PANAMA CITY, (Reuters) – The Panama Canal Authority said it won an arbitration ruling yesterday for $265 million to be returned to it from the consortium that built a third set of locks for the key transoceanic waterway.
The authority cited a decision from a Miami-based arbitration board it said was issued earlier yesterday.
The GUPC consortium, which includes Spain’s Sacyr SA and Italy’s Impregilo International Infrastructures NV, no longer exists. Neither company could not be reached for comment after hours on Friday.
Initiated in 2015, the case centred on disputed cost overruns largely dealing with concrete quality. It marks the latest of three arbitration verdicts stemming from the canal’s expansion, completed four years ago and allowing the canal to handle bigger ships.
Two arbitration decisions covering separate disputes between the canal authority and GUPC remain unresolved.