Services Offered For Businesses in India

EPC Contract Lawyers in Ahmedabad — Advisory and Dispute Resolution Across India

Overview

Engineering, Procurement, and Construction (EPC) contracts are central to large infrastructure, energy, and industrial projects in India. They typically allocate responsibility to the EPC contractor for design, procurement of materials, and timely construction within defined technical and performance parameters. Given their complexity, EPC contracts are highly susceptible to disputes relating to time, cost, quality, and performance, making careful drafting and compliance essential.

Our law practice, based in Ahmedabad and supporting clients across India, advises on all stages of EPC contracts — from structuring and negotiation to compliance and dispute resolution. We recognize that business risks are universal in EPC projects, whether domestic or cross-border, and our role is to help parties identify, manage, and mitigate legal risks.

The scope of our assistance extends beyond contract drafting to include FEMA compliances for foreign contractors, taxability of onshore and offshore supplies, transfer pricing issues, presumptive taxation options, and indirect tax implications under GST. We also guide clients on communication and notices during the execution phase, which often prove as important as the initial drafting in protecting an EPC contractor’s interests.

Through a combination of legal scrutiny, risk assessment, and awareness of industry practices, we aim to ensure that EPC contracts are not only legally sound but also commercially workable. Our coverage spans Ahmedabad as a hub, while also handling EPC advisory and disputes in major centers such as Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, and Chennai

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Key Services in EPC Contracts

We advise EPC contractors and project stakeholders across drafting, compliance, execution, taxation, and dispute resolution. Our services cover the following areas:

  • Choice of Legal Forms for Executing EPC Contracts
    Guidance on selecting the appropriate legal structure for EPC projects (project office, subsidiary, joint venture, consortium, etc.), considering eligibility, compliance obligations, and commercial suitability.
  • Drafting and Negotiation of EPC Contract Terms
    Careful review and preparation of EPC agreements, addressing key elements such as technical specifications, performance criteria, payment and security terms, warranties, suspension and termination clauses, force majeure, and dispute resolution mechanisms.
  • Contractual Communication and Notices
    Advisory on correspondence and notices issued during project execution to safeguard the contractor’s position. Proper communication is critical to ensure that contractual protections are not lost, even where the underlying contract is well drafted.
  • Regulatory Compliances under FEMA
    For foreign EPC contractors executing projects in India, advice on compliance with FEMA requirements including approvals for setting up Project Offices, mandatory reporting to the RBI, rules on operation of such offices, and procedures for repatriation of project-related funds abroad.
  • Taxability and Transfer Pricing
    Analysis of tax implications of onshore and offshore supplies under EPC contracts, with structuring strategies to prevent unintended Permanent Establishment (PE) exposure in India. Guidance is also provided on transfer pricing compliance for intra-group EPC arrangements to ensure that charges are benchmarked at arm’s length.
  • Presumptive Taxation
    Evaluation of whether presumptive taxation regimes can be applied to EPC contractors, offering simpler compliance while remaining within statutory frameworks.
  • Indirect Tax Implications (GST and Others)
    Advice on GST applicability to EPC contracts, valuation of works contract services, and treatment of composite supplies. Guidance on indirect tax structuring to ensure compliance while mitigating disputes.
  • Dispute Avoidance and Resolution
    Assistance in identifying potential disputes at an early stage (time, cost, or quality claims), advising on remedies under Indian law, and representing contractors in arbitration or court proceedings where disputes escalate.

Our Approach to EPC Contract Advisory

Our work on EPC contracts is guided by a process-oriented approach that balances legal precision with commercial realities. EPC projects involve multiple stakeholders, technical complexities, and tight timelines. We focus on the following principles while advising contractors and project participants:

  • Thorough Contract Scrutiny
    Identifying risks at the drafting stage by carefully reviewing technical specifications, performance obligations, and allocation of liabilities
  • Regulatory and Tax Compliance Awareness
    Ensuring alignment with FEMA, GST, transfer pricing, and income-tax requirements at every stage of the project to avoid disputes or penalties later.
  • Documentation and Discipline
    Emphasising well-structured agreements, supporting documents, and consistent contractual communication, which together safeguard rights during execution and dispute resolution.
  • Commercial Sensitivity
    Recognising that time and cost pressures are integral to EPC contracts, and shaping legal advice in ways that remain practical for contractors and sponsors alike.
  • Technical Understanding
    A team of advocates with exposure to technical and engineering backgrounds is able to better appreciate the practical aspects of EPC projects, ensuring that contract drafting and dispute analysis are grounded in real project conditions.
  • Preparedness for Disputes
    While contracts aim to prevent disputes, EPC projects often face claims on delay, escalation, or performance. Our approach integrates early dispute-avoidance measures with readiness to represent clients before arbitral tribunals or courts if necessary.
  • National Coverage
    While Ahmedabad is a key hub, we handle EPC contract advisory and dispute matters across India, including in Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, and Chennai, ensuring consistency in approach across different jurisdictions.

Industries & Transactions Covered

EPC contracts are central to a wide range of projects in India, particularly in infrastructure, energy, and industrial sectors. The issues that arise are often similar across industries, though the specific regulatory and technical contexts may differ. Some common scenarios include:

  • Infrastructure & Transport Projects
    Large-scale road, rail, and port projects where contractors must comply with performance security requirements and manage time-related claims due to delays in land acquisition or approvals.
  • Power & Energy Projects
    EPC contracts in renewable and conventional energy often raise disputes relating to force majeure events, liquidated damages for delay, and indirect tax implications on composite supplies under GST.
  • Industrial & Manufacturing Facilities
    Turnkey factory construction or industrial expansion projects involving onshore and offshore supply components, requiring careful structuring to avoid unintended permanent establishment exposure and transfer pricing disputes.
  • Cross-Border EPC Arrangements
    Foreign contractors executing projects in India under FEMA regulations, including setting up project offices, reporting obligations, and structuring contracts to distinguish offshore supply from onshore services.
  • Oil, Gas & Petrochemical Projects
    EPC contracts in the oil and gas sector where environmental compliance, safety standards, and complex subcontracting chains create layered risks and frequent contract variations.
  • Technology & Engineering-Heavy Projects
    Projects where specialised technical input is critical, such as telecom, data centres, or industrial automation, requiring contracts to balance engineering specifications with enforceable legal protections.

Illustrative Case Scenarios

  • Delay and Cost Escalation in Infrastructure EPC
    In many highway and transport projects, EPC contractors face claims of delay when land acquisition or approvals are held up. In such cases, liquidated damages clauses and extension of time provisions often become central to the outcome.
  • Cross-Border Power Plant Project
    Foreign EPC companies executing power projects in India typically need to establish a Project Office under FEMA. Contracts are often structured to separate offshore supply of equipment from onshore installation services, with tax planning aimed at avoiding unintended permanent establishment exposure and ensuring transfer pricing compliance.
  • Industrial Expansion with GST Disputes
    In manufacturing facility expansions, GST treatment of composite supplies frequently raises questions. A recurring issue is whether the EPC arrangement is classified as a works contract service or a supply of goods, which directly affects tax credit eligibility.
  • Joint Venture EPC Entity
    EPC projects are sometimes executed through joint venture entities. These structures require careful allocation of risk between partners, with well-drafted clauses to address potential disputes over cost overruns, performance delays, or termination.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) on EPC Contracts

An EPC (Engineering, Procurement, and Construction) contract is not defined in Indian statutes but is widely used in industry practice, particularly in infrastructure, energy, and industrial projects. It generally refers to a turnkey arrangement where the contractor undertakes responsibility for design, procurement of materials, and construction, usually within agreed timeframes and performance standards. Legally, such contracts are governed by the Indian Contract Act, 1872, and interpreted alongside sector-specific regulations, tax laws, and arbitration frameworks.
Yes. Foreign contractors executing EPC projects in India generally need to comply with the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA). This may involve setting up a project office, filing reports with the Reserve Bank of India, and meeting requirements on repatriation of funds and closure of operations after the project is completed.
Taxability depends on whether supplies are onshore (goods or services provided within India) or offshore (supplies made outside India). Onshore components are usually taxable in India, while offshore components may not be, if structured carefully. Drafting and execution must also consider the risk of creating a Permanent Establishment (PE), which could trigger wider Indian tax liability.
Where EPC projects are executed between group entities or subsidiaries, Indian transfer pricing rules apply. This requires intra-group charges (for design, supervision, or technology services) to be benchmarked at arm’s length, in line with statutory requirements.
Yes. EPC contracts generally fall within the GST framework, often treated as “works contract services” or composite supplies. Correct classification affects the applicable tax rate as well as eligibility to claim input tax credit
Yes. Most EPC contracts include arbitration clauses, either institutional or ad hoc. Common disputes involve delay, escalation of costs, defective performance, or payment defaults, and arbitration is a frequently chosen mechanism due to its enforceability and relative speed compared to traditional litigation.
Yes. Most EPC contracts include arbitration clauses, either institutional or ad hoc. Common disputes involve delay, escalation of costs, defective performance, or payment defaults, and arbitration is a frequently chosen mechanism due to its enforceability and relative speed compared to traditional litigation.

Contact Us

For queries relating to domestic and international arbitration, including proceedings before LCIA, ICC, SIAC, HKIAC, DIAC, or BIAC, you may reach out to R&D Law Chambers, Ahmedabad, Gujarat.

You may write to us at info@rdlawchambers.com.

For details on our other services, you may visit ourservices.