Legislation state of play table 290

This table, prepared by Alignment Media, provides a regularly amended guide to new and proposed legislation that will affect the construction industry. In addition to EU Directives and UK legislation, the table includes notes highlighting discussion papers issued by both government and non-government organisations, and commentary on the latest developments.

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Legal terms explained: Serial Adjudication

Serial adjudication refers to the practice whereby two or more disputes, potentially involving related issues, are referred successively to adjudication by the same parties under the same contract. Serial adjudications are not uncommon in the construction industry, where disputes can comprise numerous component parts (for example, a final account dispute that can be carved up into discrete elements).

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Evolving risks and artificial intelligence to impact on standard contracts

The biggest source of disputes relating to construction projects remains project delays, payment issues, and scope of work, according to the latest International Construction Study from CMS and YouGov.

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IPA and NIC to be scrapped by a Labour government

The Labour Party will scrap the Infrastructure and Projects Authority (IPA) and National Infrastructure Commission (NIC) if it wins the General Election, and replace them with a new body to be called the National Infrastructure and Service Transformation Authority (NISTA).

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Government wins landmark remediation legal action

The Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities has won a landmark legal challenge against a freeholder that will force it to fix serious building safety issues in a Stevenage tower block.

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News in Brief: June 2024

The Scottish Parliament has unanimously approved legislation that gives Ministers powers to assesses and remediate buildings with unsafe cladding where consent of the owners has not been provided.

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Biodiversity uncertainty highlighted in NAO report

Construction suppliers of all types, from manufacturers to designers and contractors, have for years complained about the problem of informing local authorities about the latest technological and cost saving developments.

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Teesworks discussions on making public pay contamination costs ongoing, report reveals

Making the public purse liable for contamination clear up at the Teesworks former steel site has been revealed to be under discussion by the publicly owned South Tees Development Corporation (STDC) and two businessmen who own 90% of the site’s development vehicle, despite a government review having been told earlier this year that the plan had been abandoned.

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Appeal court grants judicial review challenge to Stonehenge campaigners

Anti Stonehenge road tunnel campaigners have won the right to challenge the outcome of a judicial review which said the scheme that passes near the world heritage site on the A303 could go ahead.

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Evolving risks and artificial intelligence to impact on standard contracts, says survey

The biggest source of disputes relating to construction projects remains project delays, payment issues, and scope of work, according to the latest International Construction Study from CMS and YouGov.

To read more of this and every other news story on this site, please log in with your Construction Law membership account details. If you don't have an account, you can get free access to the news on this site and receive a free newsletter on Fridays by creating a Newsletter account. See the panel to the right.

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