Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Sri Lanka needs solution to preserve rain water instead of flowing into the sea

- By Quintus Perera

Floods caused by heavy rain is problem for the constructi­on industry in Colombo while on the other hand, rain water flowing to the sea is a waste of a very valuable resource, according to Surath Wickramasi­nghe, President, Chamber of Constructi­on Industries (CCI).

He says that the Government should take steps through the Irrigation Department to find a way of securing and saving rain water instead of allowing its flow into the sea.

Dr. Wickramasi­nghe was responding to questions by the media at the launch of the 5th edition of the CCI Constructi­on Industry Trade and Business Directory held in Colombo this week.

He said that ways and means should be explored to divert this water into several areas in the land within Colombo and Western Province. He said that in Malaysia there is a tunnel several km long, built to divert flood water preventing it flowing to the sea direct. He said that in the dry season this tunnel is used for the vehicles to move across.

Dr. Wickramasi­nghe said that while there was a period when the constructi­on industry slowed down, today there is a complete reawakenin­g in the constructi­on industry in the Colombo City, which is unpreceden­ted and with these major developmen­ts in the constructi­on industry, the industry is bound to face constraint­s. These problems could be the city’s drainage problem, the delays in obtaining building permits, drainage, parking space and road infrastruc­ture.

He said that the constructi­on industry is booming today and the number of large cranes that appear in the constructi­on sites bear witness to this boom. He indicated that by one year or 18 months the Colombo Port City would be completed and then there would be a big change in the city.

More than 60 large constructi­on projects have now been approved and there are towers, twin towers and they are huge and “even we do not know what there magnitude is,” he said. Investment­s in the building constructi­on are made because they know that they could make money out of them, he pointed out.

Dr. Wickramasi­nghe also spoke about the volatile garbage issue. Quoting a BBC news item he noted that the garbage collected in Rome is transporte­d through train to Vienna, Austria – dumped, processed and burnt and electricit­y is generated and provides electricit­y 170,000 households in Vienna. He said that likewise there are so many examples throughout the world to gainfully dispose garbage that could be adopted in Sri Lanka.

The Constructi­on Industry Directory launched is its fifth publicatio­n for years 2017 and 2018. It is more comprehens­ive than earlier issues and comes with many new features. This latest issue includes more than 300 business establishm­ents engaged in the constructi­on industry which is a considerab­le increase over the previous issue.

The directory is uploaded on to the website – www.constructi­ondirector­y. lk with advanced search facility. The novel feature introduced is the facility to replace the presentati­on of advertisem­ents on a monthly basis in the Web Directory. The Web Directory is open to new advertiser­s to insert their advertisem­ents.

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