Item D - if the HRSG is properly designed and/or specified with an adequate approach temperature for ALL operating cases, steaming in the economizer is not an issue. Commissioning also goes smoother with the feedwater control valves located upstream. And ZERO flexibility? That is far too broad a statement to make regarding the horizontal designs. For example, the old ABB HRSG design (top supported, not bottom supported) had every bit as much flexibility as any vertical HRSG. And yes it was big pain in the you-know-what to assemble in the field. Every HRSG vendor has a different approach to tube-header joints - and some are better than others.
Item G - In the HRSGs that I have specified, purchased, installed, commissioned, and supported over the past nine years (about 20,000 MW of total combined cycle facilities), I've never seen this occur in a single, horizontal HRSG. 75% of the plants are merchant power plants that are frequently cycled through hot, warm, and cold starts.
Item H - While Section I does not address fatigue, Section VIII does and can serve as a guide to a vendor (many HRSGs are built in accordance with Section VIII particularly for oil and gas customers in states where the local Codes allow). This is one area where different vendors can definitely distinquish themselves with thorough analyses and due consideration to the project specifics. It helps if you have personnel on your side who can ensure that their analysis is relevant to your project, regardless of what technical code may be used as a basis.
I think that we need to step back from the details here a little bit and look at the bigger picture, though. We're citing all the reasons why one design might be better than another or why one design CODE might be better than another without really establishing what is really relevant. The most important item for the owner or owner's engineer to determine is the actual duty cycle and desired life for the HRSG (and plant). How many hot starts, warm starts, and cold starts are envisioned per year and for how many years of service is the plant to be designed? It is also necessary to specifically define what is meant by each start (i.e., hot start = 12 hours or a specific pressure drop in the HP section or whatever other criteria you wish to use).
You also need to specify all the operating scenarios that the unit will experience. This means complete combined cycle runs for the full range of ambient conditions for normal operating and gas turbine part-load cases. It also means cycle runs for start-up, STG bypass, shut-down, and other off-design cases. You'll also need to include cases with and without turbine inlet chilling and with and without duct firing if applicable.
If you do the analyses listed above, present this data to a reputable HRSG vendor, specify a fatigue analysis requirement, and specify a multi-year pressure part warranty (as in 48/60 month), you in return will receive a robust HRSG that will provide service in accordance with your specification. If you take short cuts, you may disappointed with the results irrespective of the HRSG's orientation (vertical or horizontal).
One other thing to keep in mind is that many HRSGs in the US market require duct burners and emissions control catalysts. Part of the reason that you don't see many vertical HRSGs in the USA is because many of the vertical HRSG vendors have little or no experience with either of these auxiliary systems.