Solution
Capital Projects Acceleration
Capital Projects Acceleration
Achieve schedule and cost improvements while maintaining quality and safety.
Solution
Achieve schedule and cost improvements while maintaining quality and safety.
Systematically assess each project’s value levers, specific to its lifecycle phase, and prioritize the highest-value/lowest-certainty gaps to close.
Accelerate and maximize value capture with sprints focused on the key actions needed to exceed project targets.
Collaborate as one integrated team to implement project improvements across safety, quality, time, and cost.
A lot of organizations aren't set up to deliver a multi-billion-dollar capital agenda, and the gaps only surface once commitments are made and execution is underway.
The issue is rarely a single failure. It's a compounding effect: governance that doesn't match project scale, decision rights that are unclear at critical milestones, and delivery capability that was sized for a smaller portfolio. The result is delayed decisions, scope drift, and cost overruns that become structural.
The starting point is an honest diagnostic:
Addressing these early is the difference between a capital plan that compounds value and one that compounds risk.
Most value erosion happens before a final investment decision is made – through over-specification, optimistic baselines, and insufficient readiness on the things that actually gate execution.
Maximizing value pre-FID means locking in the right decisions while they're still reversible:
This is where the strongest project economics are won or lost. Getting it right reduces downstream rework and gives leadership genuine confidence in the numbers at FID.
When a project is off track, it’s typically more serious than the current reporting suggests. Problems on capital projects rarely arrive in isolation – they compound along the critical path, and by the time they're escalated, the recovery window has narrowed.
The instinct is to add resources or accelerate everything. That rarely works. Recovery means focusing on the few things that actually determine outcomes:
Early, targeted intervention can still recover significant value. But it requires honesty about where the project actually stands – not where the last report said it was.
The default relationship is transactional – governed by contract clauses, change orders, and claims. That model consistently produces adversarial dynamics, delayed decisions, and value leakage on both sides.
Better outcomes come when owners and contractors are aligned on value, incentives, and decision-making—not just contract compliance.
Misalignment often leads to disputes, delays, and inefficiency. Improvement comes from:
This isn't about being "more collaborative" in the abstract but shifting the relationship from adversarial to performance-driven—resulting in faster delivery, fewer disputes, and improved cost outcomes.
AI and digital tools will reshape project delivery, but most organizations are capturing a fraction of the potential because they're layering tools onto broken processes.
The highest-value applications aren't dashboards and reporting. They're capabilities that change when and how decisions get made:
To harness the full impact, governance will need to evolve alongside the tools. AI that surfaces a risk two weeks early is worthless if the decision-making process still takes six weeks to respond. The organizations getting this right are redesigning governance and decision rights around what the technology now makes possible – not just digitizing the status quo.