NSW Government Demands M6 Motorway Work Resume by May 1 or Face Legal Action

March 10, 2026
NSW Government Demands M6 Motorway Work Resume by May 1 or Face Legal Action
  • The NSW government has issued a default notice to the CPB Contractors-led CGU consortium overseeing the $3.1 billion M6 motorway tunnel, demanding that tunnelling and related work recommence by May 1 or face legal action.

  • Aitchison said a technical solution exists within the current contract and that CGU must meet its commitments, describing ongoing negotiations and declining to share costs or a new completion date.

  • Transport for NSW and the premier stressed the project remains in the public interest and that taxpayers should not bear contractual risks; the contractors are expected to cover costs under their design-and-construct contract.

  • The government has spent about $5 million on legal fees amid the dispute, with debate over whether about $1.5 billion is needed to fix the tunnels, while the premier ruled out extra funding.

  • The M6 completion target has been pushed from late 2025 to the end of 2028, with the overall project cost now around $3.193 billion.

  • If the consortium does not resume, the government may hire another contractor to finish the project, potentially transferring liability and cost management.

  • The dispute centers on who covers the cost of halting construction and the fix, with the government arguing a technical solution exists within the contract and CGU must proceed.

  • The broader context includes other NSW infrastructure issues, such as the Great Western Highway closure near Mount Victoria due to cracks, adding to regional transportation disruptions.

  • Premier Minns and Transport Minister Aitchison publicly criticized CGU’s unilateral shutdown and urged a technical, contractual solution within the existing contract without additional funding.

  • CPB Contractors’ consortium includes Ghella and UGL; the M6 is linked to WestConnex and will be tolled upon opening, with the project remaining in government hands under current policy.

  • The deadline of May 1 remains the focal point as political and legal pressure continues over the impasse.

  • Minns stressed that the contractor assumed design and construction risks and will be responsible for resolving them.

Summary based on 2 sources


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