TECHNICAL PAPERS
Aug 10, 2009

Probabilistic Approach for Budgeting in Portfolio of Projects

Publication: Journal of Construction Engineering and Management
Volume 136, Issue 3

Abstract

This paper presents a mathematical model for calculating the budgetary impact of increasing the required confidence level in a probabilistic risk assessment for a portfolio of projects. The model provides a rational approach for establishing a probabilistic budget for an individual project in such a way that the budget for a portfolio of projects will meet a required confidence level. The use of probabilistic risk assessment in major infrastructure projects is increasing to cope with major cost overruns and schedule delays. The outcome of the probabilistic risk assessment is often a distribution for project costs. The question is at what level of confidence (i.e., the probability that budget would be sufficient given the cost distribution) should be used for establishing the budget. The proposed method looks at a portfolio of such projects being funded by the same owner. The owner can establish a target probability with respect to its annual budget. The model can help the owner establish confidence level for individual projects and also examine the effect of changing the confidence level of the portfolio budget on the budget and the confidence level of individual projects. The paper is relevant to practitioners because it provides a methodology for establishing confidence levels by the owner agencies in the emerging field of cost risk assessment for infrastructure projects. A numerical example is provided using actual transit project data to demonstrate the model application.

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References

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Go to Journal of Construction Engineering and Management
Journal of Construction Engineering and Management
Volume 136Issue 3March 2010
Pages: 361 - 366

History

Received: Sep 15, 2008
Accepted: Aug 7, 2009
Published online: Aug 10, 2009
Published in print: Mar 2010

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Associate Professor, Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Northeastern Univ., 400 SN, Boston, MA 02115. E-mail: [email protected]

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