Why Energy & Construction businesses need an industry-specific Statutory Declaration
Energy & Construction operators in Thailand work under specialised regimes including Energy Industry Act, Building Control Act, EIA/EHIA Regulations. Off-the-shelf Statutory Declaration templates available online do not cover these obligations, and tend to be interpreted against the party with weaker bargaining power once a dispute arises.
Based on NYC Legal's experience with 510+ Energy & Construction clients, the recurring pain points are: EIA approval · PPA tariff dispute · Performance bond claim. Our industry-specific Statutory Declaration build is engineered to neutralise these risks before signature, anchored to recent Thai-court precedent from the last 5 years.
Legal framework referenced
An enforceable Statutory Declaration must integrate Thai general law, sector-specific rules, and the international conventions Thailand has acceded to:
• Thailand Trade Competition Act 2017 — bans exclusive dealing that restricts competition • Thailand Labour Protection Act 1998 (as amended 2019) — non-compete capped at 2 years / reasonable radius • Hague Apostille Convention 1961 — effective in Thailand 19 December 2024, cutting legalisation time by ~70% • Thailand Personal Data Protection Act 2019 (PDPA) — fines up to THB 5M + criminal liability
Sector rules for Energy & Construction: • Energy Industry Act • Building Control Act • EIA/EHIA Regulations • Renewable Energy Adder — every clause is mapped to the relevant statute so it stands up in court and at arbitration.
Signature clauses included by default
Our Energy & Construction edition of the Statutory Declaration includes the following provisions that generic templates omit:
(1) FIDIC Red/Yellow Book · (2) Performance bond 10% · (3) Retention 5% · (4) EIA covenant · (5) PPA tariff escalation
Each clause has been reviewed by counsel with direct Energy & Construction sector experience and benchmarked against Fortune 500 / Magic Circle precedent, so foreign counterparties accept them and the chosen governing law will enforce them as drafted.
Common pitfalls checklist
Across 510+ Energy & Construction contract reviews, the recurring defects that render a contract unenforceable or one-sided are:
1. Assignment clause allows transfer without consent — risk of unilateral counterparty change · 2. No Entire Agreement clause — prior emails can be pulled in as contract terms · 3. No Severability clause — one void provision can void the whole contract · 4. Dispute Resolution clause does not specify arbitration language — meta-dispute risk · 5. Indemnity clause has no cap — unlimited exposure, conflicts with CCC §150 reasonableness · 6. Confidentiality clause omits the survival period after termination · 7. No Data Protection clause aligned with Thailand PDPA 2019 — fines up to THB 5M per breach · 8. No Anti-Bribery / FCPA / UK Bribery Act clause — fails Fortune 500 procurement standard
Every NYC Legal draft passes a 32-point Pre-Sign Audit Checklist before delivery, eliminating the issues above as a matter of standard procedure.
Counterparties and typical use cases
The Statutory Declaration for Energy & Construction businesses is most commonly used in relationships with EGAT/PEA/MEA, EPC contractor, Subcontractor, BOI office, ERC. Each counterparty carries a different bargaining posture, so our attorneys calibrate position (buy-side, sell-side, or neutral) and protection level (heavy, balanced, light) to match your deal objectives.
Primary use cases in this sector: ชื่อ-นามสกุล · วันเกิด. For cross-border enforceability we ship a bilingual Thai–English version together with Notary Public certification plus Apostille (126 Hague-party states) or Consular Legalisation chain (rest of the world), packaged as a single engagement.
Four pricing tracks
1) Standard — from THB 3,000 · first draft in 1–2 business days · 2 revision rounds · Notary Public bundled.
2) Express (Rush) — from THB 4,500 · first draft in 24-48 hours · 3 revision rounds · for deals that must close fast.
3) Premium (Negotiation) — from THB 7,500 · 5-8 page legal memorandum · risk matrix · 2 rounds of term-sheet negotiation · 6-month post-signing compliance checklist · for deals above THB 10M.
4) Retainer (Annual) — from THB 24,000/year · unlimited Statutory Declaration drafting and review · 4-hour legal hotline SLA · for Energy & Construction businesses closing 3+ deals per month.
Six-step workflow
1) Intake — deal context, position, counterparty, governing law, budget captured via a 12-field form (15 minutes).
2) Risk Assessment — sector-specific risk matrix for Energy & Construction delivered within 24 hours.
3) Drafting — senior counsel drafts against the 32-point Pre-Sign Audit Checklist within 1–2 business days.
4) Revision — client review, optional 30-minute call, 2-3 in-scope rounds.
5) Execution — Notary Public + Lawyers Council of Thailand certificate.
6) Post-Sign — file vaulted for 12 months · free revisions on regulatory change · ongoing monitoring of statutes affecting your contract.
Why pick NYC Legal for Statutory Declaration in Energy & Construction
Attorneys 12+ years · 6 Notary Publics · 3,000+ documents per year · Energy & Construction, FDI, listed companies, SMEs — 510+ direct Energy & Construction clients.
Drafting in Thai and English (plus Chinese, Japanese, Arabic on request) · governance model: one senior lead + one independent quality reviewer before delivery.
Quality Guarantee — if a contract is held void or unenforceable due to our error, we refund the legal fee in full · backed by Professional Indemnity Insurance.
Signature clauses
- FIDIC Red/Yellow Book
- Performance bond 10%
- Retention 5%
- EIA covenant
- PPA tariff escalation
Frequently asked questions
How much does a Statutory Declaration for the Energy & Construction industry cost?
Four tracks: Standard THB 3,000 (1–2 days) · Express THB 4,500 (24-48h) · Premium THB 7,500 (legal memo + negotiation) · Retainer THB 24,000/year (unlimited).
Why use an industry-specific version for Energy & Construction businesses?
Because Energy Industry Act and the recurring pain points (EIA approval, PPA tariff dispute) are not covered by generic templates. Using a non-sector template is the single largest source of contract disputes in this industry (62% of IP & International Trade Court cases, 2023).
Does it work with foreign counterparties?
Fully supported. Bilingual Thai–English + Notary Public + Apostille (126 Hague-party states — Thailand effective 19 Dec 2024) or Consular Legalisation chain (rest of world), covering 168+ jurisdictions.
How long does notarisation take?
Same-day notarisation by our in-house Notary Public attorneys (Lawyers Council standard fee THB 1,500 per stamp; included in the Premium package).
Is there post-signing support?
Yes. Premium includes a 6-month post-signing compliance checklist + a 12-query legal hotline. Retainer is unlimited + ongoing monitoring of regulatory change affecting your contract.
If the counterparty requests many edits, will you charge more?
Standard includes 2 rounds · Express 3 · Premium 4 · Retainer unlimited. Out-of-scope revisions billed at THB 2,500/hour senior counsel, always with advance approval.
How is confidentiality handled?
Every attorney and staff member signs an NDA and is bound by Thailand PDPA 2019 · files stored in AES-256-encrypted vault · access logged · no third-party disclosure without written consent.
Should the governing law be Thai or foreign?
Depends on leverage and asset location — our analysis: if assets / debtors are in Thailand, choose Thai law + Thai courts · if the counterparty is a foreign MNC, Singapore law + SIAC arbitration is the neutral default. We draft both options for comparison.