https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/BU2505/S00165/how-to-be-a-better-infrastructure-client.htm
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How To Be A Better Infrastructure Client |
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The papers, Delivering Better Value and Better Outcomes and Towards Better Contracts, suggest new ways that can bring us better value and better outcomes from what we build, the Commission says.
Delivering Better Value and Better Outcomes looks at the challenges with traditional project-by-project, outsourced procurement models and identifies seven principles that delivery agencies can utilise to become more sophisticated clients. It makes the case that longer-term more collaborative partnerships can improve outcomes, subject to infrastructure clients retaining the appropriate in-house capability and expertise to manage contracts effectively.
Towards Better Contracts provides a summary of interviews conducted with infrastructure contracting professionals in the public and private sectors around current practices, and barriers to better contracting and contract management as a means to better project outcomes. It aims to increase transparency and awareness of current procurement practice challenges.
New Zealand’s traditional approach to infrastructure delivery has often relied on lowest-price tenders to deliver public value. We have pursued a project-by-project process, focused on lowest price, risk-transfer and adversarial commercial relationships – an approach which has not delivered efficiency, stability or reliability of results.
This report looks to international approaches to infrastructure delivery, with a focus on the best practices principles that have emerged from the UK. The UK has created a collaborative framework for delivery, which better leverages the experience and ability of construction partners. This reduces costs and improves infrastructure outcomes.
The paper is aimed at public sector organisations who manage, plan, deliver, and maintain infrastructure – particularly decision makers responsible for or involved with procurement decisions and/or supply chain management. It will also interest suppliers and advisors of infrastructure client organisations.
This report provides a summary of interviews conducted with infrastructure contracting professionals in the public and private sectors around current contracting practices. It aims to increase transparency and awareness of current procurement practice challenges.
Te Waihanga interviewed 26 government construction contract participants to investigate current contracting practices. This included people working in the legal, procurement, project management, and design/engineering space.
The interviews were conducted in 2023, and found that agencies’ capability as infrastructure clients was generally limited and lacking across the sector.
Key findings:
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