EAC (Estimate at Completion) Calulation
Submitted by Raavi on Sat, 12/11/2010 - 20:17
Your project exceeded costs in the past caused by an underestimation of resource costs in the cost baseline: PV: $1,200,000, EV: $1,000,000, AC: $1,200,000
You expect the underestimation to influence the future as much as it did in the past. If the value of the remaining work (BAC - EV) is at $1,000,000, what should be your new EAC (Estimate at Completion)?
o $1,800,000
o $2,000,000
o $2,200,000
o $2,400,000
Forums:


sv
Sat, 12/11/2010 - 21:56
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since this underestimation
since this underestimation will influence the future
EAC= BAC/CPI
BAC-EV=1000000
EV=1000000 (GIVEN)
SO, BAC= 2000000
EAC=2000000/(10/12)
=2400000
cuongpt
Wed, 12/15/2010 - 09:02
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Given:PV: $1,200,000, EV:
Given:
PV: $1,200,000, EV: $1,000,000, AC: $1,200,000
BAC - EV = $1,000,000
Neet to calculate:
EAC= BAC/CPI
---
BAC - EV = $1,000,000 => BAC = EV + $1,000,000 = $2,000,000
CPI=EV/AC= $1,000,000/$1,200,000 = 1/1.2
---
EAC = 2,000,000x1.2 = 2,400,000
Sandy10001
Wed, 08/20/2014 - 15:57
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Agree
Yes, I agree with the others.
ruthkim
Wed, 08/20/2014 - 20:40
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Answer: $2,400,000
Key is to know to use the EAC=BAC/CPI formula. Agree with the math as shown in other comments :)
Frances Tessler
Wed, 08/20/2014 - 20:59
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EAC
2,400,000