Case Study: Delay Caused by Supply Chain Disruptions on New Orleans Levee Project (New Orleans, LA, 2013)
Project Overview
• Name: New Orleans Levee System Upgrade
• Location: New Orleans, Louisiana
• Year: 2013
• Project Size: $600 million
• Scope: Strengthening and rebuilding levees and flood barriers
• Lead Agencies/Contractors: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers /
Category of the Issue, Problem, or Challenge
• Supply Chain
• Project Delay
Summary of the Issue, Problem, or Challenge
Disruptions in the supply of key materials, including specialty concrete and steel, caused prolonged project delays.
Root Cause Analysis
- Single Supplier Dependence: Overreliance on a limited number of suppliers.
- Transportation Bottlenecks: Port delays and logistics issues impacted material delivery.
- Market Demand Spikes: Regional construction booms created material shortages.
- Lack of Inventory Buffers: Minimal on-site stock of critical materials.
Impacts Due to the Issue, Problem, or Challenge
- Delay of 6 months.
- Increased costs due to expedited shipping and substitute materials.
- Contractor claims related to schedule impacts.
Corrective Actions Taken
- Diversified supplier base to reduce risk.
- Improved supply chain visibility and tracking.
- Increased on-site material inventories as buffers.
- Coordinated logistics planning with suppliers and transport agencies.
Lessons Learned
- Supply chain robustness is key to schedule adherence.
- Early procurement and inventory buffers mitigate disruptions.
- Active supplier and logistics management improve reliability.
Audit & Prevention: Project Control Questions to Ask on Future Projects to Help Control the Situation
- Is the supply chain diversified and robust?
- Are material inventories adequate for critical items?
- Is logistics and supplier communication proactive and effective?