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    Re:Construction Episode 197: UK payment reform risks for project engineers

    March 4, 2026|

    Reviewed by Tom Sullivan

    Re:Construction Episode 197: UK payment reform risks for project engineers

    First reported on The Construction Index

    30 Second Briefing

    Payment reform in UK construction comes under renewed scrutiny as barrister Rudi Klein, former chief executive of the Specialist Engineering Contractors’ (SEC) Group, joins the Re:Construction podcast to assess progress on fairer cashflow for the supply chain. Klein focuses on persistent late payment, abuse of project bank accounts and the impact of long payment terms on specialist contractors delivering M&E, civils and geotechnical packages. For engineers and subcontractors, the discussion signals continuing commercial risk around working capital and contract administration on major projects.

    Technical Brief

    • Episode 197 of the Re:Construction podcast was released on 4 March 2026.
    • Discussion is led by barrister Rudi Klein, former 30‑year chief executive of the SEC Group.

    Our Take

    Within the 140 Policy stories in our database, very few focus on UK specialist subcontractor bodies like the Specialist Engineering Contractors’ (SEC) Group, so this episode adds a relatively rare practitioner-led view on how policy actually lands in the supply chain.

    SEC’s long-standing role in the United Kingdom construction sector means its commentary on safety and project procurement is often picked up indirectly in our other ‘Safety’ and ‘Projects’ tagged pieces, signalling that subcontractor contract conditions remain a live policy pressure point rather than a settled issue.

    Given Rudi Klein’s more than 30 years at SEC, his perspectives tend to emphasise payment security and allocation of risk on UK projects, which in turn shape how safety responsibilities and liabilities are pushed down to specialist contractors in many of the project disputes covered elsewhere in our Policy category.

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    Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

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