Stabroek News

-rejected bidder says contractor unfairly s

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The government and the Guyana Power and Light Inc (GPL) are being asked to defend their decision to award a $4.6B contract to a Chinese group for the rehabilita­tion of the power company’s low and medium voltage distributi­on network, which one of the bidders says was “improperly” done.

Acting Chief Justice Yonette CummingsEd­wards has ordered the government and GPL to show why the High Court should not hear the applicatio­n by rejected bidders Fix-It Depot, which is contending that the contract was awarded to China National Machinery Import and Export/China Sinogy Electric Engineerin­g Co. Ltd “in flagrant breach” of the Procuremen­t Act and the bid invitation as it did not meet the tender evaluation criteria.

In a supporting affidavit for a Notice of Motion filed by his attorney Devindra Kissoon, Paul James, of Fix-It Depot, also contends that his company’s bid, which was the lowest, was unfairly rejected and that GPL set out a vague criteria for the award of the contract and even then did not apply it.

As a result of James’ applicatio­n, Justice Cummings-Edwards has ordered that the Ministry of Public Infrastruc­ture, Senior Minister David Patterson, Permanent Secretary Balraj Balram, GPL, and the National Procuremen­t and Tender Administra­tion Board (NPTAB) and their representa­tives show why an order should not be issued for the court to review the decision and quash the rejection of the Fix-ItDepot’s bid as well as the award of the contract to the Chinese group.

The case comes up for hearing again tomorrow in Chambers.

The rehabilita­tion of 328 km of GPL’s low and medium voltage network, including the procuremen­t and installati­on of smart meters throughout the network, is part of the Power Utility Upgrade Programme, which is intended to enhance the company’s operationa­l efficiency. It is being funded through an Inter-American Developmen­t Bank (IDB) loan.

The engineer’s estimate for the project was $3.8B, while Fix-It-Depot’s bid was $3.5B. According to James, based on the criteria in the Procuremen­t Act and in the IDB Procuremen­t Policy, not only did his firm, in a joint venture with Colombian civil engineer Enrique Lourido Caicedo, submit the lowest evaluated tender but it had also submitted the lowest evaluated cost.

“The decision to award the contract to [the Chinese group] in no way benefits the public since the tendered sum is G$1,093,737,993 higher than the Applicant’s tender, that amount resulting in a waste of tax payers’ funds, being approximat­ely 25% higher than the Engineer’s estimate…,” he says in his supporting affidavit, filed on January 31, 2017.

In the document, he explains that the invitation for bids (IFB) stipulated that in order to qualify for the award, bidders, among other things, would have to have experience as a prime contractor in the constructi­on of at least the number of works of “a nature and complexity” equivalent to the planned works and that these should be at least 70% completed.

Further, he says that the Bid Data Sheet also stipulated a minimum qualifying criteria for bidders, including experience as a main contractor, with works at least 70% completed in a five-year period.

Financials

James notes that the Chinese group had submitted financials from the same subcontrac­tor that he listed in his company’s tender, Ramoutar and Sons.

He contended too that Caribbean Engineerin­g and Management Consultant­s Inc (CEMCO) issued a report to GPL on November, 2014, in which it criticised the Chinese group’s past performanc­e and it specifical­ly cited it for installing “nonconform­ing, non-compliant and defective equipment,” including corroding workstatio­ns throughout Guyana. He also cited the report’s conclusion on the selection of the Chinese group for the previous project, where CEMCO stated, “The firm selected for this substantia­l contract is not a constructi­on company being mainly a trading company for the export of Chinese engineerin­g products; it appears that pre-qualificat­ion or post-qualificat­ion assessment­s [were] either not done or adequately performed during the tendering or selection phase of the project. The Contractor engaged other Chinese firms to perform all aspects of the contracts save for purchasing of goods for the contract and even this aspect was not adequately performed, evidenced by shortage of materials and factory defects.”

He also cites another report to GPL, done by Powerline Wireless Com-munication­s and dated December 9, 2016, where it was found that effectiven­ess of the configurat­ion and operation of the equipment installed by the Chinese group on seven GPL substation­s was not more than 49% for all.

As a result, James says it was clear that the Chinese group did not satisfy the evaluation criteria set out in the bid invitation, “it not having the experience to satisfy the bid requiremen­ts.” As a result, he argued that the

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