). The NIAO's Second Progress Report (October 2024) found that despite updated Orange Book risk guidance and references to Governance Statements, there was no evidence that departments had reviewed how their governance systems work in practice or that staff actively understand and use them. The NIAO assessed overall progress as "Insufficient Progress," noting that while governance frameworks and risk management processes have been formally reviewed, there has been insufficient improvement in how governance systems work in practice, with a limited practical impact (NIAO Second Progress Report, October 2024).
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-32b
Accepted
Civil Servants Raising Concerns
Recommendation

Civil servants should be encouraged not to feel in any way inhibited about disclosing possible or emerging problems, raising concerns, negative aspects or adverse criticisms of a project as necessary to ensure that decisions are properly informed.

Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in October 2021, stating it was partially addressed through the revision of the NICS Code of Ethics, the GIAFIS review of whistleblowing, and Leadership Development training for senior officials (Official government response, 2021-10-07). The NIAO's Second Progress Report (October 2024) assessed this recommendation as "Implemented," confirming that civil servants are encouraged to raise concerns through a revised NICS Code of Ethics, whistleblowing arrangements, and a Raising a Concern Policy Framework.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-33
Accepted
HMT Communication Protocol
Recommendation
The protocol for relations with HMT, namely that the Northern Ireland Department of Finance must be the sole conduit of formal communication, should be reinforced and widely understood across the Northern Ireland Civil Service. The Department of Finance, for its … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Department of Finance accepted this recommendation in October 2021, stating that a protocol for engagement with HM Treasury (HMT) was issued (Official government response, 2021-10-07). The Department of Finance keeps information sharing and knowledge transfer protocols under review, engaging with HMT and other departments on their effectiveness, and internal audit arrangements have been confirmed with reporting to boards established (Official government response, 2021-10-07). The NIAO's Second Progress Report (October 2024) assessed this recommendation as "Implemented," confirming that the HM Treasury communication protocol has been reinforced, with the Department of Finance operating as the sole conduit.
Department of Finance (Primary)
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RHI-34
Accepted
Rapid Response Capacity
Recommendation
The Northern Ireland Civil Service should have regard to best practice elsewhere about how to respond effectively when serious problems emerge, such as those that did so with the non-domestic NI RHI in the summer of 2015, by, for example, … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in October 2021, stating it was partially addressed through the revision of the NICS Code of Ethics, the GIAFIS review of whistleblowing, and Leadership Development training for senior officials (Official government response, 2021-10-07). The NIAO's Second Progress Report (October 2024) assessed this recommendation as "Implemented," confirming that a rapid response investigation capacity has been established through GIAFIS, comprising 17 trained investigators, with the ability to assemble cross-departmental teams for larger investigations.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-35
Accepted
Early Warning Systems
Recommendation
Better systems are needed for spotting early warnings and concerns from the public and businesses that something unexpected could be happening or going wrong with an initiative. Simply updating existing complaints and whistle-blowing policies, although helpful, will not be sufficient, … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in October 2021, stating it was partially addressed through the revision of the NICS Code of Ethics, the GIAFIS review of whistleblowing, and Leadership Development training for senior officials (Official government response, 2021-10-07). The NIAO's Second Progress Report (October 2024) assessed this recommendation as "Implemented," confirming that all three sub-parts have been addressed via revised guidance and a Raising a Concern framework.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-36
Accepted
Learning from Failures
Recommendation
The Northern Ireland Civil Service should develop a better process to learn from past failures, one that goes beyond the traditional method of revising and circulating internal guidance. Leaders within the Senior Civil Service must be more systematic, persistent and … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in October 2021. The Northern Ireland Audit Office (NIAO) Second Progress Report (October 2024) states that the recommendation is implemented, noting that the Non-Executive Directors Forum has been briefed, the NICS Board now commissions and scrutinises effectiveness reports, and a Raising a Concern Policy Framework is in place. The Executive's initial response in October 2021 also referenced revisions to the NICS Code of Ethics and a GIAFIS review of whistleblowing as partial steps taken.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-37
Accepted
Reduce Organisational Silos
Recommendation
In keeping with the spirit of the Ministerial Pledge of Office, the Northern Ireland political parties, supported by the Northern Ireland Civil Service, should together agree a set of actions to reduce organisational silos arising between the government Departments and … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in October 2021, stating it was addressed through revisions to various codes of conduct. The Northern Ireland Audit Office (NIAO) Second Progress Report (October 2024) noted that a Shared Leadership Board was established and Programme for Government themes demonstrated cross-departmental collaboration, leading to an assessment of 'Likely to be Implemented'. However, the NIAO also identified this as one of three recommendations still requiring additional work, noting that the mandatory coalition structure of the NI Executive inherently creates departmental silos and that cross-departmental collaboration remains unreformed.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-38
Accepted in Part
Assembly Committee Scrutiny
Recommendation
The Inquiry recommends that the Northern Ireland Assembly should strengthen the scrutiny role of Assembly Committees, reviewing whether the existing balance between legislative and scrutiny work is appropriate, and considering whether Committees should have greater research capacity and whether there … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in principle in October 2021, noting it was the responsibility of the Northern Ireland Assembly. The Chairpersons' Liaison Group published a 'Report on Strengthening Committee Scrutiny' in March 2022. However, the Northern Ireland Audit Office (NIAO) Second Progress Report (October 2024) indicated that Assembly committee scrutiny has not been structurally strengthened, and no formal reform of committee powers or research capacity has been implemented.
NI Assembly (Primary)
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RHI-39
Accepted
Ministerial Familiarity with Legislation
Recommendation
Any Minister presenting the Assembly with legislation for approval should sufficiently read and familiarise themselves with that legislation and ensure an adequate evidence base is publicly available to demonstrate that the benefits justify any attendant costs. Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in October 2021, stating it was addressed through revisions to various codes of conduct. However, the Northern Ireland Audit Office (NIAO) Second Progress Report (October 2024) assessed the recommendation as 'Unlikely to be Fully Implemented' and identified it as one of three outstanding recommendations. The NIAO noted that no specific action has been taken to ensure Ministers sufficiently read and familiarise themselves with legislation, and ministers are still not consistently ensuring an adequate evidence base is publicly available for legislation.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-40
Accepted
Declaration of Interests
Recommendation
Ministers, Special Advisers and officials in Northern Ireland government Departments should declare their interests annually in writing. When any conflict of interest arises during the course of government business each individual should understand that he/she has an obligation formally to … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in October 2021. The Northern Ireland Audit Office (NIAO) Second Progress Report (October 2024) assessed all four sub-parts as implemented, noting that a comprehensive declarations of interest framework was established through the Functioning of Government (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (Northern Ireland) 2021, with registers published in September 2024.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-41
Accepted
Special Adviser Code of Conduct Revision
Recommendation
The Special Adviser Code of Conduct should be revised. How these changes are achieved will need to be a matter for the political representatives concerned in the construction of a system in which the public can have confidence. The Inquiry's … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in October 2021. The Northern Ireland Audit Office (NIAO) Second Progress Report (October 2024) assessed all 14 sub-parts as implemented, confirming that the Special Adviser Code of Conduct was revised in January 2020 and updated in August 2021 to cover all areas specified by the Inquiry.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-42
Accepted
Ministerial Code Revision
Recommendation
The Code of Conduct issued to Northern Ireland Ministers in 2007 (contained within the Northern Ireland Ministerial Code 2006) should be revised and brought up to date reflecting the findings of the RHI Inquiry and drawing on relevant best practice … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in October 2021. The Northern Ireland Audit Office (NIAO) Second Progress Report (October 2024) noted that the Ministerial Code of Conduct was revised in December 2021, incorporating strengthened requirements around conflicts of interest and Special Adviser management. However, the NIAO also identified that sub-recommendations concerning ministerial responsibilities and Ministers actively questioning and challenging advice remained 'not yet implemented' and required further work.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-43
Not Accepted
Independent Compliance Assessment
Recommendation
In addition, the Northern Ireland Executive and Assembly ought, in the Inquiry's view, to give due consideration to an independent mechanism to assess compliance with codes of conduct in public life as they apply to Ministers and Special Advisers. Whatever … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive initially did not accept this recommendation in October 2021, specifically regarding an independent mechanism to assess special advisers' compliance. However, the Northern Ireland Audit Office (NIAO) Second Progress Report (October 2024) assessed the recommendation as implemented, noting that the NI Assembly Commissioner for Standards now has a statutory remit to investigate ministerial code breaches under the Functioning of Government (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (Northern Ireland) 2021.
NI Executive (Primary)
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RHI-44
Accepted
NIAO Progress Assessment Role
Recommendation
The Inquiry recommends a role in future for the Northern Ireland Audit Office in assessing and validating the extent of progress in implementing the lessons learned from the NI RHI scheme and implementing those recommendations, including reporting on such progress … Read more
Published evidence summary
The Northern Ireland Executive accepted this recommendation in October 2021, noting it was the responsibility of the Northern Ireland Audit Office (NIAO). The NIAO has fulfilled this role by publishing two substantive progress reports, with the first in March 2022 and the second in October 2024, thereby establishing a periodic reporting mechanism on the implementation of the RHI Inquiry's recommendations.
NI Audit Office (Primary)
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