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Mega dredging plan runs aground
Arrival of dredgers, including four from Kuwait, delayed
MIR MOSTAFIZUR RAHAMAN
WITH ANISUR RAHMAN KHAN
Uncertainty looms over the much-touted Tk 12,000-crore plan to dredge over 300 rivers by 2018 due to delay in getting dredgers for implementing the project.
Roughly, 50 dredgers would be required to complete the mega-dredging project, including four heavy-duty dredgers from Kuwait, sources said adding that there would be delay in procuring the dredgers required to start the project.
A proposal to procure 11 dredgers has been approved by the Executive Committee of the National Economic Council (ECENC), but it will take at least one and half years to get those dredgers, Water Resources Minister Ramseh Chandra Sen told The Independent yesterday.
He also admitted that the programme had already been delayed due to lack of logistic support.
Only two dredgers outsourced from China have arrived and we have to start the Gorai dredging project, a part of this mega programme, with those dredgers. We are expecting two dredgers from India under the recent agreement, he said but could not give the exact time of their arrival.
Officials of the Bangladesh Inland Water Transport Authority (BIWTA) told The Independent yesterday that the Sheikhdom had offered four dredgers as gift. But the reality is, even if all formalities were completed today, it would take two years to complete the process, said one official.
According to the sources, the modalities of receiving the dredgers had still not been settled, as Kuwait was yet to ensure financing of the dredgers as gift through the Economic Relation Division (ERD) of Bangladesh.
Emir of Kuwait had expressed desire to gift those four dredgers to Bangladesh during the visit of Bangladesh's Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to Kuwait in February this year.
Abdul Matin, chief engineer of the dredging division of the BIWTA, said they had sent a proposal for collecting the dredgers from Kuwait as gift on May 5 to the foreign ministry through the shipping ministry.
According to the project proposal, about Tk 407 crore would be spent on procuring the four dredgers, along with a crane boat, tug, crew house boat, officers' house boat and others, from Kuwait.
"We have prepared the project as per the directives of the shipping ministry. The estimated cost has been shown for the sake of records only, but the government of Kuwait will give the dredgers free of cost as per their commitment," Matin said.
"We do not know about the details like who is going to pay the taxes, custom duties or receive relevant documents from the Kuwaiti government," he added.
A project evaluation committee (PEC) meeting was held on October 10, with Planning Commission Member Nasir Uddin Ahmed in the chair.
It was decided at the meeting to write word 'gift' as the mode of financing in the project proposal and the words the government of Kuwait as the source of money.
The ERD has already sent letters to the government of Kuwait formally in this regard, but the Kuwait was yet to confirm the release of dredgers.
The BIWTA officials said they had identified 2,393 kilometres of waterways to be dredged in two phases.
Twenty-three routes are marked for dredging in the first phase, which is scheduled to end by December 2013 at an estimated cost of TK 4,201 crore, and the four-year second phase would start in 2014, for which Tk 7,271 crore would be required.
Under the programme, the total volume of dredged riverbed soil will be 3,276 crore cubic metres, and the BIWTA has only seven age-old dredgers.
(Published in The Independent on Nov 13, 2010)
Arrival of dredgers, including four from Kuwait, delayed
MIR MOSTAFIZUR RAHAMAN
WITH ANISUR RAHMAN KHAN
Uncertainty looms over the much-touted Tk 12,000-crore plan to dredge over 300 rivers by 2018 due to delay in getting dredgers for implementing the project.
Roughly, 50 dredgers would be required to complete the mega-dredging project, including four heavy-duty dredgers from Kuwait, sources said adding that there would be delay in procuring the dredgers required to start the project.
A proposal to procure 11 dredgers has been approved by the Executive Committee of the National Economic Council (ECENC), but it will take at least one and half years to get those dredgers, Water Resources Minister Ramseh Chandra Sen told The Independent yesterday.
He also admitted that the programme had already been delayed due to lack of logistic support.
Only two dredgers outsourced from China have arrived and we have to start the Gorai dredging project, a part of this mega programme, with those dredgers. We are expecting two dredgers from India under the recent agreement, he said but could not give the exact time of their arrival.
Officials of the Bangladesh Inland Water Transport Authority (BIWTA) told The Independent yesterday that the Sheikhdom had offered four dredgers as gift. But the reality is, even if all formalities were completed today, it would take two years to complete the process, said one official.
According to the sources, the modalities of receiving the dredgers had still not been settled, as Kuwait was yet to ensure financing of the dredgers as gift through the Economic Relation Division (ERD) of Bangladesh.
Emir of Kuwait had expressed desire to gift those four dredgers to Bangladesh during the visit of Bangladesh's Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to Kuwait in February this year.
Abdul Matin, chief engineer of the dredging division of the BIWTA, said they had sent a proposal for collecting the dredgers from Kuwait as gift on May 5 to the foreign ministry through the shipping ministry.
According to the project proposal, about Tk 407 crore would be spent on procuring the four dredgers, along with a crane boat, tug, crew house boat, officers' house boat and others, from Kuwait.
"We have prepared the project as per the directives of the shipping ministry. The estimated cost has been shown for the sake of records only, but the government of Kuwait will give the dredgers free of cost as per their commitment," Matin said.
"We do not know about the details like who is going to pay the taxes, custom duties or receive relevant documents from the Kuwaiti government," he added.
A project evaluation committee (PEC) meeting was held on October 10, with Planning Commission Member Nasir Uddin Ahmed in the chair.
It was decided at the meeting to write word 'gift' as the mode of financing in the project proposal and the words the government of Kuwait as the source of money.
The ERD has already sent letters to the government of Kuwait formally in this regard, but the Kuwait was yet to confirm the release of dredgers.
The BIWTA officials said they had identified 2,393 kilometres of waterways to be dredged in two phases.
Twenty-three routes are marked for dredging in the first phase, which is scheduled to end by December 2013 at an estimated cost of TK 4,201 crore, and the four-year second phase would start in 2014, for which Tk 7,271 crore would be required.
Under the programme, the total volume of dredged riverbed soil will be 3,276 crore cubic metres, and the BIWTA has only seven age-old dredgers.
(Published in The Independent on Nov 13, 2010)