Showing posts with label project management. Show all posts
Showing posts with label project management. Show all posts

Monday, November 22, 2010

Ministry seeks preferential funding for expressway

HCMC – The Ministry of Transport has asked the World Bank (WB) to consider increasing interest-free credit for the Danang-Quang Ngai expressway project to reduce risk of debt distress.

The US$1.5 billion road expressway has been discussed between Deputy Minister of Transport Ngo Thinh Duc and the WB’s task force. This is one of the major road projects in central Vietnam, according to a statement issued by the ministry.

Duc has urged the project management units and developer Vietnam Expressway Investment and Development Corp. (VEC) to complete the environment impact appraisal report on the project in line with the international donors’ requirements.

Duc has also told leaders of VEC, Project Management Unit 85 and Project Management Unit 1 to find a proper financing plan for the project. VEC is tasked with finalizing this plan for submission to the ministry this month. Based on this plan, the ministry will work with relevant agencies and international donors over the funding of the road project.

According to the ministry, the 140-kilometer road project has a low level of financial efficiency. So the ministry has suggested the WB increase the proportion of its International Development Association (IDA) financing for the project to mitigate risk. VEC plans to develop the expressway at a total cost of VND29.2 trillion, with US$576 million equivalent coming from the WB, or 38.4% of the total. JICA will provide US$725 million (48.3%) and the remaining US$200 million, or 13.3%, from Vietnam.

The project consists of a 131.5-kilometer expressway passing through Danang City and Quang Nam and Quang Ngai provinces, and a 8.5-kilometer road connecting to National Highway 1A.

The four-lane expressway is designed for vehicles to travel at a maximum speed of 120 kilometers per hour.

The expressway project is scheduled to get off the ground next year, and will be developed into two phases lasting four years.

* In a related development, the transport ministry sent a document to the Ministry of Planning and Investment to register another expressway, Nghi Son-Bai Vot. The 94.1-kilometer highway linking Nghi Son in Thanh Hoa Province and Bai Vot in Ha Tinh Province is part of the north-south expressway already approved by the Prime Minister.

Under a proposal by consultant Road and Bridge Engineering Consultants JSC, the freeway will have four to six lanes for vehicles to run at 120 kilometers per hour. This project needs a total of some VND20 trillion and is scheduled for building in 2011-2014 period.

Vietnam needs US$16 billion for traffic infrastructure projects a year, but it can manage only half of it on its own. At a recent Consultative Group meeting, international donors said weak infrastructure is one of the biggest barriers to foreign investment in the country.

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Monday, September 13, 2010

Funds sought for highway upgrade

Construction work on a section of the HCM Highway in Pleiku in the Central Highlands province of Gia Lai. Investment is being sought for upgrades to the highway. — VNA/VNS Photo Sy Huynh

Construction work on a section of the HCM Highway in Pleiku in the Central Highlands province of Gia Lai. Investment is being sought for upgrades to the highway. — VNA/VNS Photo Sy Huynh

HCM CITY — The Ministry of Transport is calling for investment in the third phase of a project to upgrade the Ho Chi Minh Highway.

According to the ministry, the capital sourced from the State budget accounts for only 20-30 per cent, which will be used for site clearance.

The project needs to seek capital from various different funding models between local and foreign investors, including Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT), Build-Transfer (BT), Build-Transfer-Operate (BTO) and others.

During the first phase (2000-07) of the project, the two-lane road was completed as well as other work to prevent landslides from occurring.

It runs from Ha Noi's Hoa Lac to Kon Tum Province's Tan Canh.

By the end of this year, the entire road from Cao Bang Province's Pac Bo and Ca Mau Province's Dat Mui Commune was expected to be completed and connected, and open to traffic.

However, work during the second phase (2007-10) has been delayed and the road will not be completed until the end of next year, according to the project management board.

The road, with a total length of 3,010 kilometres, begins at Pac Po Commemorative Zone in northern Cao Bang Province's Ha Quang District and ends in the southernmost province of Ca Mau in Ngoc Hien District.

The road has 25 sections with a total of 26 projects.

From now to 2015, three four-lane highway road sections will be built, including My An-Lo Te (76km with investment capital of VND18.5 trillion), Lo Te-Rach Soi (53.4km, VND6 trillion) and Cam Lo-Tuy Loan (182km, VND31 trillion).

From 2015-20, other highway sections will be built, including Kon Tum-Gia Lai-Dak Lak-Dac Nong (392 km, VND66.78 trillion), and Binh Ca-Son Tay-Cho Ben (143 km, VND18 trillion).

From 2020-25, highway sections will be built, including Chon Thanh-Duc Hoa-My An (160.4km, VND24,618 billion), Chon Thanh-Binh Phuoc intersection (63km, VND9.7 trillion) and Cay Chanh-Chon Thanh (102km, VND14.7 trillion).

From 2025 on, highway sections will be built, including Cho Ben-Khe Co (322km, VND38.7 trillion) and Khe Co -Cam Lo (282km, VND27.8 trillion).

In addition, other sections, with a total investment of VND30,919 billion, will also be completed or upgraded during this period.

The total investment capital for the third phase is estimated at around VND286.9 trillion (US$14.7 billion), according to the project management board.

In addition, during this phase, 54 roads will be upgraded that connect the road with the National Road 1A and many large seaports, with a total length of 2,608 km and a total investment of over VND54.5 trillion ($2.8 billion).

The detailed planning for building and upgrading the Ho Chi Minh Highway, which was approved by the Ministry of Transport, is awaiting Government approval, according to Pham Hong Son, general director of the project management board. — VNS

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Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Hydro plant milestone hailed

Engineers yesterday successfully installed the rotor of the first turbine of the Son La hydro-electric power plant. — VNA/VNS Photo Ngoc Ha

Engineers yesterday successfully installed the rotor of the first turbine of the Son La hydro-electric power plant. — VNA/VNS Photo Ngoc Ha

HA NOI — A thousand-tonne Rotor, the most critical part of the Son La hydro electric plant's Tourbine No.1, has been successfully installed, the project management unit announced.

The Rotor, which has a diameter of 15.8 metres and a height of 3.2 metres, is the heaviest rotor in Viet Nam, according to the project management unit.

The successful installation of the Rotor marks an important milestone for Son La hydro-electric power plant, the biggest of its kind in Southeast Asian, said Nguyen The Trinh, director of State-owned Lilama 10 Co.'s Son La branch.

"After the installation, we have to check the tourbine and its key parameters. In late October we will conduct a trial run," Trinh said.

Trinh said the equipment for the hyrdo-electric plant had been supplied by Alstom, and that Lilama 10 Co. was responsible for the installation work.

"Installation is a very critical step. Preparations have taken seven months," he said.

Nguyen Hong Ha, head of Son La hydro-electric plant's project management unit, said that so far all the project components have met their targets.

The Son La hydro electric plant's Tourbine No1 is expected to be fully operational by December.

Son La hydro-electric plant is one of several key national projects.

Work began on December 2, 2005. It is based in It Ong Commune, in northern mountainous Son La Province's Muong La District.

The total investment capital is about VND42.5 trillion (US$2.24 billion).

Electricity of Viet Nam is the biggest investor. ­­— VNS

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