print

FIDIC Red Book – Amendments to the FIDIC Conditions of Contract for Construction for Building and Engineering Works Designed by the Employer, Se

01/12/2022 • Article • FNTP

condition of contract

Conditions contractuelles

Vous pourriez être intéressé(e)

keyboard_arrow_left
FIDIC Yellow Book – Amendments to the FIDIC Conditions of Contract for Plant and Design-Build for Electrical & Mechanical Plant, and for Bui

05/12/2022 • Article • FNTP

FIDIC Silver Book – Amendments to the FIDIC Conditions of Contract for EPC/Turnkey Projects, Second Edition 2017

05/11/2022 • Article • FNTP

FIDIC Golden Principles

18/12/2019 • Article • FNTP

Nouveauté
GPoC 2024, Global Powers of Construction

10/10/2024 • FNTP

GPoC 2023 examines the main financial indicators of the industry’s major players and provides insights to help companies understand and assess the related challenges and opportunities. It also explores certain industry trends that have been shaping the construction sector over the past few years or are expected to have a major impact in the future. In 2023 the aggregate US$ sales of the Top 100 GPoC rose by 3.4%, while market capitalization increased by 18.3%. In 2023, revenue obtained by our Top 30 GPoC from international sales rose to 18.4% of total sales from 17.1% the previous year, still under the 19% pre-pandemic ratio achieved in 2019. None of our Top 30 GPoC reported construction losses in 2023 or 2022. Perspectives for the long term remain positive as the industry is expected to grow from US$ 10.4 trillion in 2023 to US$ 16.1 trillion by 2030, with a CAGR of approximately 5.9% during the period. Global trends such as rapid urbanization and decarbonization of the economy represent a huge opportunity for construction companies to go overseas but also to add new activities to their portfolio in addition to the traditional construction business.

Nouveauté
Infrastructure and Structural Change in Africa

10/10/2024 • FNTP

Past investments in electricity, Internet, and road infrastructure, in isolation and bundled, have contributed to structural transformation and economic development in Africa. Using new data on the expansion of the road, electricity, and Internet networks over the past two decades, the paper shows that having access to both paved roads and electricity has led to a significant reallocation of labor from agricultural to both manufacturing and services. Adding access to fast Internet has had a major impact on structural change, with an even larger impact on reallocating labor away from agriculture. The paper then uses a spatial general-equilibrium model to quantify the impacts of future regional transport investments, bundled with electricity and Internet investments, on economic development in countries in the Horn of Africa and Lake Chad region.

Nouveauté
Chiffre d’affaires international 2023 des majors français de la construction

08/10/2024 • Documents FNTP • FNTP

Malgré la poursuite de la décélération de la croissance économique mondiale en 2023 , l’activité internationale des principaux groupes français de construction a une nouvelle fois progressé de façon spectaculaire en 2023 (+26,4%), pour atteindre un chiffre d’affaires de €80 Mds.

Review of the European public-private partnership market in 2023

20/04/2024 • Article • FNTP

38 public-private partnership transactions reached financial close for an aggregate value of €13.6 billion in 2023. In value terms, the market increased by 35% compared to 2022. In number terms, the market decreased by 17% compared to 2022. The most active market was Germany, by value and number of projects. 13 countries closed at least one public-private partnership project, compared to 15 in 2022. Transport was the largest sector both in value and number terms. Over 53% of the transactions closed were government-pay public-private partnerships.

Principaux contrats internationaux remportés par les entreprises du SEFI en 2022

18/04/2024 • Article • FNTP

International Construction Costs 2024: Race for capacity

08/04/2024 • Article • FNTP

The report looks back at another highly disruptive year across global construction markets. The high construction price inflation that we first reported in 2021 broke out across most parts of the global economy in 2022. Even as domestic inflation hit double figures, construction price rises accelerated further, prompted by a unique combination of strong demand, supply chain disruption, tight labor markets and soaring energy costs.

keyboard_arrow_right
Sommaire