FIDIC Contracts Management Training
Select Other "city & date"
FIDIC Contracts Management Training Course
Introduction:
Anyone dealing with contract management in the architecture, engineering, construction, and operations (AECO) industry is likely to work with FIDIC contracts at some point. Created by the International Federation of Consulting Engineers (FIDIC), these contract agreements are considered to be the international standard and are widely used throughout the global AECO industry.
The FIDIC Contracts Management Training course assists you in understanding all the aspects of the FIDIC contracts and will enable you to understand your own Project's Contract Conditions. This program covers conditions for International Contracts (contracting parties are from different countries) for Civil and Industrial Projects.
At the end of the program, you will have a good understanding of the FIDIC Standard Conditions of Contract and how to Benchmark your Contract Conditions against these Industry Standards.
Course Objectives:
By the end of the FIDIC Contracts Management Training course, participants will be able to:
- Apply the correct FIDIC form of contract that is best suited for each project
- Implement FIDIC’s principles, mechanisms, and best practices for contract and project management
- Demonstrate the responsibilities, obligations, and entitlements of the employer and the contractor
- List the engineer’s different roles, duties, and responsibilities about FIDIC contracts
- Apply the correct payments, claims, and dispute resolution mechanisms as envisaged by the FIDIC contracts
Who Should Attend?
The FIDIC Contracts Management Training Course is ideal for:
- Civil, structural, and building engineers, project managers, quantity surveyors, and construction professionals in the early stages of their professional development need a broad introduction to the contractual approaches of the construction industry
- Those seeking an understanding of how to operate construction contracts internationally
- Graduate engineers undertaking their Initial Professional Development for the chartered Professional Review
- Those seeking knowledge and understanding of construction contracts, how they are formed, and how to work with them
- Those seeking to understand NEC, FIDIC, ICC, ACE, AND JCT contracts
Course Outlines:
FIDIC contract documents: Introduction and principles
- Introduction to FIDIC
- Background to FIDIC contracts
- Harmonization based on the type of project
- Features of the 1999 editions
- Structure of the documents
- Forms
- The main differences between the 1999 construction contract and the 1987 Red Book
- User-friendliness
- Preparation of conditions of contract
- The legal character of FIDIC conditions of contract
- Relationship between FIDIC conditions of contract and legal systems
- Risk analysis
- Which form to use
- Overview of the 1999 contracts
- Construction contract
- The main differences between the construction contracts
Responsibilities of the main parties
- Clause 1: General provisions and general issues
- Clause 2: The employer
- Clause 3: The engineer
- Clause 4: The contractor
- Clause 5: Construction contract – nominated subcontractors
- Clause 5: Plant and design-build contract – design
- Management of projects
- Clause 6: Staff and labor
- Clause 7: Plant material and workmanship
- Clause 8: Commencement delays and suspension
Tests on completion
- Clause 9: Tests on completion
- Clause 10: Employer’s taking over; defects liability
- Clause 11: Plant contract – tests after completion
Financial clauses and procedures
- Clause 12: Construction contract – measurement and evaluation
- Clause 13: Variations and adjustments
- Clause 14: Contract price and payment
Suspension and termination
- Clause 15: Termination by employer
- Clause 16: Suspension and termination by contractor
- Risk, liability, and force majeure
- Clause 17: Risk and responsibility
- Clause 18: Liability and insurance
- Clause 19: Force majeure
Claims, disputes, and arbitration
- Clause 20: Claims, disputes and arbitration
- Inherent project risk
- Contractor’s claims and employer’s claims; claims procedures
- Disputes
- Amicable settlement
- Dispute adjudication board
- Arbitration
