Tag: GCC infrastructure

  • The Strait of Hormuz Disruption Is a Construction Story: What Risk Managers Need to Watch

    What Regional Conflict Means for Construction Delivery in the GCC

    When geopolitical instability disrupts the Strait of Hormuz, the conversation in financial markets focuses on oil prices. But for infrastructure professionals delivering projects across the GCC, the more relevant story is what happens to construction costs, supply chains, and contract risk.

    Nearly 20% of global petrochemical capacity flows through the Strait of Hormuz. Steel, PVC, bitumen, polymers — the raw materials that build our projects — are all tied to petrochemical feedstock. When that supply pathway is disrupted, the effect on construction inputs is direct and significant.

    Material Cost Escalation

    The relationship between oil price and construction input costs is not linear, but it is real and material. Bitumen, which is a refinery residual product, tracks crude oil prices closely. PVC and polymer-based materials — used extensively in waterproofing, piping, and conduits — are directly petrochemical-derived. Structural steel, while not petrochemical, relies on energy-intensive manufacturing processes that become more expensive when energy costs spike.

    A 15-25% increase in key construction inputs over a 6-12 month horizon following a major disruption is a realistic planning assumption. For a $500 million program, that translates to significant budget exposure if contract language does not provide for price escalation.

    Supply Chain Route Disruption

    Shipping route diversions around the Cape of Good Hope add 10-15 days to delivery schedules. For projects with procurement windows calibrated to just-in-time delivery logic — increasingly common in complex construction programs — that delay is not an inconvenience. It is a schedule risk that needs to be quantified in the project risk register and addressed through procurement strategy.

    The practical response for program managers is to conduct a procurement vulnerability analysis: which long-lead materials are sourced through routes affected by the disruption? What is the schedule exposure if those materials are delayed? Are there alternative suppliers or stockpiling strategies that reduce the exposure at acceptable cost?

    Labour Mobility Risk

    Visa processing delays, flight route disruptions, and regional security concerns affect the movement of skilled labour across the GCC. For programs that rely on specialized crews from affected regions — whether that’s construction workers from South Asia, specialist engineers from Europe, or equipment operators from Southeast Asia — build contingency into resource plans.

    This is a risk that is often underweighted in project risk registers because it is less visible than material costs and supply chain delays. But labour mobilization failures have derailed more than a few GCC programs that were otherwise well-structured.

    Contract Implications: Force Majeure and Price Escalation

    The legal and commercial dimension of geopolitical disruption is where many programs are most exposed. Force majeure clauses, price escalation provisions, and delay notification requirements vary enormously between standard contract forms. GCC public sector contracts often follow FIDIC, which provides relatively clear force majeure language. But the interpretation of that language in specific circumstances, and the notification and documentation requirements that activate it, need to be reviewed proactively rather than in the heat of a dispute.

    Price escalation provisions — sometimes called fluctuations clauses — are included in some contracts and absent from others. In a fixed-price lump sum environment, material cost escalation above threshold levels falls on the contractor unless the contract provides otherwise. When the escalation is driven by geopolitical events rather than market cycles, the distinction between force majeure relief and escalation relief becomes important.

    Saudi Arabia’s Resilience

    Saudi Arabia’s construction pipeline remains one of the most resilient in the world. $196 billion in contract awards in 2025 alone. The fundamentals of Vision 2030 — the programs, the political commitment, the sovereign financial capacity — have not changed. What has changed is the risk profile, and that demands better risk management practice, not a reassessment of the market’s fundamental attractiveness.

    The projects that weather geopolitical disruption are the ones with robust project controls, proactive risk registers calibrated to the specific exposures of the program, and contract models built with enough flexibility to absorb uncertainty without triggering adversarial claims dynamics. Progressive contracting models, which distribute risk more rationally and keep parties aligned around shared outcomes, have structural advantages in high-uncertainty environments compared to traditional fixed-price approaches.

    This is not a moment for panic in the GCC infrastructure market. It is a moment for better professional practice.

  • From Canadian Rail to Saudi Arabia: 20 Years in Infrastructure and What I’ve Learned

    Twenty Years in Infrastructure: An Honest Account

    Twenty years in infrastructure teaches you that most project failures are not engineering failures. They are relationship failures, contract failures, and governance failures dressed up as engineering problems.

    I started my career in Ontario’s construction industry in 2004 as a co-op student through Seneca College’s Civil Engineering Technology program. My first site was a municipal road reconstruction in the Region of Peel — nothing glamorous, but it was the beginning of understanding how physical infrastructure actually gets built versus how it gets planned.

    Over the following decade, I worked my way through progressively complex projects — road widenings in Brampton, highway rehabilitation programs for the Ministry of Transportation Ontario, TTC rehabilitation contracts in Toronto, and eventually rail corridor expansion for Metrolinx through Fermar Paving. By the time I was managing a $110 million Stouffville Rail Corridor Track Expansion as Senior Project Manager, I had sat on both sides of the owner-contractor relationship enough times to understand why it so frequently becomes adversarial.

    The Rail Projects That Shaped My Thinking

    My years at Fermar Paving shaped my understanding of what it takes to deliver complex rail infrastructure on time and within budget. The Georgetown South Track Grading project — $100 million of earthworks, underground servicing, and rail construction on an active GO-Metrolinx corridor — required coordination with CN Rail, compliance with Canadian Rail Operating Rules, and management of a team and subcontractors across multiple simultaneous work fronts.

    The Stouffville Rail Corridor Track Expansion that followed was more complex still. $110 million. Double-tracking an active commuter rail corridor while maintaining passenger service. The design staging plan I inherited had unnecessary crossovers that were adding time and cost. I reorganized the staging, reduced the number of crossovers required, and achieved substantial completion on schedule. That project taught me that constructability — the field knowledge that tells you which design assumptions won’t survive contact with actual ground conditions — is where contractor value gets created or wasted.

    The Barrie Double Track Expansion was another lesson in schedule complexity. $80 million of rail construction with interdependencies that required continuous schedule analysis, what-if scenarios, and recovery planning. I was Project Scheduler on that program, and it built in me a discipline around critical path thinking that has informed every program I’ve managed since.

    Moving Into the Owner’s Chair

    Joining Metrolinx as a project manager in 2022 changed my perspective fundamentally. After spending nearly a decade delivering projects for contractors, I was now sitting on the other side of the table — representing the owner on programs worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

    The Georgetown Train Station Accessibility and Rehabilitation project was my first major delivery role at Metrolinx. $150 million. Accessibility upgrades and full station rehabilitation. The most valuable thing I did on that project wasn’t the project management itself — it was a value engineering analysis that eliminated scope elements that weren’t serving the project’s business case, reducing the overall budget by 10%. And changing the pedestrian crossing design from a tunnel to a bridge, which cut cost by 15%, schedule by 30%, and risk by 20%.

    What I also learned was that owner governance — the systems through which an organization makes decisions, approves changes, and manages risk — has an enormous effect on project outcomes. When governance is designed for a traditional procurement environment but a progressive contract model is being used, the friction between the two is immediate and persistent.

    The Bowmanville Extension and the CMAR Experience

    The Bowmanville Train Line Extension — a $2 billion rail extension on Canada’s busiest commuter corridor — became the central experience of my time at Metrolinx. Delivered under a Construction Manager at Risk model, it was one of the most ambitious progressive contracting engagements attempted in North American transit delivery.

    As Manager, and then Acting Senior Manager, I was the primary owner’s representative within the CMAR relationship. I managed the commercial framework, led GMP negotiations, supervised a team of project managers and coordinators, and provided regular reporting to Metrolinx leadership on program performance. I also discovered, through hard experience, every challenge that the CMAR model creates when an owner’s governance framework isn’t designed to keep pace with the collaborative decision-making the contract requires.

    The Move to Riyadh

    In early 2025, my family and I relocated to Riyadh. It was not an impulsive decision. Saudi Arabia’s infrastructure pipeline — $196 billion in contract awards in 2025 alone, a National Privatization Strategy targeting 220 P3 transactions by 2030, and Vision 2030 programs at a scale I had never encountered in Canada — represented the most significant infrastructure delivery challenge of my generation.

    I’m building Concept Dash’s presence in the Kingdom as Chief Business Development Officer for the MENA region. We offer infrastructure PMO services, BIM and digital twin capability, and OT cybersecurity services through our partnership with a NACSA-licensed cybersecurity firm. The Saudi market is more sophisticated, more ambitious, and more analytically demanding than I expected. The recalibration has been ongoing and genuinely educational.

    This blog is where I share what I learn — from 20 years of field experience and from the ongoing education of building a business in the GCC’s most dynamic market.