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England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Buckinghamshire Council v FCC Buckinghamshire Ltd [2024] EWHC 1552 (TCC) (21 June 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2024/1552.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 1552 (TCC) |
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BUSINESS & PROPERTY COURTS IN MANCHESTER
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT (KBD)
1 Bridge Street West, Manchester M60 9DJ |
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B e f o r e :
SITTING AS A JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
____________________
BUCKINGHAMSHIRE COUNCIL |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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FCC BUCKINGHAMSHIRE LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
(instructed by Sharpe Pritchard LLP, London) for the Claimant
Fiona Parkin KC, George McDonald & Samar Abbas Kazmi
(instructed by Pinsent Masons LLP, Manchester) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 15 - 19 April, 1 May 2024
Draft judgment circulated: 30 May 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Remote hand-down:
This judgment was handed down remotely at 10am on 21 June 2024 by circulation to the parties or their representatives by email and by release to The National Archives.
His Honour Judge Stephen Davies
His Honour Judge Stephen Davies:
Section | Paragraphs |
Introduction and summary of decision | 01 25 |
The parties and other significant entities | 26 - 33 |
The evidence | 34 - 37 |
The issues for trial | 38 - 57 |
Waste collection, transfer and disposal | 58 - 65 |
The project agreement (PA) | 66 - 120 |
Pre-contract phase | 121 - 136 |
The waste finder agreement (WFA) | 137 - 143 |
From construction phase up to the first proceedings | 144 - 162 |
The proceedings before and the judgment of O'Farrell J | 163 - 166 |
Information and payment by FCCB pursuant to the O'Farrell judgment | 167 - 170 |
The relevant principles of contract construction | 171 - 191 |
Deductible costs | 192 - 243 |
The application of the principle to the individual cost items | 244 - 281 |
The Luton unitary charge | 282 - 316 |
Luton residual contamination | 317 - 320 |
The blended waste issue | 321 - 337 |
The management fees allocation issue | 338 - 343 |
The IBA tonnage issue | 344 - 349 |
Bletchley material recycling facility | 350 - 351 |
Metals income | 352 - 370 |
The Fortis contract | 371 - 390 |
The clause 99 and 111 obligations | 391 - 411 |
Glossary | end |
Introduction and summary of decision
The parties and other significant entities
The evidence
The issues for trial
The overarching issue
The costs issues
The income issues
Waste collection, transfer and disposal
The project agreement (PA)
Introductory
Contract waste
TPW
Invoicing and payment
The paymech and the definition of TPI
"Third Party Income: the Contractor's (including for the purposes of this definition the Operating Contractor and/or any Affiliates') income from third parties (other than the Authority under the Contract and other than Substitute Waste) associated with the Project including without limitation that derived from Third Party Waste, Electricity Output and Recyclates Output.
The Contractor and/or Affiliate shall be entitled to deduct from such income the costs directly incurred in generating the income provided that the Contractor is able to demonstrate that:
(a) the costs to be taken into account are specifically and solely related to the generation of Third Party Income additional to that modelled in the Base Case; and
(b) such costs are incremental costs incurred over and above those costs which were either envisaged in the Base Case or have been or will be otherwise recovered through the Payment Mechanism; and
(c) the costs are not the costs of handling or processing the Third Party Waste or Recyclate by the Contractor or Affiliate,
and for the avoidance of doubt, reference to "Affiliates" in sub-paragraph (a) shall be deemed to include FCC Environment (UK) Limited, FCC Recycling (UK) Limited or any Affiliate of FCC Environment (UK) Limited."
The Base Case
Other clauses
"132.1 The Contractor acknowledges that:
132.1.1 the Contractor and the Authority have taken care to ensure that the payment of the Facilities Payment Sum and the granting of the long term contract to the Contractor are not state aid, do not distort the market and do not confer selective benefits on the Contractor; and
132.1.2 the Authority has invested in the Facilities to meet its own needs and to the extent those needs are satisfied, will generate a market investor return on its investment.
132.2 Given the acknowledgement set out in Clause 132.1 (Third Party Generation Income) above, the Contractor shall use the same endeavours and adopt the same principles in maximising the third party income as would a prudent commercial operator who had funded the Facilities in full from its own resources and will not lessen those endeavours or change those principles on account of its own Base Case having been satisfied.
132.3 The Contractor shall ensure that it does not set, offer, tender or agree any price for capacity, power or services which will generate third party income which the Contractor reasonably considers is an undervalue when compared with a comparable facility operating in similar circumstances and taking into account the market capacity, economic conditions and length of any contract."
"138.1 This Contract and all documents referred to herein set forth the entire agreement between the Parties with respect to the subject matter covered by them and supersede and replace all prior communications, representations (other than fraudulent representations), warranties, stipulations, undertakings and agreements whether oral or written between the Parties.
138.2 Each of the parties acknowledges and agrees that it does not enter into this Contract in reliance on any warranty, representation or undertaking other than those contained in this Contract, and that its only remedies available in respect of any breach of warranty, misrepresentation or untrue statement shall be any remedies available under this Contract provided that this shall not apply to any warranty, representation or statement made fraudulently, or to any provision of this Contract which was induced by fraud, for which the remedies available shall be those available under the law governing this Contract "
Pre-contract phase
The waste finder agreement (WFA)
"A. FCCB has agreed to build and operate an energy from waste facility for [BC]. The Facility will have a capacity to burn approximately 300,000 tonnes of waste a year, of which approximately 100,000 tonnes a year will be supplied by BC. The remaining (approximately 200,000 tonnes) of waste is to be secured from commercial and industrial sources ("C&I Waste") by FCCB."
"B. The economic viability of the project is dependent upon FCCB achieving the guaranteed minimum incomes set out in the Base Case which is in turn dependent on a combination of the volume, quality and price of C&I Waste that FCCB can secure."
"C. FCCB requires an organisation capable of securing the supply of C&I Waste for the Facility and [FCCR] is willing and able to supply those services all in accordance with the terms and conditions set out below."
From construction phase up to the first proceedings
The proceedings before and the judgment of O'Farrell J
Information and payment by FCCB pursuant to the O'Farrell judgment
The relevant principles of contract construction
"(2) The court must consider the contract as a whole and, depending on the nature, formality and quality of its drafting, give more or less weight to elements of the wider context in reaching its view as to its objective meaning.
(3) Interpretation is a unitary exercise which involves an iterative process by which each suggested interpretation is checked against the provisions of the contract and its implications and consequences are investigated."
Deductible costs
Directly incurred.
(1) divides costs "relevant to a particular chargeable job" into two categories, namely direct costs and overheads;
(2) defines direct costs as including: (a) direct employed staff costs; (b) costs payable to a contractor; (c) materials costs; (d) costs of hire of equipment, plant and vehicles; and (e) other relevant costs specifically attributable to a chargeable job;
(3) provides for overheads to be added as an ascertained percentage of direct costs, where the percentage is ascertained by adding together the following three percentages: (a) first, the overall cost of support services provided within the cost centre responsible for the chargeable job as a percentage of the total direct costs charged to the cost centre; (b) second, the cost of support services provided to that costs centre by other cost centres within the claimant's organisation, again as a percentage of the total direct costs charged to the cost centre; and (c) third, the cost of capital and depreciation of assets used in connection with the direct costs incurred by that cost centre and cost centres providing support services, again as a percentage of the total direct costs charged to those cost centres.
Proviso (a) specifically and solely related to the generation of additional TPI.
Proviso (b) incremental costs above those envisaged in the Base Case.
Proviso (c) - handling or processing TPW costs by FCCB or an affiliate
"The definition of Third Party Income expressly includes income 'derived from Third Party Waste ' Third Party Waste is defined as: 'all waste received at the Facility(ies) other than Contract Waste and Substitute Waste'. The definition could have stated that it was limited to income generated from the time at which waste arrived at the Facilities, or income generated directly by the treatment and disposal processes at the Facilities provided by FCCB to the Authority; it does not do so. The natural and ordinary meaning of income 'derived from Third Party Waste' is that it extends to all income arising from waste that is ultimately received at the Facilities, regardless of the point in time at which the sums from which the income is derived become payable. The Waste that is the subject of the Herts CC and NLW Waste contracts falls within the definition of Third Party Waste if it is received at the Facilities."
"FCCB contends that the Authority has not paid or contributed to the Affiliates' costs, such as transporting the waste to the Facilities and, therefore, it should not derive benefit from the Affiliates' income so generated. However, that commercial argument does not override the terms of the Project Agreement, which provide for the allocation of costs and risks between the parties. It also ignores the wider commercial context of the Authority's contribution to the opportunity for earning income from transporting waste by making the Facilities available. The Project Agreement permits FCCB to deduct costs directly incurred in generating Third Party Income from the funds to be made available for income sharing. Although the Court has not been asked to construe the costs proviso to the Third Party Income definition, or to determine any specific categories or items of costs relied on by FCCB, as a matter of principle, such costs would include costs incurred by the Affiliates in generating the income from Herts CC and NLW Waste."
The application of the principle to the individual cost items
(1) Haulage and contractors
(2) Manpower
a. In its post-draft judgment submissions FCC invited me to reconsider this finding, on the basis that the exercise I identified as possible in paragraph 251 above had in fact been undertaken as part of the disclosure sampling protocol process as agreed between the parties and approved by the court in the directions order made by Ms Buehrlen KC referred to at paragraph 22 above. It submitted that the documents it had provided in relation to manpower costs, including job descriptions for each staff grade describing the work done, were the subject of specific questions raised by BC, none of which raised any specific query as to whether these were directly incurred costs.
b. However, it is apparent that the sampling process was only intended to enable the parties to identify and for FCC to provide a sufficient number of documents to enable the parties to litigate the issues in dispute. It was not intended to operate as a substitute for FCC to identify and prove its case as to whether all, or if not all some identified part, of the claimed manpower costs were directly incurred costs and thus deductible.
c. FCC also relied on the fact that although BC had, in its opening submissions, identified certain categories of costs as either indirect costs or appearing to be a combination of direct and indirect costs, which had not bene separated out, it did not include manpower in either category.
d. However, at no time had BC ever conceded that manpower costs were direct costs and, moreover, it made clear in its opening submissions that FCC had chosen to organise its costs into these categories, that BC was not in a position to unravel them to try and work out which might fall into which category and, in the circumstances, the burden was on FCC to "demonstrate that all of the various component parts of the heads of cost into which it has grouped things are costs that were 'directly incurred' in generating income from third parties". It made no concession in relation to manpower costs in its closing submissions, written or oral.
e. In the circumstances in my judgment it was or should have been plain to FCC that it was advancing an all or (whether it liked it or not) nothing case in relation to manpower costs. If it had wanted to take up BC's challenge and to identify an intermediate position, by reference to the documentary and witness evidence it had submitted, it was obliged to do so in clear terms before the trial concluded. It did not do so and, as BC submitted in its response on this point, it could not have expected the court to embark on this process of its own volition in the course of production of its judgment, whether prior to circulation of the judgment in draft or on receipt of the draft. Indeed, as BC also submitted, even in its request for reconsideration FCC did not identify which, if any, manpower costs were directly incurred and which were not, or make submissions as to on what basis it could be said that the costs of employing, for example, a contracts supervisor or contract manager or chargehand fell within the category of direct costs.
f. In reality, what FCC is inviting me to do, having considered my judgment in draft, is to reconsider my conclusion in paragraph 252 that it would not be proper to allow FCC to have the opportunity to advance this intermediate case as a new case. Indeed, in its responsive submissions on this point it submitted that the fairest course would be to determine the question as to whether manpower costs are deductible until the trial of the Luton costs issue.
g. I accept that it is always open to a judge to reconsider a decision at this stage, if it is necessary to do so to deal with the case justly. I am satisfied that it is not appropriate to do so in this case, for the following reasons.
h. FCC, a well-resourced and well-advised organisation, took the decision to plead and to argue its case on this all-or-nothing approach. Although it submits that it did so in reliance on what was said by O'Farrell J in paragraph 93 of her judgment, it cannot for reasons already identified have regarded that as having been intended to be anything other than the most provisional of observations. It knew that BC's case was that it would have to justify all costs as meeting the definition of deductible costs, including that they be directly incurred.
i. Although there is, as I have said, no direct authority on this point, I am unable to accept that those experienced in the commercial and construction fields, whether legal, financial or business people, would not have had a pretty clear appreciation of the difference between direct and indirect costs. It would have been extremely straightforward for it to plead and argue, strictly as an alternative, that even if the costs of one category of staff arguably fell outside this definition nonetheless the remainder did not, and to provide a breakdown of the costs by reference to each staff category.
j. Finally, the consequence of its failure to do so only impacts on its success or failure in relation to the manpower costs the subject of the historic years dealt with in this claim, excluding the Luton costs which are the subject of further consideration. It does not prevent FCC from adopting an approach which is consistent with this judgment in future years.
(3) Site costs
(4) SHE costs
(5) Hire costs
(6) Fuel
(7) Plant repair and maintenance
(8) Fixed rent, rates and licensing
(9) Site overheads
(10) Depreciation
(11) Divisional Overhead
(12) Corporate Overheads
(13) Operational support charge
The Luton unitary charge
Paragraph 84: " The natural and ordinary meaning of the words "associated with the Project" indicates that the definition is concerned with income from a wide range of activities related to the availability of the Facilities. It is not confined to income payable only from the activities of waste treatment or disposal after waste arrives at the Facilities; no doubt such income is included; but it is capable of extending to income from ancillary activities of collecting waste at a site remote from the Facilities and transporting it to the Facilities for the purpose of treatment and disposal."
Paragraph 85: "The definition of Third Party Income expressly includes income "derived from Third Party Waste " Third Party Waste is defined as: "all waste received at the Facility(ies) other than Contract Waste and Substitute Waste". The definition could have stated that it was limited to income generated from the time at which waste arrived at the Facilities, or income generated directly by the treatment and disposal processes at the Facilities provided by FCCB to the Authority; it does not do so. The natural and ordinary meaning of income "derived from Third Party Waste" is that it extends to all income arising from waste that is ultimately received at the Facilities, regardless of the point in time at which the sums from which the income is derived become payable. The Waste that is the subject of the Herts CC and NLW Waste contracts falls within the definition of Third Party Waste if it is received at the Facilities."
(i) O'Farrell J was not suggesting in her judgment that the satisfaction of some "purpose" test was an essential prerequisite for income to come within the definition of TPI. It was simply a way of explaining why FCC's reliance on paragraph 11.4 of the paymech was misconceived. As O'Farrell J said at paragraph 92: "If the waste is in fact delivered to the Facilities for treatment or disposal, then the income derived from such waste, whenever generated, is Third Party Income".
(ii) In any event, it is clear that the treatment of waste at Greatmoor was one of the purposes of the Luton contract as varied. It is not an essential prerequisite for income to fall within the definition of TPI that treatment of waste at Greatmoor is the only purpose of the contract under which the income is received.
a. In submissions produced after circulation of this judgment in draft BC submitted that this provisional conclusion was inconsistent with the conclusions reached above regarding the deductible costs in relation to the Herts and NLW contracts, where I had considered similar categories of cost to those pleaded by FCC in relation to the Luton contract and, principally, disallowed the majority of such costs. It submitted that it would be wrong to allow FCC to attempt to relitigate the same arguments in relation to the Luton deductible costs.
b. In responsive submissions FCC: (a) emphasised there could be no question of re-litigation, given that in my order made 4 March 2024 I had ordered in terms that "any issue concerning the costs (if any) that the Defendant is entitled to deduct if the Claimant's case in paragraph 59D of Amended Schedule 2 to the Amended Particulars of Claim succeeds shall be deferred until after the trial in April 2024"; (b) noted that it was apparent from the draft judgment that the income derived from the Luton unitary contract was of a different nature and type to that derived from the Herts and NLW contracts, so that there is no necessary inconsistency between the findings in relation to the latter and the above provisional observation in relation to the former; (c) submitted that the determination of what costs are deductible in relation to the income from Luton needs to be made on the basis of the evidence adduced in relation to the Luton costs, especially in circumstances where as is clear from this judgment a number of the conclusions reached in relation to the different categories of cost were made (at least in part) on the basis of the evidence (or, more specifically, the lack of it) adduced by FCC in relation to the Herts and NLW contracts.
c. Having considered these submissions, I am satisfied that I should not alter what is in paragraph 311 above, for essentially the reasons advanced by FCC, save to provide the following clarification. I can see that, if the words "the costs incurred by FCC in generating the overall unitary charge income are directly incurred for that purpose" are read as meaning "all of the categories of costs incurred by FCC in generating the overall unitary charge income as pleaded in appendix C to amended Schedule D2 are directly incurred for that purpose", that might indicate that I had undertaken an item by item consideration of each cost category and reached the provisional conclusion that all such categories are to be regarded as direct costs. That was not my intention and I should clarify that what I envisage is that the question is to be determined, as FCC submits, by applying my conclusions on the proper interpretation of what are deductible costs to the evidence as adduced at the trial of the Luton costs issue.
d. BC also raised its concerns that FCC should not be permitted: (i) to re-run its submissions on the proper construction of the definition of TPI as regards what costs are properly deductible; and (ii) to "re-arrange or change" the costs properly to be deducted from Luton unitary income (as currently pleaded in App. C to Sch. 2) on sight of this judgment. In response, FCC has made clear that it does not seek to re-open point (i) - as indeed it could not, in my judgment, seek to do - but has also submitted that it should be entitled to make out its case on the basis of the evidence to be adduced at the trial of the Luton costs issue. This second point is really a case management point to be addressed when directions come to be given in relation to the trial of the Luton costs issue and I will address any dispute in that regard at that point.
Luton residual contamination
The blended waste issue
The management fees allocation issue
a. As with the Luton contract (as to which see above) it became clear from submissions received by the parties on receipt of the draft judgment that: (a) there is both concern from BC as to what I have said in paragraph 242 as to the position in principle and as to the course of conduct proposed by me in paragraph 343; whereas (b) FCC is content for it to be addressed after judgment is handed down.
b. On the basis that, as in relation to the Luton contract, I make it clear that my "in principle" view was intended and should be read as a provisional in principle view, and leave over the final determination as to the way forward after judgment is handed down, as I have already indicated, then that disposes of this point, at least for present purposes.
The IBA tonnage issue
Bletchley material recycling facility
Metals income
"FCCB pays [FCCR] to dispose of the IBA. FCCR transports the IBA from [Greatmoor] to an area within the landfill site where there is a plant run by a Fortis entity. FCCR does not treat or otherwise process the IBA. Fortis then recovers metal residues from the IBA at the plant. Those metals residues are contaminated and are sent to a specialist metals contractor, where they are separated into less contaminated metals and the IBA residue. The metals contractor sends the less contaminated metals on to a smelter or another third party."
"FCCB's case is that it does not in fact derive any income from the extraction and reprocessing of metals from the IBA; alternatively, that it already accounts for any benefit from metals extracted from the IBA through gate fee income at [Greatmoor]. The court has not considered what, if any, income has in fact been derived from metals extracted from the IBA; nor whether FCCB already accounts for such income through other payments or allowances. The court would require detailed evidence and submissions on this issue before making any observations as to the merits of such arguments. They are matters for the detailed accounting process that the parties agree this court has not been asked to determine."
The Fortis contract
47.7.1 afford the Authority a reasonable opportunity to conduct due diligence on any Third Party Waste Contract and/or any Off Take Contract before the Contractor enters into the same to enable the Authority to assess its terms for compliance with the provisions of Clauses 47.4 and 47.5 (Amendments to and conditions relating to Third Party Waste and Off Take Contracts) above and to raise comments thereon;
47.7.2 take into account any reasonable comments made by the Authority and shall use its reasonable endeavours to amend the Third Party Waste Contract and/or any Off Take Contract accordingly before such contract is concluded; and 47.7.3 on request and free of charge, provide copies of any Third Party Waste Contract and Off Take Contract and any related documents to the Authority's Representative."
The clause 99 and 111 obligations
99.1.1 maintain a full record of particulars of the costs of performing the Works and the Services including those relating to the design, construction, maintenance and operation;
99.1.2 upon request by the Authority, provide a written summary of any of the costs referred to in Clause 99.1.1 (Contractor's Accounts and Open Book Accounting), including details of any funds held by the Contractor specifically to cover such costs, in such form and detail as the Authority may reasonably require to enable the Authority to monitor the performance by the Contractor of its obligations under this Contract;
99.1.3 provide such facilities as the Authority may reasonably require for its representatives to visit any place where the records are held and examine the records maintained under this Clause 99 (Contractor's Accounts and Open Book Accounting); and
99.1.4 at the request of the Authority (a) provide to the Authority copies of its annual report and accounts within twenty (20) Business Days of publication and (b) provide to the Authority a copy of the Base Case at Financial Close and (as the same may be amended) within twenty (20) Business Days of any amendment thereto."
99.2.1 administrative overheads;
99.2.2 payments to Sub-Contractors and by Sub-Contractors to sub-contractors;
99.2.3 capital and revenue expenditure; and
99.2.4 Third Party Income
99.2.5 such other items as the Authority may reasonably require from time to time to conduct costs audits for verification of cost expenditure or estimated expenditure, for the purpose of this Contract, and the Contractor shall have (and procure that the Sub-Contractors shall have) the books of account evidencing the items listed in Clauses 99.1 to 99.2 (Contractor's Accounts and Open Book Accounting) inclusive, available for inspection by the Authority (and any expert) upon reasonable notice, and shall promptly present a report of these to the Authority as and when requested".
Glossary
Amersham: one of the two planned WTS under the PA which ultimately was not proceeded with
AUC: annual unitary charge
C&I waste: commercial and industrial waste (also referred to as external or trade waste). To be contrasted with municipal waste (i.e. waste collected by local authorities). Municipal waste may include: household residual waste (i.e. non-recyclable "black bag" waste); mixed dry recycling ("MDR"), typically cardboard, plastic bottles, food and drinks cans and paper; waste delivered to HWRCs by the public; green waste, hazardous waste, clinical waste, bulky waste, street cleaning waste and ad hoc requests such as gas bottles.
EfW: energy from waste
Excess TPI: excess third party income
EY: Ernst Young BC's financial advisers during the procurement process
Greatmoor: the EfW waste treatment facility operated by FCC under the PA
GOMB: Greatmoor operational management board, see Sch.30 PA.
High Heavens: the other planned WTS under the PA which, unlike Amersham, was proceed with.
HWRCs: household waste disposal / recycling centres (also sometimes referred to as household recycling centres (HRCs) or civil amenity sites (CAs)).
Kingsway: a WTS operated by Luton
Luton: Luton Borough Council
IBA: incinerator bottom ash
IBAA: IBA aggregate the reside once ferrous and nonferrous metals are removed from the IBA
IRR: internal rate of return
MDR: mixed dry recyclables
MRFs: materials recycling facilities
MSW: municipal solid waste
MUC: monthly unitary charge
NLW: North London Waste Limited
O&M Contract: the operating and maintenance contract entered into between FCCB and FCCR
PA: project agreement
Paymech: the payment mechanism provided for by Sched. 15 of the PA.
ppt: price per tonne
TPI: third party income
TPI share: third party income share
TPW: third party waste
TPWCs: third party waste contracts
TPW income: third party waste income. (Note also TPW excess income - third party waste excess income i.e. the excess income from TPW over and above the guaranteed TPW income)
TPW income share: third party waste income share
WTF: waste transfer facility
WTS: waste transfer station
end
Note 1 As well as substitute waste, sourced by FCCB in substitution for contract waste where the latter falls below the specified minimum annual tonnage, although that does not figure in this case. [Back] Note 2 Clause 2.2 made the schedules part of the contract, although clause 5.1 provided for an order of precedence in case of inconsistency, with the conditions taking priority over schedule 15 (the paymech) and schedule 15 taking precedence over the remaining schedules (save for one, immaterial to this case). [Back] Note 3 And adjacent to an existing landfill site operated by FCC known as the Calvert landfill. [Back] Note 4 They are relevant to the proper construction of Off Take Contracts, in the context of the Fortis contract, where I refer to these provisions in more detail. [Back] Note 5 As Mr Dickson explained, because at the time of entry into the PA it was still unknown whether or not Amersham WTS would proceed, the import per sheet had to include different permutations dependent on whether or not it would do so, but this makes it even clearer in my view that all such costs were envisaged as being incurred at the Facilities, whichever ones might in the end be proceeded with. [Back] Note 6 Adjacent to Greatmoor see fn. 2 above. [Back] Note 7 See for example the observations of Christopher Clarke LJ in Wood v Capita [2015] EWCA Civ 839 at [29] to [31]. [Back] Note 8 This proviso also prohibits the deduction of costs which have been or will be otherwise recovered through the paymech, but neither party has suggested that this is relevant. [Back] Note 9 In fact, as I have explained, it is not the definition of TPW which is different, but merely that the definition of income derived from TPW has a different meaning from TPW. [Back] Note 10 Also at Kingsway, although apparently burned down in October 2022 and no longer operational. [Back] Note 11 Which can be identified from the weighbridge records created and maintained at Kingsway. [Back] Note 12 MSW has a lower calorific value than trade waste which, for reasons which are unnecessary to explain, is better for the operation of the EfW facility at Greatmoor. [Back] Note 13 Since there is no clause 132.4, this must be either a reference to the obligation on FCCB under clause 132.2 to maximise TPI or the obligation on FCCB under clause 132.3 not to agree a price at an undervalue, which refer back to the clause 47.4 obligation. [Back] Note 14 It notes that it was only in the context of its desire to avoid the trial being lost due to insufficient time being available to litigate every disputed item that BC took the pragmatic decision to abandon the vast majority of the individual disputes. [Back]