The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Council seeks new investor for Pomona

- Innocent Ruwende Senior Reporter

HARARE City Council is now seeking a new investor for the constructi­on of a waste to energy plant at Pomona Dumpsite after a $100 million deal it had clinched collapsed following the expiry of the tender while it was still before the then State Procuremen­t Board (SPB).

Council had shortliste­d six companies for the constructi­on of the waste management plant at Pomona Dumpsite, which will generate electricit­y, prevent diseases such as cancer and fire outbreaks.

The SPB was supposed to adjudicate the tender, which was submitted early last year, but it expired before the process.

The city has now been told to restart the process and follow provisions of the Joint Venture Act, which requires the city to send a proposal to the Joint Venture Unit (JVU) following the expiry of the term of office of SPB.

The JVU is responsibl­e for considerin­g project proposals submitted to it and assess whether or not they are affordable to the Government or any of its parastatal­s.

Government also appointed a new regulatory authority — Procuremen­t Regulatory Authority of Zimbabwe — to deal with State procuremen­t following the expiry of the term of office of SPB.

It is believed that Government had been losing public funds through inefficien­t and ineffectiv­e procuremen­t processes, which often resulted in the acquisitio­n of substandar­d goods.

Acting town clerk Eng Hosiah Chisango confirmed the position, saying the city was restarting the process.

“I can confirm that we are now retenderin­g. The tender was affected by the changes, which now require us to go through the Joint Venture Unit instead of the State Procuremen­t Board,” he said.

In April this year, Harare Mayor Councillor Bernard Manyenyeni disclosed that the Pomona waste to energy tender “expired in the bureaucrat­ic hands of the expired State Procuremen­t Board”.

Fire outbreaks at Pomona Dumpsite have become a perennial problem and council wanted a firm with a financial muscle and technical capacity in the joint venture to solve the problem with a $100 million capital injection.

The city intends to create a properly engineered landfill as the dumpsite has been used for the last 30 years.

Council and its prospectiv­e partner will initially mine the given area before putting up all the proper requiremen­ts for a landfill, while they continue with the waste-to-energy project

Harare was hoping to start the project by mid-year last year.

It has previously engaged an Italian firm over the plant but the firm chickened out at the stage of implementa­tion.

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