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Planning advice for contractors
Analysis and commentary on NEC programmes, compensation events, tender planning and project controls. Written for Tier 1 and Tier 2 contractors.
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Premier Modular v Maidstone: the NEC Accepted Programme lesson behind a £1.65m ruling
In June 2026 the High Court refused to enforce a £1.65m NEC adjudication award in Premier Modular v Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust. The legal headline is natural justice. The lesson for contractors is a project controls one. The whole dispute turned on which programme was the Accepted Programme, and the date the claim relied on was never in it. Under NEC, a compensation event is only as good as the Accepted Programme it stands on, and acceptance is a status you earn,

Roman Bazelchuk
5 days ago6 min read


NEC vs FIDIC: Why Contractors Keep Making the Same Mistakes
A UK Tier 2 contractor with a strong NEC track record won its first major FIDIC contract and was in dispute eighteen months later. A UK contractor with extensive FIDIC experience won an NEC4 contract and had the project manager invoking clause 64 within six months. Both failures had the same underlying cause: contractors who switch between NEC and FIDIC without recognising that the two contracts reward fundamentally different organisational capabilities. This is the editorial

Roman Bazelchuk
Dec 5, 202515 min read


NEC4 cashflow: why the programme is a financial instrument, not just a delivery plan
A contractor seven months into a £35 million NEC4 contract is financing £4.2 million of working capital. The work is on programme. The technical performance is sound. The cashflow position is not. Three teams diagnose three different causes and none of them identifies what is actually happening.

Roman Bazelchuk
Nov 29, 202513 min read


Remote NEC planning support: how UK contractors are accessing scarce expertise the labour market cannot supply
The UK construction sector has committed to delivering £718 billion of work over the next decade against a labour market that the Construction Industry Training Board projects will need an additional 239,300 workers between 2025 and 2029 just to meet the requirement. Senior NEC planning capability sits inside that shortage. The conventional view of remote planning support positions it as a cost-saving arrangement or a small-contractor accommodation. Both framings understate w

Roman Bazelchuk
Nov 5, 202510 min read


NEC4 programme compliance: the three commercial exposures that compound when contractors get it wrong
UK adjudication data records 2,264 referrals between May 2023 and April 2024, with inadequate contract administration identified as the leading cause of disputes at 50 per cent of cases. Behind that figure sits a pattern most experienced commercial directors recognise. Contractors with weak NEC4 programme compliance lose disproportionately on change assessment, on delay narratives, on cashflow timing, and on tender evaluation. The losses are not random.

Roman Bazelchuk
Nov 1, 202510 min read
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