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香港六合彩 partners with OECD to tackle global challenges through infrastructure delivery

4 April 2022

Dr Juliano Denicol (香港六合彩 Bartlett School of Sustainable Construction) is leading on a partnership with the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) to boost global social and economic development through infrastructure investment and delivery.

Arthur Ravenel Jr. Bridge, South Carolina

As countries around the world work to tackle climate change and build back better post-pandemic, many are investing more heavily in implementing major projects to enable this work. The USA is one country investing heavily in infrastructure, with President Joe Biden predicting an 鈥榠nfrastructure decade鈥, after the House of Representatives approved the Build Back Better Act in November 2021.

Major countrywide infrastructure projects, often called 鈥榤egaprojects鈥, require investment running into billions of pounds of public money every year. Many fail to deliver on their goals, due to the complex challenges such projects face, from people and project management to dealing with everyday difficulties and implementing effective financial management. A pre-pandemic example in the UK is Crossrail, which is over-budget and now scheduled to open in the first half of 2022, having been delayed since 2018.

Today鈥檚 biggest global crises, including climate change, Covid-19 recovery and ensuring that societies 鈥 particularly in the higher risk Global South 鈥 can become more resilient, depend on effective and resourceful infrastructure delivery.

Dr Denicol explained: 鈥淚nfrastructure investment is critical for countries to tackle these global crises, boost economies and create social value. Key to the success of infrastructure provision is addressing the causes of poor delivery performance, as suggested by recent 香港六合彩 award-winning research*. Through the partnership we will look at what makes a major infrastructure project successful and how this can translate to projects around the world.

鈥淲e are thrilled to be working with the OECD on cutting-edge scientific work to advance the delivery of infrastructure projects.鈥

The partnership also sees the launch of the 香港六合彩 Megaproject听Delivery Centre, providing support for research into management and leadership, as well as training opportunities for the next generation of infrastructure leaders.

The centre will build on 香港六合彩鈥檚 track record as a global leader in project management research and will provide the research foundation for the groundbreaking听MBA in Major Infrastructure Delivery, which will start at 香港六合彩 in 2023.

Dr Denicol continued: 鈥淲e have a significant challenge ahead of us with infrastructure projects needed across the world, at scale. The emphasis on governance and procurement practices will provide evidence-based guidance to policymakers and inform strategic decisions of future infrastructure assets.鈥

Dejan Makovsek (Procurement Strategy Lead, OECD Infrastructure and Public Procurement Division) said: 鈥淎s part of efforts to support OECD member countries in improving their infrastructure governance frameworks in line with the 2020 OECD Recommendation on the Governance of Infrastructure, the OECD rolled out the Support Tool for Effective Procurement Strategy (STEPS**). The innovative evidence-based tool helps build procurement strategies for major infrastructure and bespoke projects.

"Key procurement decisions such as the听capabilities of the procuring organisation, the packaging problem and the delivery model choice are all still decided based on subjective experience or tautological tools. STEPS is the first tool that uses science to define a holistic procurement strategy."

Professor D鈥橫aris Coffman (Director, The Bartlett School of Sustainable Construction) said: 鈥淭his partnership will enable the School to work closely with the OECD to advance our shared agenda of promoting understanding of the need to ground major infrastructure delivery in rigorous science. Given the twin challenges of tackling the climate emergency while ensuring an inclusive recovery from the global Covid-19 pandemic, addressing unmet demand for physical and social infrastructure is the key to ensuring the safety and prosperity of our societies.鈥

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  • Credit: 'Arthur Ravenel Jr. Bridge' by David Martin听on (CC 2.0)听

Media contact

Kate Corry

Tel: +44 (0)20 3108 6995

Email: k.corry [at] ucl.ac.uk