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Sindh unveils country’s first waste-to-fuel transport project

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Sindh unveils country’s first waste-to-fuel transport project

KARACHI: Sindh government on Thursday unveiled the Karachi Breeze Red Line Project, at an estimated cost of Rs78.384 billion, to run its 213 bus fleet on biomethane fuel produced from animal waste.

The first of its kind project would provide transport services for 300,000 people on a daily basis, a statement said.

Feasibility and design for the biogas project was presented at a national conference organised by the Asian Development Bank (ADB) in collaboration with the government of Sindh, UN Green Climate Fund (GCF), Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, and the Agence Francaise de Developpement (AFD)- all financiers of the Karachi Red Line BRT project.

According to the feasibility study, the Karachi Red Line BRT would have its own dedicated biogas plant located in the Landhi Cattle Colony, where 2,000 tons of cattle waste would be used to produce 60,000 Nm3 per day of biogas.

The biogas plant would deliver 11 tons per day of compressed biomethane gas (CBG) to the bus fleet, increasing to 17 tons over the life of the BRT line as demand increases.

ADB Country Director for Pakistan Xiaohong Yang said most jobs and employment opportunities were located in the urban economies. Road congestion were costing Asian economies an estimated two to five percent of gross domestic product (GDP) every year due to lost time and higher transport costs.

“One of the biggest challenges being faced by Karachi, like any other urban city of Asia, is maintaining vital economic growth while ensuring quality of life and livability standards. The Karachi Red Line BRT, and especially the biogas project, is part of ADB's vision to transform Karachi into a competitive, equitable, and environmentally sustainable urban centre.”

Sindh Minister for Energy Imtiaz Ahmed Shaikh said the Red Line project was the world's first transport project to receive $48 million funding from UN Green Climate Fund due to its use of an innovative and environment-friendly fuel resource.

“The Red Line will not only solve the city's mobility issues by providing a more reliable, safe and inclusive transportation system: it will also make bus transport more cost-effective and reduce greenhouse gas emissions, improving the current pollution of the city,” he added.

Federal Minister and Adviser to Prime Minister for Climate Change Malik Amin Aslam reiterated that climate change remained a top priority for the federal government to support the prime minister's vision to make Pakistan a clean and green country.

“Sindh has taken an important initiative to reduce the effects of climate change, and any initiative with such potential should be encouraged and replicated across the country,” he added.

Sindh Planning and Development Department’s Chairperson Naheed Durrani said the project provides the first professional manure handling and waste management facility for Landhi cattle colony. It would take half of this manure and provide a facility for the safe treatment of dead livestock in its first phase.

“Red Line BRT and biogas will contribute to support Pakistan's Vision 2025, which aims to transform urban areas into creative, eco-friendly and sustainable cities through improved city governance, effective urban planning, efficient local mobility, infrastructure and better security to make urbanisation an important driver of growth,” she added.

https://www.thenews.com.pk/print/57...untry-s-first-waste-to-fuel-transport-project
 
Sindh government to launch biogas buses in Karachi
Sanjay Kumar
3 hours ago

ADB and UN are financing it
The Sindh government has decided to launch biogas buses in Karachi under its “Clean and Green Sindh Program”, officials said Friday.The Asian Development Bank and the United Nations Green Climate Fund are helping the government build the Bus Rapid Transit Red Line project.“The Red Line is the world's first transport project to receive funding from the UN Green Climate Fund,” Sindh Minister for Energy Imtiaz Sheikh said.In July, the ADB had approved a $235 million loan to help develop the bus transit system in Karachi.“The Karachi Bus Rapid Transit Red Line Project will deliver a 26.6-kilometer corridor and associated facilities benefiting as many as 1.5 million people,” the ADB had said in a statement.The United Nation’s Green Climate Fund loan of $37.2 million and a $11.8 million grant will be used to finance the biogas plant and the incremental cost of the transition from diesel bus technology to compressed natural gas hybrid bus technology with the biomethane extracted from cattle waste, according to documents seen by this correspondent.Owais Qadir Shah, the Sindh minister for transport, said that at least 29 stations will be built under the Red Line project and a single bus will carry around 125 passengers.The federal government has also assured the Sindh government of its support in developing the Red Line project.“This is a real cause for celebration and a big gift for Karachi,” said Malik Amin Aslam, Prime Minister Imran Khan’s adviser for Climate Change.“We are glad that the Government of Sindh has taken a lead on it,” he added.
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https://www.samaa.tv/transport/2019/11/sindh-government-to-launch-biogas-buses-in-karachi/

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Sindh, centre agree to run city transport on methane gas
The Newspaper's Staff ReporterNovember 29, 2019
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KARACHI: The Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf government in the centre and the Pakistan Peoples Party administration in Sindh on Thursday appeared to be on the same page for improving the metropolis’s near-collapse public transport system. The authorities in the province vowed to complete the ongoing projects and bring new ones within the shortest possible time while those in the centre promised to power the system with environment-friendly biomethane produced from animal waste as a fuel.

This will provide an efficient and affordable transport solution for citizens and significantly reduce the carbon emissions level in the metropolis.

Speaking at the national conference on Biogas Project for Karachi Red Line Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) at a hotel here, Adviser to Prime Minister on Climate Change Malik Amin Aslam and the Sindh transport minister shared their plans for the transport system, raising hopes for the city where the transport system is on the verge of collapse due to a history of failure, negligence, inefficiency and lack of follow through in both the government and public-private partnership projects.

Mr Aslam said the government was taking serious steps for the improvement of environment and strictly pursuing the vision of Clean and Green Pakistan. He said developing urban transport was not just a matter of supplying buses.

The adviser said that in the era of environmental concerns, a critical consideration was how to power the system. He reiterated that climate change remained a top priority for the federal government to support Prime Minister Imran Khan’s initiative to reduce the effects of climate change and any potential initiative should be encouraged and replicated across the country.

The environment-friendly fuel may help reduce carbon emissions level

The adviser said that over 50,000 gallons of water was being wasted daily in Karachi, which would be utilised in this project. Emission of carbon gas at a huge level was polluting the environment of the megalopolis. He said that 213 buses would benefit around 300,000 people of the city under the project on a daily basis. He termed the project a “transformational” one and a “big gift” for Karachiites.

Sindh Minister for Transport Awais Qadir Shah in his address said that two major challenges were being faced by the government; lack of transport facilities for the masses and environmental change. He said the mass transit project was the most important need of the city and this project would benefit the citizens at large with the provision of affordable travelling facility besides being an eco-friendly project.

Asian Development Bank (ADB) Country Director for Pakistan Xiaohong Yang said most jobs and employment opportunities were located in the urban economies. Road congestion was costing the Asian economies an estimated two to five per cent of the gross domestic product (GDP) every year due to lost time and higher transport costs.

She said that one of the biggest challenges being faced by Karachi like any other urban city of Asia was maintaining vital economic growth while ensuring quality of life and liveability standards. The Karachi Red Line BRT, especially the biogas project, was part of ADB’s vision to transform Karachi into a competitive, equitable and environmentally sustainable urban centre.

Ambassador of France to Pakistan Marc Barety also spoke at the conference and said that his country’s Agence Francaise de Development (AFD) had been working in Pakistan since 2006. The AFD was also funding the Red Line project as it was focusing on projects of urban management, he added.

He said the AFD was prioritising such environment-friendly projects. The scheme was a wonderful example of international cooperation.

Earlier in his welcome address, Sindh Minister for Energy Imtiaz Ahmed Shaikh said that the government of Sindh was fully cooperating with the international agencies for the execution of the mass transit project. He told the participants that the Red Line project was the world’s first transport project to receive funding from UN Green Climate Fund because of its use of an innovative and environment-friendly fuel resource.

Published in Dawn, November 29th, 2019

https://www.dawn.com/news/1519381/sindh-centre-agree-to-run-city-transport-on-methane-gas
 
Lmaoooo Bilawal's grand kids will be chanting ab bhi Bhutto zinda hai before this project is up and running, if it even starts that is.
 
Sindh unveils country’s first waste-to-fuel transport project

KARACHI: Sindh government on Thursday unveiled the Karachi Breeze Red Line Project, at an estimated cost of Rs78.384 billion, to run its 213 bus fleet on biomethane fuel produced from animal waste.

The first of its kind project would provide transport services for 300,000 people on a daily basis, a statement said.

Feasibility and design for the biogas project was presented at a national conference organised by the Asian Development Bank (ADB) in collaboration with the government of Sindh, UN Green Climate Fund (GCF), Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, and the Agence Francaise de Developpement (AFD)- all financiers of the Karachi Red Line BRT project.

According to the feasibility study, the Karachi Red Line BRT would have its own dedicated biogas plant located in the Landhi Cattle Colony, where 2,000 tons of cattle waste would be used to produce 60,000 Nm3 per day of biogas.

The biogas plant would deliver 11 tons per day of compressed biomethane gas (CBG) to the bus fleet, increasing to 17 tons over the life of the BRT line as demand increases.

ADB Country Director for Pakistan Xiaohong Yang said most jobs and employment opportunities were located in the urban economies. Road congestion were costing Asian economies an estimated two to five percent of gross domestic product (GDP) every year due to lost time and higher transport costs.

“One of the biggest challenges being faced by Karachi, like any other urban city of Asia, is maintaining vital economic growth while ensuring quality of life and livability standards. The Karachi Red Line BRT, and especially the biogas project, is part of ADB's vision to transform Karachi into a competitive, equitable, and environmentally sustainable urban centre.”

Sindh Minister for Energy Imtiaz Ahmed Shaikh said the Red Line project was the world's first transport project to receive $48 million funding from UN Green Climate Fund due to its use of an innovative and environment-friendly fuel resource.

“The Red Line will not only solve the city's mobility issues by providing a more reliable, safe and inclusive transportation system: it will also make bus transport more cost-effective and reduce greenhouse gas emissions, improving the current pollution of the city,” he added.

Federal Minister and Adviser to Prime Minister for Climate Change Malik Amin Aslam reiterated that climate change remained a top priority for the federal government to support the prime minister's vision to make Pakistan a clean and green country.

“Sindh has taken an important initiative to reduce the effects of climate change, and any initiative with such potential should be encouraged and replicated across the country,” he added.

Sindh Planning and Development Department’s Chairperson Naheed Durrani said the project provides the first professional manure handling and waste management facility for Landhi cattle colony. It would take half of this manure and provide a facility for the safe treatment of dead livestock in its first phase.

“Red Line BRT and biogas will contribute to support Pakistan's Vision 2025, which aims to transform urban areas into creative, eco-friendly and sustainable cities through improved city governance, effective urban planning, efficient local mobility, infrastructure and better security to make urbanisation an important driver of growth,” she added.

https://www.thenews.com.pk/print/57...untry-s-first-waste-to-fuel-transport-project
Lol they have been doing it for years
 
Sindh government gearing up to invite tenders for Red Line BRT project

The Project Director of BRT aims to run the Red Line transport service as an environmental-friendly project. All the buses of the Red Line BRT will be based on compressed natural gas (CNG). As far as the source of CNG for this project is concerned, it will be taken from a specially established bio-gas plant in Bhains Colony. The plant will have the capacity to produce as much as 20,000 kg of CNG in a single day. Out of the total CNG produced from this plant, 10,000 kg at the cost of Rs.23 per kg will be purchased to run the project’s buses in a smooth manner. The rest of the 10,000 kg of CNG produced from the bio-gas plant will be supplied to Sui Southern Gas Company, which will generate Rs.1 billion of revenue annually. With this planning, there will be no need to provide a subsidy on the operations of the Red Line project.

Full article here:

https://www.pakwheels.com/blog/sindh-government-gearing-invite-tenders-red-line-brt-project/
 
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