Hi planners, I am not sure about something contractually.
Lets say
Week 1 - Task A- excavation delayed by information required from architect. 3 weeks EOT granted.
Week 2 – Task B – Construct new foundation, ahead 1 week due to faster excavation compare to tender baseline
Week 3 – Task C – construct walls, 2 weeks faster than the tender programme (tender baseline)
If we look at week 1, the client approved the 3 weeks extension of time but week 2 and week 3, we done the work faster than the tender programme. this neutralise the 3 weeks EOT!
Does this mean I need to give back the EOT?
I am afraid, if I show this 3 weeks ahead, then there will be no delay anymore. What happen task D, E, F, G..... slower than the tender duration due to ourself? I don’t want the client to know I am ahead 3 weeks for itask B and C and no delay now. Just in case the future tasks delay because of ourself and i still have 3 weeks to play around.
just a though from a contractor,
Cheers
Mike
Hi Mike
As usual it all depends on your contract but the usual terms are that once an EoT has been properly awarded it cannot be taken back - except for ommission of work in the final award. This is why contract administrators do not like granting an EoT on the basis of an Impacted as Planned analysis because it is entirely theoretical.
Best regards
Mike Testro