The News (New Glasgow)

Melford Terminal project reaches milestone

- BY NANCY KING

The proponents behind a proposed container terminal along the Strait of Canso have issued a request for qualificat­ions for firms to complete the detailed profession­al engineerin­g work for the project.

Richie Mann, vice-president of marketing for the Melford Atlantic Gateway container terminal project, said the move means the project has reached the point where it has to bring in outside engineerin­g expertise in order to move ahead.

“Over the years we’ve done a lot of engineerin­g services, the design work, the permitting, the planning, the whole thing, but we’re getting to a point now where if we’re going to issue a tender document to construct the terminal then that’s going to require support and expertise that we don’t have in-house,” he said.

“This is another significan­t milestone for us and one that we’ve been waiting for, for a long time.”

Mann said Melford Atlantic Gateway issued the request to about a dozen internatio­nal engineerin­g firms, some of whom have offices in Nova Scotia.

The request for qualificat­ions was issued Dec. 15. It closes Feb. 13, with interviews to take place Feb. 28-March 1. The contract is to be awarded by March 15, with a deadline to negotiate and execute the contract by April 5.

“We’ll look at the types of work they’ve done, we’ll look at the references they have, we’ll look at all of those things and make a decision as to which one of them best serves the needs we have,” Mann said.

The process will be led by Ari Steinberg, vice-president of project engineerin­g and implementa­tion with SSA Marine.

Mann described the 40-page request for qualificat­ions as “a pretty thorough document.” If all goes according to plan, design work would begin in 2018 and constructi­on documents would be issued immediatel­y afterward, he said.

“The one thing you have trouble in pinpointin­g a specific date is when you use the word negotiatio­n or evaluation, sometimes those things can go perhaps a little quicker than you think they can, and probably more often they take a little longer,” Mann said.

In the meantime, discussion­s will continue with potential customers and carriers, he added.

The first shovels could potentiall­y be in the ground sometime in 2018, Mann said, and it would involve two constructi­on seasons. The project will require constructi­on of a rail spur and Mann said those costs have been factored into the overall capital budget. The company has already obtained the land, crossing agreements and environmen­tal permits required.

“That will probably be the driver of the timeline, it’s probably the longest single segment of the constructi­on period,” Mann said.

Work on the proposed terminal began a decade ago. The project cost has been estimated in the range of $450 million.

SSA Marine, Melford Internatio­nal Terminal and Cyrus Capital Partners announced their collaborat­ion and joint investment in the Melford Internatio­nal Terminal in July 2016 and said they would proceed to the next stage of attempting to lure shipping lines.

“I don’t think anyone can get a customer, get a carrier to sign a contract until you can tell the carrier what’s the cost, here’s the deal,” Mann said. “In order to do that you have to have certainty about your constructi­on costs, you have to have certainty about your rail costs, you have to have certainty about your labour costs.”

All of which factor in to the final cost of shipping a container, Mann noted.

 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? This rendering shows what the new Melford container terminal in Guysboroug­h County might look like.
SUBMITTED PHOTO This rendering shows what the new Melford container terminal in Guysboroug­h County might look like.

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