The Uncle Gnarley Blog has a new website. Click here to visit www.unclegnarley.ca to view the latest posts!

Monday 27 July 2015

ENGINEERS BREAK SILENCE ON PROBLEMS AT MUSKRAT FALLS

For most engineers the execution of a megaproject is principally about the calibre of those in charge of management. Many don’t concern themselves with issues like water management, the question of whether it is a ‘political’ project, or whether the government has made a premature sanction decision. Most simply want the construction phase to benefit from the best practices of the industry and their profession.

The Muskrat Falls project is proceeding poorly; even the Nalcor CEO has been forced to admit he can’t guarantee either the schedule or the budget will be achieved.

Imagine, therefore, that you had a group of professionals weigh in on how they would “fix” the problem of “slippage” and address fundamental cost and other issues.  What do you think they might they say?

Recently, I had that opportunity; some engineers are at their wits end over how the project is managed. It was not just a theoretical exercise; they are intimately familiar with the Muskrat Falls project. 


While Nalcor is not likely to listen, I thought the public should have a better understanding of the type and magnitude of the problems experienced at Muskrat Falls, and why the future of the project is in doubt.

These are the top four recommendations of those engineers:


1.     Remove several managers in the project management system. The project simply needs better managers; this has been a problem from the very beginning.

2.     Relocate all of the project team staying in St. John’s to Happy Valley- Goose Bay. SHUT DOWN the Torbay office, except for possibly a few accounting people. Relocate all key management and engineering staff to the MF site; the very idea of managing such a project remotely from St. John’s is expensive and damaging to morale. Even minor decisions have to be referred to St. John’s. The construction site has suffered from low morale from the start. Besides, major projects are not normally managed in such a way.

3.     Descope, that is to say reduce the scope of the Astaldi contract by removing the powerhouse and some of the civil work from the contractor. One engineer suggested replacing Astaldi, that it might be cheaper if Nalcor simply bought out the Astaldi contract.  Another engineer suggested Astaldi ought to have been partnered with a contractor with the strengths it lacked.

(Astaldi was given the contract only because its bid price was lowest; even then it was not a lump-sum bid. Astaldi is said to have no cold weather experience and no union based experience. Weak Astaldi management has been “beefed up” with weak Nalcor management. Recently, an ex-Kiewit manager replaced the one at Astaldi. Some productivity improvements have been reported.)

4.     Make the Muskrat Falls site an “open site” and walk away from the current labour language in the union agreement. For readers not familiar, an “open site” is variously defined as a labour force model in which all unions are permitted to have employees (i.e. not a “closed shop”) working together. Another model is one in which both union and non-union workers are permitted to be employed on a work site.  Both models are based upon securing the best labour force available, and where everyone is paid well. The “Teamsters” or “closed-shop” model, used at the Vale project, in Long Harbour, was reported to be highly unproductive . That is the model adopted for the Muskrat Falls project, too.

Other Recommendations:

  1. Establish a project execution plan.  There has never been a project execution plan for this project. Such a plan tends to be what one engineer called a “wordy” document but it is a critical piece of work because it outlines a construction strategy, describes how milestones will be achieved, and identifies the risks and how to manage them. (An execution strategy also identifies the planning tools and strategies to assure productivity and break down work packages; it reflects the challenges and takes into account the size and complexity of such a large project. It helps define solutions to labour productivity issues, project management, workface planning and organization, always using industry based best practices. Weather, snow, and cold temperatures would have been a major focus of such an execution strategy.)
6.     Establish a meaningful updated schedule based upon actual measured completeness and what remains to be done. The engineers state that if a recent (two months ago) audit had been undertaken of powerhouse/spillway contract the completion figure might be closer to 9% than to the 26.3% reported by the government’s oversight committee at the end of March, 2015.

Of course, the oversight committee was only parroting a Nalcor figure (35% was the “planned” scheduled progress figure to March 2015). 9% is a long way from 35%! The oversight committee also reported that 37.5% of the budget for the Generation Facility was incurred at the end of December, 2014.

As the engineers point out, the devil is in the details. They state the public will never know the truth about “real” progress at Muskrat unless an independent 3rd party conducts a quantity survey based on known construction measures.

The engineers state they have never witnessed “change-orders” appear so fast as at Muskrat Falls. Such change orders are a major reason for cost overruns.  (The engineers also raised the point that if you don’t tie administration hours to project progress, you can burn a lot of money and show no actual site completion.)

One person interviewed stated that Nalcor has what he termed a “self-controlled” budget. There is no independent budget manager.  He stated he has never seen financials controls like on this project where monies are advanced without any consideration for the amount actually allocated for a piece of work.    

7.     Investigate thoroughly the “self-performing” approach taken to quality control on site contracts. Rather than Nalcor having established an independent third party inspection and testing process of supplied equipment and materials, the contracts are written so that the Quality Assurance is performed by the contractor.

One example given was with respect to MTR Certificate for rebar (This is a Mill Test Report, a quality assurance document). Nalcor was asked if any testing had been conducted on the material. The reply: “that’s Astaldi’s responsibility”.  The engineers stated this just does not happen on major construction projects. This is the Owner’s role; it is further proof, they say, Nalcor is not qualified to be running the Muskrat Falls project.  

8.     Review major contracts in regards to their ability to control total cost.

One engineer stated that Nalcor needs an independent group to audit both the work performed and the contracts it has awarded; otherwise, the door is wide open to cost overruns.

He stated that while Nalcor says its contracts are “unit price” based, Astaldi, for example, can perform work in a most inefficient way and still invoice Nalcor.

9.     Investigate in detail the costing for the project and existing unorthodox (to say the least) project controls methodology. These are not this Blogger’s words! The engineer stated he has never seen more creative accounting with money moved around from one account to another; presumably, he stated, the money will eventually run out.

10.  Review the use of "first of a kind" or what is normally considered proto-types in the case of the turbine governors and possibly other components. Though the Chinese company had manufactured smaller turbines, it has not built any as large as those produced for Muskrat Falls. Yet, Nalcor did not provide oversight, for quality assurance purposes, when those turbines were built.

Any experienced project manager reading those recommendations will be surprised just how sweeping are that group’s proposals for change on the Muskrat Falls construction site.
One would have to conclude the management problems are endemic to an extent that the project is doomed to suffer a very late completion, major cost overruns, and a poor quality of work, too, due to the absence of an adequate Quality Assurance program.

The engineers state that Nalcor’s decision to “self-manage” the project was its first and worst decision. The Nalcor management team, except for a couple of individuals, are simply not of a calibre to be undertaking such a large project, they said.

I would only add these engineers have no malicious intent; the contrary is true. They see a megaproject very poorly managed and they don't want it to fail.

Finally, a question for the oversight committee:how can so many critically important issues go unnoticed as you put claim to an oversight role?  

It is time for them, Nalcor, and the government to stop pretending everything is fine.