Case Study: Owner Procurement Delays Stall Alaska Highway Project Mobilization (2017)
Project Overview
• Name: Dalton Highway Reconstruction – Milepost 209-235
• Location: North Slope Borough, Alaska
• Year: 2017
• Project Size: $145 million
• Scope: Reconstruction and realignment of 26 miles of Arctic highway, including drainage and embankment work
• Lead Agencies/Contractors: Alaska DOT&PF /
Category of the Issue, Problem, or Challenge
• Contract Owner
• Procurement and Logistics
Summary of the Issue, Problem, or Challenge
The Alaska DOT failed to deliver long-lead culverts and geosynthetics on schedule due to internal procurement delays and vendor certification issues. These owner-furnished materials (OFM) were critical path items.
Root Cause Analysis
- Owner attempted to self-procure to cut project costs but underestimated logistical complexity.
- No performance guarantees were built into OFM delivery timelines.
- Harsh seasonal windows made material delays especially costly.
Impacts Due to the Issue, Problem, or Challenge
- Entire spring-summer construction window was lost.
- Contractor faced remobilization costs and crew unavailability the next season.
- Total delay: 12 months; financial impact exceeded $7.5 million.
Corrective Actions Taken
- Alaska DOT ceased OFM approach for time-critical materials.
- Material procurement risk now contractually transferred to contractor.
- Seasonal logistics plans now embedded in project procurement schedules.
Lessons Learned
- Public owners must be cautious about assuming responsibility for critical material delivery.
- Delays in remote environments can magnify exponentially due to limited access windows.
- Risk transfer via contract must be matched by performance guarantees.
Audit & Prevention: Project Control Questions to Ask on Future Projects to Help Control the Situation
- Are owner-furnished materials truly beneficial from a schedule and risk standpoint?
- Has the owner vetted its internal procurement and logistics capacity?
- Are contingency plans in place for delays in remote or seasonal areas?