Case Study: Cost Overrun from Material Price Escalation on Florida Highway Reconstruction (Miami, FL, 2015)
Project Overview
• Name: Miami-Dade Highway Reconstruction
• Location: Miami, Florida
• Year: 2015
• Project Size: $700 million
• Scope: Major highway reconstruction including asphalt paving, bridges, and drainage improvements
• Lead Agencies/Contractors: Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) /
Category of the Issue, Problem, or Challenge
• Material Price Escalation
• Cost Management
Summary of the Issue, Problem, or Challenge
Significant increases in asphalt and steel prices during the construction period caused unexpected budget overruns.
Root Cause Analysis
- Market Volatility: Global steel and oil price fluctuations impacted material costs.
- Fixed-Price Contracts: Contracts did not account for material price escalations.
- Lack of Hedging: No mechanisms were in place to hedge against price increases.
- Procurement Timing: Bulk purchasing delays led to exposure to market price spikes.
Impacts Due to the Issue, Problem, or Challenge
- Cost overruns reached approximately 18%.
- Budget adjustments required mid-project.
- Contractor disputes over cost sharing arose.
Corrective Actions Taken
- Adopted escalation clauses in future contracts.
- Implemented material price monitoring and early procurement strategies.
- Used financial instruments to hedge against commodity price risks.
- Increased contract flexibility to share market risks.
Lessons Learned
- Material price volatility must be factored into contract and budget planning.
- Early procurement and price hedging reduce exposure.
- Flexible contracts help manage market risks.
Audit & Prevention: Project Control Questions to Ask on Future Projects to Help Control the Situation
- Are material price risks identified and managed?
- Do contracts include escalation or risk-sharing provisions?
- Is procurement timed to minimize exposure to price spikes?