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Reality Check

Stop Pretending Risk Disappears

Oil & gas projects don’t fail because risk exists. They fail because owners pretend it doesn’t—by pushing it onto contractors, confusing insurance with mitigation, and protecting dates instead of flow.

“You can outsource execution; you cannot outsource uncertainty.”

For decades, the industry has tried to make risk disappear through contracts. Lump-sum wrappers, indemnities, warranties, caps, and exclusions get stacked like talismans to ward off reality. Then the surprises arrive: an uncharted utility, a permit that drifts, a weather window that closes, a tie-in that won’t align with operations. Suddenly the model breaks, relationships sour, claims swell, and the schedule bleeds.

This is not a morality tale. It’s a management failure. Risk belongs where the levers are—where someone can actually reduce its likelihood or consequence at the lowest total cost. That means getting allocation right, financing it intelligently, and building systems that preserve flow across interfaces.

Allocation
Put risk where levers exist.
Financing
Use insurance wisely.
Flow
Protect interfaces, not dates.
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Myth #1

“Push the risk down.”

You can transfer liability. You cannot transfer uncertainty. When owners try to dump uncontrollable risk on vendors, the market responds rationally: higher prices, thicker exclusions, more claims, and less competition. What you’ve done is swap manageable variability for a certainty of adversarial behavior.

Better rule: transfer only what the contractor can control—means and methods, shop quality, subcontractor performance, logistics they plan and execute. Retain or share what the contractor cannot control—permits, land access, third-party operators, data quality, subsurface and product spec uncertainty, extreme conditions.

“A lump-sum without mature scope is just a pre-paid claim.”

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Principle

Control = Ownership

Risk ownership belongs to the party with the information and levers: who sets the data, governs access, holds the interfaces, and can actually change outcomes. That ownership must be explicit in both the risk register and the contract.

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Financing vs Reduction

Insurance Isn’t Mitigation—It’s an Invoice

Insurance changes who pays when things go wrong; it doesn’t make those things less likely to happen. It’s risk financing, not risk reduction.

Mitigation reduces probability or impact. In oil & gas, that’s HAZID/HAZOP, LOPA and QRA, disciplined vendor qualification, FAT, SAT, design margins and redundancy, constructability reviews, realistic weather windows, and genuine schedule buffers. Use insurance CAR/EAR, third-party liability, professional liability, marine cargo) alongside—aligned with your indemnities and caps—so you don’t create gaps or double-pay.

“Insurance lowers pain, not probability.”

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Contracting

The Lump-Sum Lie

Lump-sum EPCC works only when scope is mature, site risks are bounded, and interfaces are under control. Otherwise, it incentivizes optimism, paperwork, and legal creativity. The antidote is boring but powerful: FEED quality, data warranties, DSC clauses, relief events, and priced options for scope growth. If uncertainty is substantial, target-cost with gainshare/painshare is frequently cheaper in total and much faster to correct when reality shifts.

Flow Beats Heroics: Treat variability as a flow risk, not only a date risk. Use Last Planner thinking to remove constraints early; put buffers where interfaces are brittle; and couple this with -style buffer management to keep the network breathing. Protect the tie-ins, not just the ribbon-cutting.
FEED Quality
Warrant & verify data.
Relief Events
Define, trigger, trace.
Target-Cost
Buy truth early.
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Offshore Reality Check

Knock-for-Knock Needs Brains

Knock-for-knock regimes apportion liabilities cleanly, but they don’t magic away hazards. Pair them with bow-tie thinking and barrier health KPIs. Know which threats you are preventing, which barriers degrade under pressure, and how you’ll detect and recover. If a barrier is critical and fragile, fund it—don’t litigate it later.

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Levers that Reduce Risk

Contracting Levers That Actually Reduce Risk

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Truth > Theatre

When to Share: Mechanisms That Buy Truth

Some risks are inherently uncontrollable by either side—macro inflation, geopolitical events, extreme weather clusters. Others are controllable but only with joint decisions and rapid design-construct-operate feedback. In those cases, blunt risk transfer creates silence and gaming.

Better: Target-cost with measured painshare/gainshare, agreed open-book principles, and crisp change control. You’ll pay for uncertainty either way; choose the method that buys truth early, not excuses late.

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Governance

Make Risk Visible—or Pay for It in Arbitration

Most “surprise” claims are just invisible risks that lacked a named owner, a clause, or a buffer. Fix that with ruthless traceability:

  • Top 20 risk list signed by both parties at contract award.
  • For each: named Risk Owner, Action Owner, treatment plan, trigger, and a pre/post score.
  • Trace each to a contract lever: clause, relief event, buffer, or index.
  • If you cannot trace it, it’s an orphan risk—your future dispute.
  • Escalation thresholds: define $$ and days that mandate a decision at the right level.

And keep it alive. A monthly risk forum that kills dead items and funds living ones is cheaper than a claims team.

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Information Risk

Owner Data Is a Risk Item

FEED quality, survey accuracy, P&IDs, vendor datasheets, metocean statistics, and tie-in windows are not neutral. They are risk-bearing information assets. Treat them like equipment: verify, maintain, and version-control. If your data is poor, your mitigation is theatre.

“Risk lives where the levers are.”

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Pin This

Oil & Gas Allocation Cheat Card

Contractor-leaning

Means & methods, supervision, welding/NDT, shop testing, subcontractor performance, logistics they plan and control.

Owner-leaning

Permits & access, third-party operators, ROW and land, data quality (FEED, surveys, tie-in windows), subsurface/product specification uncertainty, owner-driven scope change, political risk.

Shared/Mechanized

Extreme metocean (relief events + buffers), geotech beyond baseline (DSC), commodity shocks (price indices), global supply chain disruptions (force majeure with duties to mitigate).

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Implementation

Implementation in the Real World: A 10-Point Plan

  1. Risk Breakdown Structure tuned for oil & gas (HSE, technical, schedule/constructability, supply chain, interface, regulatory, ESG/political).
  2. Joint risk register from FEED through EPC: Owner (A), Action Owner (R), PMC Oversight (C), Stakeholders (I). Don’t conflate accountability with who executes the task.
  3. Constructability and interface reviews early and often; publish an interface map with owners and due dates.
  4. Buffers at interfaces using Last Planner + CCPM: protect throughput, not just milestones.
  5. Contract-risk traceability: Every high-risk item maps to a clause or buffer before award.
  6. Insurance aligned with indemnities and caps; eliminate overlaps and gaps; understand what’s retained vs. financed.
  7. Vendor readiness: pre-award qualification, surveillance plans, FAT/SAT gates tied to risk treatments.
  8. Transparent change control: small, fast decisions beat “perfect” slow ones. Pair with target-cost mechanics when uncertainty is high.
  9. Barrier management for Major Accident Hazards: bow-ties with leading KPIs; fund weak barriers proactively.
  10. Leadership cadence: monthly risk forum, quarterly portfolio risk review; approve spend where it actually drops probability or consequence.
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The Close

Make It Boring—or Make It Expensive

Projects don’t need more courage, heroics, or lawyers. They need boring clarity: who actually controls each risk, how the contract reflects that truth, and how the schedule protects flow rather than fantasies.

Before your next contract goes out the door, ask for three exhibits:

  • Top-20 risks with named owners, treatments, triggers, and pre/post scores.
  • A traceability map from those risks to clauses, relief events, or buffers.
  • An interface buffer plan that shows how you’ll keep throughput under pressure.

If it’s not on paper, it’s not managed. And if it’s not managed, you will pay for it—in margin, schedule, and reputation.

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Partner

Work with Ekton: Put Risk Where the Levers are

Ekton Project Analytics helps oil & gas owners and PMCs allocate risk to the party that can actually control it, protect flow at interfaces, and separate mitigation from insurance. We turn the article’s principles into implementation:

Risk Allocation Sprint (2–3 weeks)

Top-20 risks mapped to owner/action owner, contract lever (DSC, relief event, LDs, indices), and interface buffers.

→ Our Integrated Cost, Schedule & Risk Analysis program embeds Monte Carlo with CCPM/Last Planner to protect throughput—not just dates.

Contract & Data Readiness

FEED/data warranties, knock-for-knock alignment, and traceability from risks to clauses—so uncertainty isn’t “pushed down” and reborn as claims.

Capability Building

PMI-RMP Exam Prep for Oil & Gas—practical casework on allocation, barrier health, and interface risk, so teams model reality, not fantasy.