The Technical Bid Proposal is compiled with input from the Contractor's technical teams, after which it is subjected to evaluation by the Employer. The main purposes of such an evaluation are:
1 to establish the Contractor's capability for executing the Project, and
2 to determine if the Technical Bid Proposal meets the Employer's requirements fully and can therefore be considered acceptable.
If the Technical Bid Proposal is found to be acceptable, the bidder will then be requested to submit the Commercial Bid Proposal. In the case of the lump-sum portion of the bid, its components will comprise priced line items for the various elements encompassed within the specified work scope. In addition, there will most probably be a requirement for the Contractor to price a schedule of rates that the Employer has provided, which would then be used later to assess the value of potential Variations. Owing to the high level of competition nowadays for new overseas construction Projects, the average industry profitability level priced in for EPC Projects is not very high (ranging from 2.5% to 7.5% on net costs, depending on the perceived level of risks involved). However, in one particular study conducted by Galonske and Weidner in a seemingly good earnings window for the plant construction industry, the actual ratio of Earnings before Interest and Taxes (EBIT) to Net Revenue earned was found to vary from +6% down to −4%.12 This demonstrates just how tough it is for Contractors to make a profit on EPC Projects.
Moving forward, once the Employer has accepted a bidder's Technical and Commercial Bid Proposals, the Employer will generally issue a Letter of Intent to the selected Contractor before the formal Contract is signed, in order to save time in commencing the Project's implementation work. However, before the Employer issues such Letter of Intent, many negotiations and discussions will have taken place regarding the wording of the contractual and work scope clauses. In fact, a lot of effort and resources are put into that exercise, right from the stage of compiling the Bid Proposals through to the receipt of the Letter of Intent. Those costs, along with all other costs of bidding, are solely borne by each bidder at its own expense, and they are generally recorded (written off) in the financial statements of the bidders as management expenses.
It is usual for all the bidding work to be conducted in the main offices of the bidders in their home countries, even where a bidder is already working in the country where the Project is to be built. Primarily this is because it is much cheaper to do so, but also because it is easier to control the bidding activities than it is if they are conducted remotely from the main office. Even so, the bidding costs for the average Contractor are large, take up a lot of people over a long duration (as I mentioned earlier, 12 months is not unusual). Sadly though, for the typical Contractor, the bidding success rate is low; only about one in five or so bids will result in a Contract award (unless, it seems, it is a Korean company).13
Notes
1 1 Government of South Australia (2005). Construction Procurement Policy Project Implementation Process. ISBN 0-9775044-0-7. www.dpti.sa.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file 0020/51653/pip.pdf (accessed 28 November 2017).
2 2 Bobbitt Design Build Inc. (15 April 2019). New study: design-build can cut project delivery time in half. https://www.bobbitt.com/article/new-study-design-build-can-cut-project-delivery-time-in-half (accessed 6 May 2019).
3 3 Wikipedia. Design-build. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Design-build (accessed 23 August 2018).
4 4 Douglas R. (2016). EPC or EPCM contracts, which one can drive stronger outcomes for project owners? http://www.ausenco.com/en/epc-epcm-whitepaper (accessed 11 November 2017).
5 5 Both books published by FIDIC (also known as ‘The International Federation of Consulting Engineers’, FIDIC being the acronym of the French version of its name).
6 6 Loots P. and Henchie N. (2007). Worlds Apart: EPC and EPCM Contracts: Risk Issues and Allocation, Mayer Brown, p. 2.
7 7 McNair D . (January 2016). EPCM Contracts: project delivery through engineering, procurement and construction management contracts. www.pwc.com.au/legal/assets/investing-in-infrastructure/iif-8-epcm-contracts-feb16-3.pdf (accessed 29 October 2018).
8 8 Ibid., Section 2.4.2.
9 9 Agarwal R., Chandrasekaran S. and Sridhar M. for McKinsey & Company (June 2016). Imagining construction's digital future. http://www.mckinsey.com/industries/capital-Projects-and-infrastructure/our-insights/imagining-constructions-digital-future, p. 1, Exhibit 1 (accessed 23 August 2017).
10 10 My conclusion does not apply to ‘reimbursable’ type EPC Contracts (which nearly always benefit the Contractor, but, sadly for Contractors, seem to be next to non-existent nowadays).
11 11 Johannsen H ., for Singleton Urquhart LLP (21 November 2017). Design-build /EPC contracts. www.inf.gov.nt.ca/sites/inf/files/resources/design-build_epc_contracts_-_pmc_2017_helmut.pdf (accessed 5 May 2018).
12 12 Galonske B. and Weidner W. (2010). Profitability of plant construction – risk management as a profit driver. http://www.oliverwyman.com/content/dam/oliver-wyman/global/en/files/archive/2011/Risk_management_as_a_profit_driver_Perspectives_2_2010_en.pdf, p. 14 (accessed 22 October 2017).
13 13 Saipem (2014–2015). General EPC contractors in oil & gas markets. http://www.diem.ing.unibo.it/personale/saccani/index_files/Impianti%20Meccanici%20T%20(dal%202014-2015)/Il%20processo%20EPC.pdf, p. 4 (accessed 1 June 2018).
Chapter 3 EPC Project Risk Management Overview
3.1 Project Risk Management – Definition
Before proceeding further, I feel that it