Insufficient Equipment Delays Bakun Dam
Tan Sri Nik Mohamed Nik Yaacob, chief executive, admitted that the Bakun dam project was behind schedule at Sime Darby's AGM yesterday.
He said that the delay is partly due to insufficient equipment but is less than the six months reported elsewhere. He stressed that the project will be completed on time by September 2007.
He further said that the delay would eat into some of the profits of the project.
Now what conclusion can be drawn if the project is going to finish on time (inferring that there will be no additional overheads incurred) but the project is going to cost more and the lack of sufficient equipment is delaying the project?
It very much sounds as though somebody has under estimated the amount of equipment needed.
This blog discusses all matters related to the science, art and practice of project management in Malaysia.
Even beyond project management!
Wednesday, November 05, 2003
Thursday, October 30, 2003
Highly Profitable Construction Industry
Whatever their problems, Malaysian construction companies seem very profitable in comparison with their Western counterparts.
A table of some major British construction companies' operating margins was recently published by a subsidiary of The Financial TImes. The margins seem so low in comparison:
3.3% Alfred McAlpine
2.9% Amec
2.4% Kier
2.2% Balfour Beatty
2.0% Carillon
1.7% Mowlem
1.5% Costain
1.5% Morgan Sindall
If only I knew the secret of local construction companies' success and could export it to the west.
Whatever their problems, Malaysian construction companies seem very profitable in comparison with their Western counterparts.
A table of some major British construction companies' operating margins was recently published by a subsidiary of The Financial TImes. The margins seem so low in comparison:
3.3% Alfred McAlpine
2.9% Amec
2.4% Kier
2.2% Balfour Beatty
2.0% Carillon
1.7% Mowlem
1.5% Costain
1.5% Morgan Sindall
If only I knew the secret of local construction companies' success and could export it to the west.
Saturday, October 25, 2003
Smelter Asia
Things are already starting to look tough for the Smelter Asia project even though it's four years before the scheduled opening of its aluminium smelting plant. The plant has a projected capacity of 500,000 tonnes which is much, much higher than the total demand for aluminium in Malaysia. The viability of the project must be highly dependant upon exports.
According to one of its government agencies, China currently has the capacity to produce over 5 million tonnes of aluminium annually. Plants in the "pipeline" will increase that to over 10 million tonnes per annum.
For its sake, I hope that Smelter Asia's cost of production is close to that of its Chinese competitors.
Things are already starting to look tough for the Smelter Asia project even though it's four years before the scheduled opening of its aluminium smelting plant. The plant has a projected capacity of 500,000 tonnes which is much, much higher than the total demand for aluminium in Malaysia. The viability of the project must be highly dependant upon exports.
According to one of its government agencies, China currently has the capacity to produce over 5 million tonnes of aluminium annually. Plants in the "pipeline" will increase that to over 10 million tonnes per annum.
For its sake, I hope that Smelter Asia's cost of production is close to that of its Chinese competitors.
Wednesday, October 22, 2003
Contingency Galore?
Today's New Straits Times quoted the Deputy Transport Minister on progress on the double tracking project from Rawang to Ipoh. He said the project is 70 per cent complete, is on schedule, will be completed by December 2004 and operations will begin a year later.
If I've read that correctly that's 12 months between project completion and starting operations. That's a lot of contingency or is it?
Let's keep an eye on the project to see when operations start.
Today's New Straits Times quoted the Deputy Transport Minister on progress on the double tracking project from Rawang to Ipoh. He said the project is 70 per cent complete, is on schedule, will be completed by December 2004 and operations will begin a year later.
If I've read that correctly that's 12 months between project completion and starting operations. That's a lot of contingency or is it?
Let's keep an eye on the project to see when operations start.
Sunday, July 20, 2003
Last month,we have Mindef's project fiasco. Now, we have another interesting and juicy story of computer school labs that failed to be completed on time after two years of EoT.It was reported in the newspapers that the east coast projects have structural defects!May be more will be exposed later...
We have been doing projects for more than 100 years in this country of ours.Now, we are in the 8th Malaysian Plan.Surely, we have learnt something,haven't we??
Just re-examine our system, our people and our processes in project management.Do we have the the right thing in the right place?If not,then let's all go back to school.
We have been doing projects for more than 100 years in this country of ours.Now, we are in the 8th Malaysian Plan.Surely, we have learnt something,haven't we??
Just re-examine our system, our people and our processes in project management.Do we have the the right thing in the right place?If not,then let's all go back to school.
Wednesday, July 09, 2003
Sunday, June 22, 2003
I hope the recent exposure by Army chief about "deviations" in implementing projects worth RM 114 millions will be a wake-up call to all those people in all sectors, especially the governments who are entrusted with public fund. This wake-up call will come to nothing if those who are involved in projects are NOT enabled with knowledge on how to go about managing their projects.
Yesterday, while I was waiting to buy book at Kinokuniya, I met the chairman of one government agency. He told me that he has instructed his agency to improve project management system since three years ago ,but nothing happened. I told him that his people just do not know how to go about doing that. Plain ignorant.Period.
Yesterday, while I was waiting to buy book at Kinokuniya, I met the chairman of one government agency. He told me that he has instructed his agency to improve project management system since three years ago ,but nothing happened. I told him that his people just do not know how to go about doing that. Plain ignorant.Period.
Tuesday, May 20, 2003
When I discover Project Management Institute(USA) and Association for Project Management(UK) in early 2000, I just wonder why we in Malaysia still do not have a body or an instituition for Project Management or for Project Managers? As far as I know and I could remember, we Malaysians have been doing thousands and billions ringgit of projects.
How could this happened to us? Are we not concerned about the standard of project management and the quality of our project managers?
How could this happened to us? Are we not concerned about the standard of project management and the quality of our project managers?
Friday, May 16, 2003
Oh good! It really works. Now, I can start writing about project management in Malaysia. As a start , I will do alone and later on invite a few others to chip in.
To kick the ball rolling, I am posting a reply from ex-boss of a government department which was entrusted to manage and deliver billions ringgit projects a year:
Beris Man: Sir, I would like to do a study of the project management practice in your ex -organisation?
Ex- boss: Don't bother!
Beris Man: why?
Ex-boss: There was no such thing!
Beris Man: Then what the thousands of people doing there for years?
Ex-boss: Everything else except project management.
To kick the ball rolling, I am posting a reply from ex-boss of a government department which was entrusted to manage and deliver billions ringgit projects a year:
Beris Man: Sir, I would like to do a study of the project management practice in your ex -organisation?
Ex- boss: Don't bother!
Beris Man: why?
Ex-boss: There was no such thing!
Beris Man: Then what the thousands of people doing there for years?
Ex-boss: Everything else except project management.
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