Article | June 30, 2026
FCPA Enforcement: Where the Bribery Actually Happened
FCPA enforcement trends analyzed by geography. Discover where bribery risk is concentrated and how it impacts global compliance, investigations and risk management.
May 28, 2026
“Differing Site Conditions” (DSC) generally refer to “subsurface or latent physical conditions” encountered at a site that “[differ] materially from those indicated in the contract,” or “unknown physical conditions of an unusual nature, differing materially from those ordinarily encountered and generally recognized as inherent in the work provided for in the contract.”1
In practical terms, a DSC exists when a contractor encounters a physical condition at a site that was not reasonably anticipated. In many instances, those unexpected conditions affect cost, schedule, or performance.
Many construction contracts distinguish between two types of DSCs:
A Type I DSC condition exists when the encountered physical conditions differ materially from the conditions indicated in contract documents that could include plans, specifications, or geotechnical reports.
A Type II condition arises when a contractor encounters unusual and/or unknown physical conditions that differ materially from those ordinarily encountered and reasonably anticipated in similar work performed in the same area.
Technical experts approach DSC claims methodically because it is important to establish whether the unexpected physical condition caused added costs, delays, or other project impacts. The specific steps an expert will take depend on the specific contract, project, and available documentation.
Some example areas that experts look at when assessing DSC claims are:
Experts commonly assess various materials available at the contracting stage of the project:
Geotechnical experts assess the conditions that were encountered in the field. Those conditions can be documented in:
The analysis often compares the encountered physical conditions with the conditions reasonably expected based on the pre-bid available information to assess:
Once the condition is established as different and material, construction management experts determine whether the DSC negatively impacted the project schedule. This assessment may include an analysis of:
Once such impacts are determined to exist, the expert will use industry-tested methodologies to quantify the impacts. Such analysis may include:
Finally, damages experts assess the cost impacts attributable to the DSC. These costs may include:
They may also review the contractor’s cost records to confirm:
Quantum experts often coordinate closely with scheduling and technical experts to align causation and cost.
Secretariat’s geotechnical, construction delay, and quantum experts analyze differing site conditions claims in various dispute resolution venues. With decades of both consulting and field experience evaluating subsurface conditions, foundation performance, and site stability, we develop independent, evidence-supported opinions. In collaboration with our delay and quantum experts, Secretariat’s investigations and analysis can assess what went wrong and provide practical solutions for early dispute avoidance.
FCPA Enforcement: Where the Bribery Actually Happened
FCPA enforcement trends analyzed by geography. Discover where bribery risk is concentrated and how it impacts global compliance, investigations and risk management.
Secretariat is pleased to share that 56 of our experts have been recognized in the Lexology Index 2026 Construction report for their outstanding work on complex construction disputes and claims around the world. With 12 experts named as Global Elite Thought Leaders—the report’s most exclusive ranking, achieved by only 5% of listed professionals—Secretariat has earned the No. 1 spot in this category for the second year in a row among more than 750 ranked firms.
Eric Poer, a Managing Director in Secretariat’s Global Investigations & Disputes practice, was retained by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to serve as their forensic accounting expert in a high-profile securities fraud dispute.