David Thomas Seaton - Fluor Corp.
Analyst
Okay. First on CPChem. It's exclusively in the construction phase. Mostly of the issue is relative to piping productivity. When you look at the degree of difficulty of the design, the weather events and everything else, it took us out of sequence. And everybody that's been in this business knows, when you get out of sequence, the costs go up and that's what we've seen here. As I said, in the second quarter, we had a review, but we had not really gotten into the piping scope on the ISBL or the Inside Battery Limits. That's what we really started in the third quarter and when we saw where we were, but more importantly, what it was going to take to get finished, is what resulted in the additional craft hour supervision, indirects, materials and the like. We sit at about 60% complete in construction. The project is scheduled to be mechanically complete in late summer, early fall of next year. So, we're within a year of completion, based on the delayed schedule that we had because of the weather events. So I feel like – we took a really hard look at this, almost a conservative look at this, because of what we knew we had to get done. I will mention that that this project was bid prior to some of the changes that we've made and some of the innovations that we've applied in the integrated solutions model. So, when you look at where we're going, we shouldn't have these kind of issues in our backlog or in the projects that we win. So I think we're at a place where we've got our hands around what it's going to take. I'm extremely disappointed, as I said in the release, in where we are. But I feel comfortable that going forward these types of things will be less of an issue. When you look at 2017, I would say, it's just in a couple of places. One is there's been a delay in the award of some of the projects, even with the TCO project. So it's a book and burn issue that drives us to – and not the number we presented. The other issue is I think the competition is extremely tight. And we're probably, maybe a little bit more conservative in terms of the win rate that we look to get – because we are going to maintain that discipline in terms of risk and pricing. We've got – when you look at the other businesses though, I think we see good growth opportunities, but they're just not big enough to fill the void of some of other larger programs and projects that are there. So we've taken a bit of a conservative view at next year.