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Plumbing & Mechanical Services (UK) Industry Pension Scheme
The Plumbing & Mechanical Services (UK) Industry Pension Scheme opened in 1975 as a multi-employer pension arrangement, founded by the Scottish and...
Plumbing & Mechanical Services (UK) Industry Pension Scheme
The Plumbing & Mechanical Services (UK) Industry Pension Scheme opened in 1975 as a multi-employer pension arrangement, founded by the Scottish and Northern Ireland Plumbing Employers' Federation (SNIPEF) and the Association of Plumbing and Heating Contractors (APHC). Its legal architecture rests on a Trustee Company, Plumbing Pensions (U.K.) Limited, which CEO Stephen Graham leads, while an Employer Company represents the interests of participating firms. The Scheme answers to a board chaired by Jon Bridger of KB Independent Trustees Ltd, with Unite the Union nominating member directors — embedding labor oversight directly into pension governance. Asset management follows a sterling-based, liability-aware framework. The investment program is anchored by a UK commercial property portfolio, which forms the primary direct-employment of member capital, supplemented by a bulk annuity policy that hedges long-dated pension obligations. Mitie Group and Skanska UK rank among the major participating employers whose contributions feed the Scheme, connecting the fund's cash flows to ongoing facilities management and construction project cycles. While the Scheme does not publicly catalog direct private-equity or venture positions, its structure points to a fixed-income and real-asset core that prioritizes benefit security over endowment-style absolute-return targets. With no disclosed team headcount, the Scheme operates through an administrative vehicle — Plumbing Pensions UK Administration Ltd — listed on LinkedIn, and maintains ties to the industry via SNIPEF and APHC membership. The fund's £2B-plus asset base (Altss estimate) makes it a material, if quiet, institutional presence in Scottish pension circles. Unlike many defined-benefit pools that have merged into the Pension Protection Fund or been consolidated into master trusts, this Scheme remains a standalone entity representing a distinct trade footprint. Its structural differentiator is the joint-governance model. Employer representatives, union trustees, and an independent chairman share decision rights, making the investment process a negotiated outcome rather than a delegated CIO mandate. That tripartite form means asset allocation reflects member representative priorities directly, and the preference for hard assets and insured solutions suggests a conservative posture that resists the illiquidity and fee structures common in diversified growth funds.
General information
Firm type
Pension Fund
Year founded
1975
AUM
USD 2.54B (Altss estimate)
Location
Region
Europe
Country
United Kingdom
City
Edinburgh
Corporate office
Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Principals
Stephen Graham
Chief Executive Officer, Plumbing Pensions (U.K.) Limited
Jon Bridger
Chairman of the Trustee Board
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Who runs investment decisions at the Plumbing & Mechanical Services (UK) Industry Pension Scheme?
The Trustee Board, chaired by Jon Bridger of KB Independent Trustees Ltd, holds fiduciary responsibility for investment decisions. Day-to-day management is executed through Plumbing Pensions (U.K.) Limited under CEO Stephen Graham. Unite the Union also holds board seats, giving member representatives a direct voice in strategy.
How is the Scheme structured as an employer-union pension fund?
It operates on a tripartite trust model. Plumbing Pensions (U.K.) Limited acts as Trustee, Plumbing Pensions Employers Limited (PPEL) represents contributing firms like Mitie Group and Skanska UK, and Unite the Union nominates member directors. Independent trustees such as KB Independent Trustees Ltd provide neutral chairmanship.
Does the Scheme invest directly in private equity or venture capital?
There is no public disclosure of direct private-equity or venture capital allocations. Known assets are a UK commercial property portfolio and a bulk annuity policy. The investment posture suggests a liability-driven, fixed-income and real-asset orientation rather than a private-markets growth program.
Which employers contribute to the Scheme?
Participating employers span the plumbing, mechanical, and allied services industries. Publicly identifiable contributors include Mitie Group, the facilities management giant, and construction contractor Skanska UK, alongside smaller trade firms represented by SNIPEF and the APHC.
Is the Scheme related to any philanthropic foundations or adjacent vehicles?
No philanthropic foundations or alternative investment vehicles are publicly associated. The Scheme operates solely through its trustee and employer companies, with no parallel charitable arms, operating businesses, or co-investment clubs disclosed.
Profile maintained by Altss using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.
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