Skip to main content

Contractors demand tenders for Carillion’s work in Alberta, Canada

Road contractors in the Canadian province of Alberta are demanding tenders be conducted for maintenance contracts that are currently run by Carillion, now in receivership. Carillion, based in the UK, went into receivership in January, and its Canadian operations did so as well, around a week later. The call for tenders in Alberta arose when the Alberta Roadbuilders and Heavy Construction Association learned that more than US$380 million worth of road contracts are likely to be handed over to Emcon, a
July 25, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
Snow joke: Alberta highway maintenance contractors are serious about wanting tenders for contracts being done by failed Carillion (photo courtesy Emcon)
Road contractors in the Canadian province of Alberta are demanding tenders be conducted for maintenance contracts that are currently run by 2435 Carillion, now in receivership.


Carillion, based in the UK, went into receivership in January, and its Canadian operations did so as well, around a week later.

The call for tenders in Alberta arose when the Alberta Roadbuilders and Heavy Construction Association learned that more than US$380 million worth of road contracts are likely to be handed over to Emcon, a highways contractor based in the neighbouring province of British Columbia. The association says Alberta firms should be given a chance to bid for the work.

“We have nothing against competition coming in from another province. An open [bidding] process, that’s all we wanted to see come out of this,” Ron Glen, head of the roadbuilders association, reportedly said.

Carillion Canada holds three of eight of Alberta’s highway maintenance contracts amounting to around 43% of contracted work in the province. Emcon Services stands to take over the work within the next four to five years.


Emcon president Frank Rizzardo has said his firm stands ready to take up the work pending a ruling from a bankruptcy judge, likely this month. But “nothing is final”, he said.

In March, the province said it was going to pay Carillion Canada another $6.8 million to ensure it can pay its supply chain partners and subcontractors in order for it to meet its road maintenance obligations.

Carillion Canada is said to control more than 300 snowplows, around half of all Alberta showploughs. It employs about 300 workers during the winter and up to 500 in summer.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • PPRS: the positive side of structural failures
    March 27, 2018
    You learn from your failures, not your successes. That was the overall message for delegates during the day-two morning session on the impact of engineering structural failures. These lessons are also too often “painful”, said Anne-Marie Leclerq, deputy minister for infrastructure within the ministry of transport for the Canadian province of Quebec. On September 30, 2006, a span of the six-lane Concorde Bridge in Laval, near Montreal, collapsed crushing to death five people and injuring six. Only recently
  • UK contractor Ringway provides protection for autonomous vehicles
    April 3, 2018
    Ringway, a Eurovia company in the UK, has taken part in a self-driving vehicle test on public roads in the English city of Milton Keynes. For the three-day test, two Ringway trucks provided a rolling roadblock behind an autonomous Jaguar Land Rover passenger vehicle. The trucks were there to ensure other highways users were safe and not inconvenienced by the tests, according to Ringway. Ringway also supplied two supervisors and two traffic management vehicles.
  • Polish public procurement practices pilloried
    November 29, 2012
    Comments by the European Construction Industry Federation (FIEC) have thrown the spotlight on Polish public procurement practices. "We have never ever heard such outspoken criticism about procurement practice and contracting authorities in a single country by so many contractors from so many different enterprises and countries," commented Ulrich Paetzold, director general of FIEC.
  • Flatiron wins Steveston work in Canada
    April 18, 2022
    The Steveston Interchange project near Vancouver is key for improving traffic flow into what will be a new immersed Massey Tunnel under the Fraser River.