"The New Panama Canal: A Risky Bet"

"How a $3.1 Billion Expansion Collided With Reality"

"PANAMA CITY — On July 8, 2009, the champagne finally flowed.

After an intense two-year competition, a consortium led by a Spanish company in severe financial distress learned that its rock-bottom bid of $3.1 billion had won the worldwide competition to build a new set of locks for the historic Panama Canal.

The unlikely victors toasted their win at La Vitrola, a sleek restaurant in an upscale neighborhood east of downtown Panama City. Within days, executives of the four-nation consortium, Grupo Unidos por el Canal, flew to Europe to begin planning the project.

This time, there would be no champagne. Disputes quickly erupted over how to divide responsibilities. Some executives appeared not to fully grasp how little money they had to complete a complex project with a tight deadline and a multicultural team whose members did not always see things the same way."

Walt Bogdanich, Jacqueline Williams, and Ana Graciela Méndez report for the New York Times June 22, 2016.

Source: NY Times, 06/23/2016