Treasury support lacking

The Treasury is failing to engage with the Major Projects Authority (MPA) – a key organisation set up as part of the drive towards more efficient project delivery – as strongly as government spending watchdogs at the National Audit Office (NAO) had hoped.

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Review finds cost savings

The government claims to have identified savings in infrastructure costs representing half of the £3,000 million annual savings target of its Infrastructure Cost Review programme.

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CDM is money well spent

The Construction (Design and Management) Regulations (CDM) have been with us since 1994, since when they have been revised only once, in 2007. The original Regulations had gone some way towards putting responsibility for safety where it could most effectively be handled, starting with the design, while also ensuring that no one in the supply chain, including clients, could wash their hands of safety.

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When advice on the law is not legal advice

Edward Freeman of Clyde & Co points out that a recent case has highlighted that clients and their advisers need to give serious consideration as to how and by whom advice is given in adjudications and other forms of ADR.

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Risk financing and management

Insurance expert John D Wright of JD Risk Associates says risk management is no longer the new kid on the block but has evolved to become a key management tool. The insurance market has responded.

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Insurance policies not fit for purpose?

Fitness for purpose warranties often do not provide the cover that parties imagine they do, warns Peter Stockill of Berrymans Lace Mawer in this review of the relevant features common to most insurance policies.

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FIDIC provision might be no alternative

For disputes under a main contract and back-to-back sub-contract to be heard in a single arbitration, the parties still need to be party to the same arbitration agreement after the new ICC 2012 Rules. Estelle Katsimani and Michael Mendelblat of Herbert Smith ask if a new provision in FIDIC’s subcontract offers any relief.

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The concept of time at large

The issue of time at large usually arises when an employer’s own actions prevent completion dates being achieved. Andrew Batty of Pinsent Masons spells out the implications for both employers and contractors.

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Public procurement challenges

Lindy Patterson QC of Dundas & Wilson examines how relatively recently introduced procedures for challenging public procurement processes are working. Challenges are becoming more frequent and even tenders which are under the EC threshold contract value are not immune.

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Project Bank Accounts

Project Bank Accounts are playing a key role in the government’s overhaul of construction procurement. Christopher Pedder of Pinsent Masons analyses the likely impact of their use. 

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