Among the many facets of a construction or industrial project, MEP contracting is considered to be one of the most material-intensive operations. This is due to the fact that MEP refers to mechanical, electrical, and plumbing work. These are basic units of service that every single building or industrial setup needs. Out of all types of contractors, perhaps the most practical real-world challenge is material management, especially for MEP contractors. Unlike in the bulk civil works where civil works, there are standardised materials, for MEP jobs, a specific set of tools, components, and fittings are required for each project depending on the designs, scale, and technical specifications.
Selection of tools and fittings impacts the speed of work, quality of work performed, safety, and satisfaction of the client. Choosing the wrong material, or more costly, lacking tools on-site often leads to costly delays and rework. In MEP contracting, having a projectwise plan for essential
Every Engineering, Procurement, and Construction (EPC) project has a procurement phase. It could be a power plant, a refinery, infrastructure development, or any industrial facility; the procurement function has control over the project’s cost, timeline, quality and success. In an ideal world, procurement gets everything right, but in the day-to-day here the work of EPC execution, procurement is also the department that achieves the most blunders that cause delays, escalate costs, initiate disputes, or in some instances bring operations to a grinding halt. These procurement blunders are their EPC counterpart's worst nightmare.
The blunders don't appear from thin air. In fact, procurement blunders stem from a lack of foresight, false estimation, poor collaboration, and having no regard for the above reality. An EPC project manager or a head of procurement has to ensure avoidance of these pitfalls if they want to see successful completion of projects to avoid these
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