Study goals
To investigate the attribution and implications of feasibility studies in sanitation contract administration, aiming to optimize planning phases and contribute to more efficient contractual management through understanding viability analysis importance in managing contractual conflicts.
Relevance / originality
Addresses critical gaps in sanitation project management literature within Brazil's New Sanitation Legal Framework context. Examines inadequate methodologies for feasibility assessment that result in incomplete or inoperative enterprises, contributing valuable insights for sector transformation.
Methodology / approach
Employs exploratory-descriptive research with qualitative approach through single case study design. Data collection utilized semi-structured interviews with five professionals and secondary data analysis. Content analysis methodology supported by Atlas.ti software for comprehensive examination.
Main results
Feasibility analysis emerges as strategic tool for enterprise success, identifying solutions, opportunities, and risks. However, frequent contractual conflicts occur due to planning failures, scope changes, and technical problems. Projects experienced significant budget increases: 95.07% and 39.70% respectively.
Theoretical / methodological contributions
Establishes feasibility analysis as essential instrument for preventing and managing contractual conflicts in sanitation projects. Demonstrates that solid technical foundation reduces contractual ambiguities. Identifies complementary practices including continuous contract management and transparent communication requirements.
Social / management contributions
Provides strategic framework for achieving universal sanitation access with quality through improved project management practices. Offers practical guidelines for companies and academia to establish best practices agenda, continuous training investments, and modern planning methodologies.