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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Engie Fabricom UK Ltd v MW High Tech Projects UK Ltd [2019] EWHC 1876 (TCC) (17 July 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2019/1876.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 1876 (TCC) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT (QBD)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court)
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ENGIE FABRICOM UK LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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MW HIGH TECH PROJECTS UK LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Mr Simon Hargreaves QC and Mr Tom Owen (instructed by Clyde & Co LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 27th June 2019
Judgment available to the parties 10th July 2019
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HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT
Crown Copyright ©
THE DEPUTY HIGH COURT JUDGE:
(i) The Institute of Chemical Engineers former Sub-contract (the Yellow Book) 4th Edition 2013 referred to in the Sub-contract and in this judgment as "the General Conditions";(ii) The Special Conditions which comprised a list of bespoke amendments to the General conditions plus two additional Conditions;
(iii) Specifications A to D; and
(iv) Schedules 1 to 21.
"This Clause 47 shall only apply to disputes arising under construction contract as defined in the Housing Grants Construction and Regeneration Act 1996, or any amendment or re-enactment thereof".
"This Clause 47 applies only to the extent (if any) required by the Construction Act 1996, as amended".
"The following operations are not construction operations within the meaning of this part –
…
(c) Assembly, installation or demolition of plant or machinery, or erection or demolition of steel work for the purposed of supporting or providing access to plant or machinery, on a site where the primary activity is
(i) nuclear processing, power generation or water or effluent treatment, or
(2) the production transmission, processing or bulk storage (other than warehousing) of chemicals, pharmaceuticals, oil, gas, steel or food and drink."
"For the construction of a fluidised bed gasification power plant at Cleveland Street, Kingston upon Hull…"
"For the construction of a fluidised bed gasification power plant at Cleveland Street, Kingston upon Hull.."
Thus, the Defendant engaged the Claimant for the "Sub-contract works" namely the design, engineering, manufacture, delivery to the site, construction, execution and completion of the "Sub-contract Plant", which was the gasification plant system. Fabricom accepts that the only issue is the narrow issue concerning the primary activity on the site. Fabricom say that the "primary activity" of site is the disposal and thermal treatment of waste (by incineration and/or gasification) hence the exclusion does not apply and the construction is a construction contract as defined in the Construction Act. It is said by Ms McCafferty QC that the primary activity on the site is the disposal and thermal treatment (by incineration/gasification) of waste. Power generation is merely a secondary activity, and the production of gas is merely an ancillary activity.
"On the basis of the information contained in the extracts from this website and the contract to which I have referred, I am satisfied and find as a fact that:
the prime purpose of the plant built at Chineham was the incineration of waste; and
that the principal physical activity at the site was also the incineration of waste.
I am quite satisfied that the plant was developed principally as a means of finding alternatives to landfill sites for the purpose of disposing of waste. I am impressed by the sheer volume of waste incinerated annually at the Chineham site as contrasted with the modes output of electricity which it generates. I accept Mr Cox's assertion that the generation of electricity was simply "a spin off" from the incineration process. It may be appropriate to refer to the plant as an "Energy Recovery Incinerator", but this does not lead to the conclusion that the principal purpose was power generation. Accordingly I am satisfied and find as a fact that power generation was and is not the "primary activity" on the site within the meaning of Section 105(2)(c)(i) of the Act".
"(i) What the parties describe contractually or otherwise as being the primary activity of the site is relevant but not determinative"
(ii) One must first determine what the site is, for instance, is there a site within a site;
(iii) There can only be one primary activity on a site; and
(iv) One can have regard to all relevant published material relating to the user of the site and the site itself"
(a) a close analysis of the statutory language
(b) a detailed review of several previous decisions on section 105(2); and
(c) a careful consideration of extracts from Hansard relating to the exclusion.
(a) The CHP plant was providing steam and electricity to serve the paper mill;
(b) The CHP plant occupied an area of only 10% of the total paper mill site; and
(c) The CHP plant was "not an independent power station but one which depends on the relationship with Tullis Russell".
"The site" must be "considered as one of the overall impression rather than detailed examination of particular documents or obligations which would not have been known to the parties when the entered into the Sub-contract."
The Claimant argues that whilst generation of electricity from waste is one of the purposes of the site and one of the activities on site it is clear from the "overall impression" of the evidence about the site and the plant installed on the site that power generation is not the underlying primary activity on site. The Claimant says also that power generation is not the primary purpose of the site although accepts that that factor is of lesser importance. It is said that power generation is merely a secondary activity and as in Conor Engineering the primary activity is the thermal treatment of waste as an alternative to landfill for the purpose of disposing of waste.
"The key target proposed for energy recovery combines the need to direct residual waste from landfill through waste treatment facilities that comply with the waste hierarchy definition of recovery. This will ensure that the use of landfill is significantly reduced and energy is generated from the residual waste"
"A key element of the original Strategy was to develop and Energy from Waste (EfW) facility to manage the waste left over after recycling and composting… The Council's plan to commence the procurement process for new waste contracts in 2012. This is to ensure that facilities are provided to process the various waste streams and that alternative treatment facilities are in place to reduce reliance on landfill".
"It shall be a condition of any permit covering incineration or co-incineration with energy recovery that the recovery of energy take place with a high level of energy efficiency".
"This permit controls the operation of a waste incineration plant. The relevant listed activity is section 5.1 (i) (b). The incineration of non-hazardous waste in a waste incineration plant with a capacity exceeding three tonnes per hour….
The main features of the permit are as follows:
The installation is designed for the thermal treatment of waste derived fuels, by incineration. Energy will be recovered from the installation in the form of electricity, principally for export to the National Grid…"
"The applicant has described the facility as Energy Recovery, our view is that for the purposes of IED (the EU industrial emissions directive 2010/75/EU)… the installation is a waste incineration plant because:
- Notwithstanding the fact that energy will be recovery from the process; the process is nevertheless "incineration" because it is considered that its main purpose is the thermal treatment of waste; and
- The plant only produces electricity and heat but no material output;
- The waste is the principal source of fuel;
- The waste being burned is mixed waste comprising different materials; and
- The waste has not been treated to improve its quality to a relevant standard."
"In order to defeat the application for summary judgment it is sufficient for the Respondent to show some "prospect" i.e. some chance of success. The prospect must be "real" i.e. the Court will disregard prospects which are false, fanciful or imaginary…. The hearing of an application for summary judgment is not a summary trial. The Court at the summary judgment application will consider the merit of the Respondent's case only to the extent necessary to determine whether it has sufficient merit to proceed to trial. The proper disposal of an issue under PT24 does not involve the Court conducting a mini-trial… At the trial, the criteria to be applied by the Court is probability: victory goes to the party whose case is the more probable "taking into account the burden of proof". This is not true of a summary judgment application. "The Criteria on which the judge has to have applied under CPR part 24 is not one of probability; it is absence of reality" (Lord Hobhouse of Woodborough in Three Rivers DC v. Bank of England {No 3) [2001] 2 ALL ER 513….
"Where a summary judgment application gives rise to a short point of law or construction, the Court should decide that point if it has before it all the evidence necessary for a proper determination and it is satisfied that the parties have had an adequate opportunity to address the point in argument… Conversely an application for summary judgment is not appropriate to resolve a complex question of law and fact, the determination of which necessitates a trial of the issue having regard to all of the evidence…