Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Paydirt: Contractor gets Rs. 1.65bn to cart off Colombo rubbish

- By Kasun Warakapiti­ya

The Colombo Municipal Council ( CMC) has embarked on a high- cost garbage transfer process under pressure to find a speedy solution to rubbish being dumped on city streets over the past week.

The move came as the Ministry of Megapolis and Western Developmen­t ruled it could not accept more garbage for the Kerawalapi­tiya site near Wattala, leaving the CMC without a location for Colombo garbage.

The CMC estimates it would be spending Rs. 1.65 billion a year to send garbage through a private transport company to the Aruwakkalu sanitary landfill site in Puttalam.

This is in contrast to the Rs. 630 million paid annually to the Sri Lanka Land Reclamatio­n and Developmen­t Corporatio­n ( SLLRDC) to dump garbage at at corporatio­n site in Kerawalapi­tiya.

Some 40 trucks will be required to transport approximat­ely 600 metric tonnes of garbage collected daily in Colombo city to the country’s north for disposal.

CMC Municipal Commission­er Palitha Nananayakk­ara said the transport of council garbage to Arawakkalu began on Thursday. CMC trucks collect garbage from around the city and take it to Kerawalapi­tiya and a private contractor takes over f rom there to transport it to Arawakkalu. Mr. Nananayakk­ara said a disagreeme­nt over payment for damage to roads caused by the garbage trucks had been resolved with the private contractor agreeing to pay for road maintenanc­e.

The P r a d e s h i ya Sabha in Wanathawil­luwa in the Puttalam District had wanted the CMC to pay a fee for road maintenanc­e in the area, saying the constant transit of garbage trucks would damage roads.

“First they asked us to pay Rs. 4 million a day and then asked for Rs. 3 million,” Mr. Nananayakk­ara said. “Then the Ministry of Megapolis said to pay them the full amount but we did not agree to that. The Governor of the Western Province said we should Rs. 2.5 million a day.

“We made an agreement with the contractor­s that they themselves would have to bear the cost of paying the money and should undertake negotiatio­ns with the Wanathawil­luwa Pradeshiya Sabha,” Mr. Nanayakkar­a said. No negotiatio­ns have yet taken place.

Under an agreement signed with Western Power Company ( a subsidiary of Aitken Spence and Co), the CMC will at a future date send all its solid waste to an energy plant at Kerawalapi­tiya that, it is hoped, would be commission­ed in 2020.

The CMC said it had been told by the SLLDRC on June 25 that the Kerawalapi­tiya could not accommodat­e any more non-recyclable waste.

Megapolis Ministry Secretary Nihal Rupasinghe said the SLLDRC dump site had been chosen as an interim solution pending completion of the Aruwakkalu site but that after two years it had reached full capacity.

The CMC said in early July it had tried to negotiate with the ministry to keep sending garbage to Kerawalapi­tiya or to lease a five- acre block of land as an alternativ­e site until the waste- to- energy project was commission­ed.

No resolution was reached. The ministry insisted that Colombo garbage be transporte­d to Aruwakkalu.

The original plan involving Aruwakkalu was that the garbage be taken by train from Kelaniya to Aruwakkalu but the rail track is still under constructi­on so the CMC now has to undertake the extra cost of road transport.

 ??  ?? Clearing up the garbage piling up on Jumma Masjid Road (above). An ugly sight: Garbage in Dematagoda (right) and Katawalamu­lla (below left). Pix by Indika Handuwala
Clearing up the garbage piling up on Jumma Masjid Road (above). An ugly sight: Garbage in Dematagoda (right) and Katawalamu­lla (below left). Pix by Indika Handuwala
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