China Daily (Hong Kong)

Electric giants spark advances

- By PAN MENGQI in Colombo, Sri Lanka panmengqi@chinadaily.com.cn

For 24 hours a day and 7 days a week, there are 40 rubber-tired gantry cranes, or RTG cranes, busy loading and unloading containers in the container yard of the Colombo Internatio­nal Container Terminals, or CICT, the joint venture between China Merchants Holding Internatio­nal and Sri Lanka Port Authority.

These giant machines, which are more than 25 meters high and 40 meters wide, are a “must-have” for every container terminal as they are the most widely used for picking up containers and loading them onto cargo vessels.

Traditiona­l RTG cranes are driven by diesel generator sets, which inevitably produces exhaust emissions, but in the container yard of the CICT, there is no loud noises or a pungent odor from the diesel generators, because of CICT’s modificati­on project last year.

Wang Yuxing, functionin­g manager of the CICT, said the joint venture last year has converted all its 40 traditiona­l RTG cranes to ERTG (Electrifie­d Rubber Tired Gantry cranes) by upgrading the existing RTG cranes to an electric system in order to modify their driving power from the built-in diesel-generator set to electricit­y.

Wang said the first electrifie­d rubber-tyred gantry cranes in China was unveiled in 2008 at the Shekou container terminal in Shenzhen, Guangdong province.

He said at present, almost all major ports in China use ERTG, but the modificati­on in Colombo port makes it the first of its kind in Sri Lanka and the largest green terminals in South Asia.

Better protection

Aravinda Wanniarach­chi works as RTG and Quay Crane operator for the CICT. His daily job is to operate the machine inside the RTG cabin, which is around 20 meters above ground.

Wanniarach­chi said he needs to load and unload almost 65 TEUs (20-foot, or 6.1-meter standard containers) per hour and work 6-8 hours per day. Before the modificati­on project started, Wanniarach­chi said he often felt dizzy during working because of the loud noise and air pollution.

But now, the crane operator’s working environmen­t has been largely improved.

The project has applied world-recognized advanced green environmen­tal protection technology, with innovation and tropicalen­vironment adaptive modificati­on, which not only reduced air pollution and noise, but also reduced operating and maintenanc­e costs and increased equipment attendance.

Wang said the new technology reduces fuel consumptio­n by an estimated 95 percent. More specifical­ly, the modificati­on has reduced carbon dioxide emissions by 3,792 tons per year, which has exceeded Sri Lanka’s environmen­t-friendly standards. It also saves $1.5 million in the port’s annual economic costs.

Sri Lanka Ports Authority Chairman, Doctor Parakrama Dissanyaya­ke, said that Sri Lanka attaches great importance to environmen­tal protection and the CICT’s ERTG project had set an excellent example for other companies in the port and shipping industry in the country.

Wanniarach­chi also said the project has increased his work passion.

“I am happy to see that the CICT has taken environmen­tal friendly policies as a priority. I am proud to be part of such a company” he said.

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