ARCADIS: Construction disputes rise in value to $32.1million

Alleen voor leden beschikbaar, wordt daarom gratis lid!

Algemeen advies 27/05/2014 09:09
. 2013 saw the rise of the 'mega-dispute' worth over $1billion
. Disputes taking slightly less time to resolve - 11.8months
. One in three joint ventures leading to disputes

(27 May 2014) Disputes relating to major global construction projects increased in value to, on average, $32.1million in 2013 according to ARCADIS, the global natural and built asset design and consultancy firm. This was $400,000 more than in 2012 when disputes were valued at $31.7million. ARCADIS also saw the emergence of the 'mega-dispute' in 2013, with its teams working on three separate disputes worth over $1billion including the Panama Canal Expansion project.

This year's report 'Global Construction Disputes: Getting the Basics Right' is ARCADIS' fourth annual study into the duration, value, common causes and resolutions of construction disputes across the globe. The report found that construction dispute values were the highest in Asia at $41.9milllion, closely followed by the Middle East at $40.9million. In the US, disputes values tripled in value to $34.3million and also rose in the UK to their highest value since the report started at $27.9million.

The findings showed that disputes took, on average, less time to resolve in 2013 at 11.8months, down from 12.8months in 2012. They took longest to resolve in the Middle East and US with 13.9months and 13.7months respectively. Disputes in Continental Europe tended to be resolved the quickest at 6.5months.

Mike Allen, Global Head of Contract Solutions at ARCADIS said: "Today's major construction programmes are fast paced, complex and involve a multitude of supplier parties, so there are numerous points at which a dispute can occur. Many of these disputes are resolved out of the public eye but do often result in heavy costs and time overruns. Our research indicates the scale of this problem and highlights the need for better contract administration, more robust documentation and a proactive approach to risk management to help mitigate against the most common causes of dispute."

The Panama Canal Expansion was one of the highest profile disputes in 2013, with the Panama Canal Authority in dispute with the GUCP contractor consortium about cost overruns said to be worth $1.6bn. It was reported that a deal over a protracted financing dispute was secured in order to free up funds earlier this year and this has allowed work to continue.

The research found that the most common causes of construction disputes related to the administration of contracts. The top five causes in 2013 were:

Failure to properly administer the contract;
Failure to understand and/ or comply with its contractual obligations;
Incomplete design information or employer requirements;
Failure to make interim awards on extensions of time and compensation; and
Poorly drafted or incomplete and unsubstantiated claims.

Party to party negotiation was deemed the most popular method of alternative dispute resolution in 2013, followed up arbitration and adjudication.

The likelihood of a joint venture (JV) ending in dispute was also reviewed in the report. ARCADIS found that, where a JV was in place, it had a one in three (35%) chance of causing a dispute. This is an increase from 2012 where instances of JV dispute were less commonplace at 19%.

Mike Allen continued: "As a result of an increasing active construction market, we are seeing the number of joint ventures increase as employers seek to divest risk across major programmes and blend specialist skills in the supply chain into one contract. This is clearly not an easy undertaking and our research shows it is leading to an increase in the number of disputes highlighting a need for some very careful focus around the selection, set up and management of the JV relationship."

The full report can be downloaded from here
ARCADIS' Contract Solutions team helps clients avoid, mitigate and resolve disputes. The 160 strong team is based around the globe and encompasses one of the industry's largest pool of procurement, contract, risk management and also quantum, delay, project management, engineering defects and building surveying experts. The team provides procurement, contract and dispute avoidance and management strategies, management expertise as well as dispute resolution and expert witness services. This is delivered through a blend of technical expertise, commercialism, sector insight and the use of live project data, combined with a multi-disciplined and professional focus.

Ends

lees voor meer Please visit: www.arcadis.com



Beperkte weergave !
Leden hebben toegang tot meer informatie! Omdat u nog geen lid bent of niet staat ingelogd, ziet u nu een beperktere pagina. Wordt daarom GRATIS Lid of login met uw wachtwoord


Copyrights © 2000 by XEA.nl all rights reserved
Niets mag zonder toestemming van de redactie worden gekopieerd, linken naar deze pagina is wel toegestaan.


Copyrights © DEBELEGGERSADVISEUR.NL