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The 2026–2027 Budget Speech and accompanying regulatory measures have accelerated Mauritius’ transition toward mandatory sustainable construction, introducing a binding green building code that reshapes the legal landscape for every FIDIC-governed project on the island. Alongside the code itself, the 2026 edition of the National Schedule of Rates (NSR 2026) and updated grading criteria published by the Construction Industry Advisory Mechanism (CIAM) impose new compliance costs, altered tender requirements, and fresh valuation benchmarks that contractors, employers and contract administrators must address immediately. For projects already under way, these changes raise urgent questions about contractual entitlements, who bears the additional cost, how contractor variations should be valued, and what notice steps must be followed to preserve claims under FIDIC’s strict time-bar regime.
This article provides a practical, clause-level playbook for construction compliance in Mauritius: from understanding the code’s legal status, through valuing green-compliance variations against NSR 2026 rates, to preparing enforceable Dispute Adjudication Board (DAB) referrals and arbitration proceedings.
The green building code represents Mauritius’ most significant regulatory intervention in the built environment since the Building Control Act was first enacted. The Government of Mauritius formally announced the adoption of Minimum Building Standards for safe and sustainable construction, establishing binding performance benchmarks for energy efficiency, building envelope thermal performance, water management and construction materials sourcing across designated categories of new-build and major-refurbishment projects. These standards draw upon technical criteria developed in collaboration with the Green Building Council Mauritius (GBCM) and align with the energy-efficiency policy framework documented in reports by the UNEP Copenhagen Centre on Energy Efficiency.
The code’s legal force derives from amendments and regulations made under the Building Control Act, supported by the broader environmental obligations contained in the Environment Protection Act. The Government’s official adoption notice, published on govmu.org, confirms that compliance is mandatory, not aspirational, for the categories of works specified. Practitioners should obtain the full text from the Government of Mauritius website and cross-reference with GBCM technical guidance for interpretation of performance thresholds. The CSIR Mauritius Green Building Handbook provides supplementary technical best-practice detail on envelope performance and materials specifications that designers and contractors should treat as a practical compliance resource.
The code’s obligations can be distilled into five actionable compliance checkpoints that must be integrated into project design and execution:
For any FIDIC contract signed before the code became binding, each of these checkpoints represents a potential change in scope, and therefore a potential variation entitlement, delay event, or both.
The central question for every employer and contractor on a Mauritian FIDIC project is straightforward: who pays for green building code compliance, and who bears the programme risk? The answer depends on which FIDIC form governs the contract, how the Employer’s Requirements are drafted, and whether the regulatory change qualifies as a Variation or a Change in Law under the applicable conditions.
| FIDIC Form | Design responsibility | Regulatory-change risk allocation (default position) |
|---|---|---|
| Red Book (Conditions of Contract for Construction) | Employer designs; Contractor builds | Employer bears risk of regulatory changes affecting design/specification; Contractor entitled to Variation if Employer’s design must change |
| Yellow Book (Plant and Design-Build) | Contractor designs to Employer’s Requirements | Contractor must comply with laws applicable at Base Date; changes after Base Date may entitle Contractor to time and cost under Change in Law provisions |
| Silver Book (EPC/Turnkey) | Contractor assumes near-total design risk | Risk allocation is heavily Contractor-side, but Change in Law clauses still provide limited relief for unforeseeable regulatory changes |
| FIDIC Green / EBRD Template | Varies by procurement structure | Sustainability requirements are front-loaded into Employer’s Requirements; Variation mechanism handles post-award changes |
Under the default FIDIC provisions, a regulatory change that comes into force after the contract’s Base Date and that requires the Contractor to alter its works, design or materials may constitute a Change in Law entitling the Contractor to additional time and cost. The Contractor must, however, satisfy the notice requirements precisely, a point examined in detail below. For projects procured using the EBRD’s FIDIC Green template, sustainability obligations are typically embedded in the Employer’s Requirements from the outset, and the Variation mechanism governs any post-award modifications required by evolving national standards.
Industry observers expect that the practical effect of the green building code on most pre-existing FIDIC contracts in Mauritius will be to trigger Variation instructions, whether formally issued by the Engineer or constructively implied by regulatory necessity. Employers who fail to issue timely instructions risk exposing themselves to larger claims later, while contractors who fail to give timely notices risk losing their entitlements entirely. The urgency of this dynamic cannot be overstated for FIDIC claims in Mauritius.
Construction compliance in Mauritius under the new green building code demands prompt, documented action from all parties. The following checklist distils the critical steps:
Effective construction dispute prevention starts with the quality of daily records. Contractors and employers should maintain logs capturing the following for every day that green-compliance work is in progress:
These records form the evidential foundation for any subsequent FIDIC claim, DAB referral or arbitration proceeding.
The 2026 edition of the National Schedule of Rates is the authoritative pricing reference for public-procurement works in Mauritius and is widely adopted as a benchmark in private-sector FIDIC contracts. Where the green building code requires changes to works, the Variation should be valued using NSR 2026 unit rates, measured quantities, and appropriate additions for preliminaries, escalation, and overhead and profit.
The CIAM 2026 grading updates add a further layer: contractors’ registration grades, which determine tender eligibility and financial thresholds, have been recalibrated, meaning that some contractors may need to requalify or demonstrate additional technical capability related to green-compliant works. This has direct implications for bond values, advance-payment guarantees and the weight that a DAB or arbitral tribunal will give to a contractor’s cost submissions.
A defensible valuation of a green-compliance variation follows these stages:
The following illustrative example demonstrates how a typical green-compliance variation might be valued using the NSR 2026 framework. Rates shown are representative and should be replaced with actual NSR 2026 figures for any live claim submission.
| Item | Unit / Quantity | NSR-Based Rate & Calculation |
|---|---|---|
| Supply and install 100 mm rigid insulation board to external walls (upgraded from 50 mm per original specification) | m² / 1,200 | Incremental rate: MUR 450/m² × 1,200 = MUR 540,000 |
| Substitute double-glazed low-E windows for single-glazed units | Nr / 85 | Differential rate: MUR 8,500/Nr × 85 = MUR 722,500 |
| Install rainwater harvesting system (tank, pumps, pipework) | Provisional sum | MUR 385,000 (measured and priced per NSR provisional-sum methodology) |
| Preliminaries (additional 3 weeks site establishment attributable to compliance works) | Weeks / 3 | MUR 180,000/week × 3 = MUR 540,000 |
| Overhead and profit (12%) | , | 12% × MUR 2,187,500 = MUR 262,500 |
| Total variation value | , | MUR 2,450,000 |
Protecting a claim arising from the green building code requires strict adherence to FIDIC’s procedural machinery. For FIDIC claims in Mauritius, the following clause-by-clause roadmap applies:
| Step | Action required | Typical FIDIC deadline |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Awareness of event | Contractor becomes aware (or should have become aware) that the green building code creates additional cost or delay | Trigger date, record this in the project diary |
| 2. Notice of claim | Serve written notice to the Engineer identifying the event and the contractual basis for the claim | Within 28 days of awareness (check Particular Conditions for any amended period) |
| 3. Fully detailed claim | Submit a detailed statement of claim with supporting documentation: cost breakdown (using NSR 2026 rates), programme analysis, contemporaneous records | Within 42 days of awareness (or as specified in the contract) |
| 4. Engineer’s determination | Engineer reviews and makes a fair determination on entitlement and quantum | Within 42 days of receiving the fully detailed claim (FIDIC default) |
| 5. Dissatisfaction notice | If either party disagrees with the Engineer’s determination, serve a Notice of Dissatisfaction | Within 28 days of the determination |
| 6. DAB referral | Refer the dispute to the Dispute Adjudication Board for a binding (but not final) decision | After Notice of Dissatisfaction; per DAB procedural rules in the contract |
| 7. Amicable settlement | Attempt amicable settlement following DAB decision | 56 days (FIDIC default) |
| 8. Arbitration | Commence arbitration if amicable settlement fails | After expiry of the amicable settlement period |
Critical warning: Failure to serve the initial notice within the contractual time limit is widely treated as a time bar that extinguishes the claim entirely. This remains one of the most common, and most costly, errors in FIDIC claims practice.
The following template may be adapted for a green-building-code compliance claim. It should be issued on project letterhead, addressed to the Engineer, with copies to the Employer:
“We hereby give notice pursuant to [Clause reference, e.g., Sub-Clause 20.1] of the Conditions of Contract that the Contractor considers itself entitled to an extension of the Time for Completion and to additional payment by reason of the following event or circumstance: the entry into force of mandatory green building standards under the Government of Mauritius’ Green Building Code, which requires changes to the Works not contemplated in the Employer’s Requirements at the Base Date. Full particulars of the claim, including detailed cost and programme impact assessments valued by reference to the NSR 2026, will be submitted within [42] days. All rights are reserved.”
If the Engineer refuses to certify a variation or a claim is rejected, the contractor should prepare for DAB referral using this checklist:
For projects yet to be tendered, the green building code creates an opportunity to allocate risk clearly from the outset and reduce the likelihood of disputes. The following drafting recommendations apply to both employers and contractors:
| Entity Type | Key Obligations Under the Green Building Code | Timeline / Critical Dates |
|---|---|---|
| Employer (Client) | Update Employer’s Requirements to reflect code mandates; furnish regulatory approvals; budget for NSR/CIAM cost impacts; confirm permitting pathway | Immediate: issue amendments to tender documents and existing contracts; comply by the effective date set out in the Government’s adoption notice |
| Contractor (Main Contractor) | Implement design and works changes to satisfy the code; give FIDIC notices promptly; maintain contemporaneous cost and programme records; engage QS for valuation | Submit notice of claim within 28 days of becoming aware of the impact (or per Particular Conditions); submit fully detailed claim within 42 days; submit NSR 2026-based valuations as soon as the change is scoped |
| Designer / Engineer / Contract Administrator | Confirm design compliance with code performance benchmarks; approve variations only per contract mechanisms; certify interim payments tied to NSR 2026 valuation; maintain signed design-change records | Provide technical approvals and determinations within contract-specified timeframes; retain all signed design-change records and compliance certificates |
The green building code in Mauritius is not a future aspiration, it is a present-day compliance obligation with immediate contractual consequences for every FIDIC project on the island. Three actions are non-negotiable: first, review existing contract documents against the code’s requirements and identify every affected specification; second, serve or request FIDIC notices within the contractual time limits to preserve claims entitlements; and third, instruct a quantity surveyor to value all green-compliance variations using NSR 2026 rates and maintain segregated cost records from the outset.
Early indications suggest that projects that fail to address the green building code proactively will face materially larger disputes, and materially weaker claims positions, than those that embed compliance into their contract administration from day one. Whether you are an employer seeking to manage budget exposure or a contractor protecting legitimate entitlements, the window for action is now.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Nevish B. B. Sewraj at Sewraj Solicitors, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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