The Home Office has listed 3M and nCipher as providers to the early stage of the National Identity Scheme.
Home secretary Jacqui Smith said that, as well as Thales's £18m contract for development of technology and processes — which was publicised last year — nCipher will be paid about £1.3m for a contract to provide "public key infrastructure and security related work".
nCipher, formerly a UK-based security firm, is now a part of Thales, having been bought in October 2008.
The other vendors are 3M SP&SL, which will receive about £700,000, plus a fee for each card, to design and produce the cards, issued initially to staff at two airports later this year. Secure Mail Services has a deal to deliver the cards under which it will be paid per item.
The information appears in a letter to Liberal Democrat shadow home secretary Chris Huhne. It is dated 15 December, 2008, but has only just been released online by the House of Commons library, along with several others of the same date.
In another December letter, to Dominic Grieve, the Conservative's shadow justice secretary, Smith said that a web-based service allowing people to check their "core identity information" on the National Identity Register will require secure remote-authentication of that person.
However, she added that although the Home Office is investigating possible alternatives, "no final method has been decided", and no cost can be indicated at the moment.
In another letter to Grieve released through the library, Smith provided spending figures for branding and marketing of the Identity and Passport Service. These show it spent £1.7m on marketing in 2007-2008, up from £239,000 in 2006-2007.





