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	  News in 2016
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	Global construction industry unites to enhance consistency - ICMS
		November 2016
		Launch of public consultation for ICMS, which seeks to 
		improve consistency and reduce risk in the global construction industry
		
Against a backdrop of tightening public purse strings and growing 
		investment demand, construction industry leaders have joined together to 
		set out a radical new approach to calculate costs for the world’s 
		building and civil engineering projects. 
		FIG is represented by Chair of 
		Commission 10 See Lian Ong, who is chairing the Standard Setting 
		Committee (SSC).
		In November 2016 the International Construction Measurement Standards 
		(ICMS) Coalition, a group of over 40 professional bodies established at 
		the IMF in Washington D.C. in 2015, is calling for professionals to 
		support the collaboration and help embed common standards at the heart 
		of construction investment. 
		Overall, close to $78 trillion is expected to be spent on 
		infrastructure globally between 2014 and 2025.* While construction is a 
		global industry, the way construction project costs are measured varies 
		enormously, hampering decision making and creating barriers to 
		investment. 
		To tackle this problem, the ICMS Coalition is leading the creation of a 
		universal system for measuring the cost of construction projects which 
		will allow comparisons to be made on a like-for-like basis between 
		countries. 
		All stakeholders in the construction and infrastructure sectors can 
		comment on the draft standard by visiting:
		
		www.icms-coalition.org/consultation
		Ken Creighton, Chair of the ICMS Coalition, said: “Today is an 
		important day for the global construction market because we are one step 
		closer to achieving consistency across the industry. We are seeking 
		input from professionals and all stakeholders in the built environment 
		to help draft this landmark standard and establish international best 
		practice.”
		This draft international standard presents huge opportunities for the 
		global cost management profession.  The current lack of consistency 
		in construction leads to misunderstanding and uncertainty which inhibits 
		sounds investment decisions. We’ve worked hard to get the new standard 
		to this point and we now need to hear from cost consultants, quantity 
		surveyors and civil engineers around the world.
		The current plan is that the  First Edition of ICMS will be available 
		before the FIG Working Week 2017 in Helsinki, Finland 29 May - 2 June.
		About ICMS
		The ICMS Coalition is a rapidly growing partnership of leading 
		organisations from around the world, committed to producing and 
		supporting consistent shared standards for construction costs. 
		
		 
		Starting with meetings at the International Monetary Fund in June 2015, 
		the Coalition created an independent standards setting committee and 
		committed to the vision of one set of international standards. The 
		organisations that have already signed the declaration to become joint 
		members of the ICMS Coalition are:
		
		Africa Association of Quantity Surveyors – AAQS
		Association for the Advancement of Cost Engineering – AACE
		Association of Cost Engineers – ACOSTE
		Association of South African Quantity Surveyors – ASAQS
		Australian Institute of Quantity Surveyors – AIQS
		Building Surveyors Institute of Japan – BSIJ
		Canadian Association of Consulting Quantity Surveyors – CACQS
		Canadian Institute of Quantity Surveyors – CIQS
		Chartered Institute of Building – CIOB
		Chemical Engr. & Construction Company Limited, Lagos – SMIEC
		China Engineering Cost Association – CECA
		Commonwealth Association of Surveying and Land Economy – CASLE
		Conseil Europeen des Economists de la Construction – CEEC
		Consejo General de la Arquitectura Técnica de España – CGATE
		Dutch Association of Quantity Surveyors – NVBK
		European Federation of Engineering Consultancy Associations – EFCA
		Ghana Institution of Surveyors – GhIS
		Ikatan Quantity Surveyors Indonesia – IQSI
		Indian Institute of Quantity Surveyors – IIQS
		Institute of Engineering and Technology – IET
		Institution of Civil Engineers – ICE
		Institution of Surveyors Kenya – ISK
		International Cost Engineering Council – ICEC
		International Federation of Surveyors – FIG
		Korean institution of quantity surveyors (KIQS)
		Nigerian Institute of Quantity Surveyors – NIQS
		Pacific Association of Quantity Surveyors – PAQS
		Philippine Institute of Certified Quantity Surveyors – PICQS
		Property Institute New Zealand (PINZ)
		The Real Estate Institute of Botswana (REIB)
		Royal Institute of British Architects – RIBA
		Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors – RICS
		Royal Institution of Surveyors Malaysia – RISM
		Singapore Institute of Building Limited – SIBL
		Singapore Institute of Surveyors and Valuers – SISV
		Sociedad Mexicana de Ingeniería Económica, Financiera y de Costos – 
		SMIEFC
		Society of Chartered Surveyors Ireland – SCSI
		The Hong Kong Institute of Surveyors – HKIS
		The Italian Association for Total Cost Management – AICE
		The Brazilian Institute of Cost Engineers – IBEC
		The Chartered Institution of Civil Engineering Surveyors – ICES
		The Institute of Quantity Surveyors of Kenya  – IQSK
		The New Zealand Institute of Quantity Surveyors  – NZIQS
		Union Nationale des Economistes de la Construction – UNTEC
		 
		*Oxford Economics / PwC:
		
		http://www.pwc.com/gx/en/industries/capital-projects-infrastructure/publications/cpi-spending-outlook.html
		
		
		 
		
		 
		
		29 November 2016