The Grupo Unidos por el Canal (GUPC) consortium, led by Spanish builder Sacyr, had said it might stop work by today unless Panama paid for USD 1.6 billion in "unforeseen" costs.
However, the consortium said yesterday in a statement that there was "no reason to make any change tomorrow in the status of the construction," arguing that GUPC could cease work at any time as it deemed necessary.
He stressed that construction would go ahead with or without GUPC.
GUPC, which includes Impreglio of Italy, Belgium's Jan de Nul and Constructora Urbana of Panama, has agreed to negotiate with the canal authority within the contract.
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The overall canal upgrade is costing USD 5.2 billion, including GUPC's USD 3.2 billion contract to build a third set of locks for the century-old canal, which currently welcomes ships that carry up to 5,000 containers.
In the current dispute, GUPC says it ran into costly overruns because the canal authority gave the builders the wrong information regarding the area's geology.
The expansion work on the canal began in 2009 with the goal of being done by 2014 to coincide with the waterway's 100th birthday, but completion was pushed back to 2015 after a first disagreement between the canal authority and GUPC over cement quality.