Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Central Expressway: Rejected company re-enters through influence

-

Corporatio­n to form a consortium with Taisei to implement the project. Fujita was twice rejected by the PC and the CANC for not fulfilling basic, mandatory bidding criteria.

The Cabinet decision to permit a consortium was consequent to a letter from Shigeru Kiyama, Special Advisor to the Japanese Cabinet and Ambassador for Economic Cooperatio­n on Quality Infrastruc­ture Investment Promotion, to Sri Lanka’s Highways Minister backing Fujita for the project.

Throughout documents related to the project--including Cabinet memoranda, minutes of CCEM meetings, reports and other official letters seen by the Sunday Times-- it is emphasised that the arrangemen­t to involve Fujita in CEP III is due to the strong recommenda­tion of “the Japanese Government”.

But confusingl­y, Kenichi Suganuma, Ambassador of Japan to Sri Lanka, also wrote to Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe in May saying: “The Government of Japan fully respects the Sri Lankan rules and procedures for tenders carried out by the Government of Sri Lanka, including for the Third Section of the Central Highway, and is in no position to raise objections to the results of a lawful tender procedure.”

Fujita’s offer had earlier been deemed non-responsive by technocrat­s. Bidders were required to have participat­ed in at least one contract that was “successful­ly or substantia­lly completed” within the past five years; that was similar to the proposed project; and where the value of the bidder’s participat­ion exceeded US$ 600 million (Rs 91 billion). But, there was none worth the specified amount among projects Fujita had completed in the preceding five years. Its last project of more than US$ 600 million was finished in 1989.

The CEP III bidding documents mandated contractor­s to have been involved in eight key constructi­on activities during the past five years: excavation, filling, rock blasting, aggregate base course, asphalt, concreting, two-lane viaducts and two-lane tunnels. Fujita only provided proof of three of these; that, too, not from a project com- pleted during the past five years, as required.

The company failed to pass muster at, not one but, two evaluation­s with the PC even stating in the second instant that weakening criteria after submission of bids to qualify a certain bidder or bidders “is not acceptable since it affects the transparen­cy and consistenc­y in the evaluation and selection procedure and hence will lead to criticism”.

This newspaper reported in January that a large delegation from Japan, headed by an adviser to the Japanese Prime Minister, was in Sri Lanka to push through the CEP III tender. Informatio­n about other stages of the bidding process, including details of negotiatio­ns for more favourable lending terms, was also published at various times.

The tender for CEP III has been chaotic from the outset, with Road Developmen­t Authority (RDA) officials confessing anonymousl­y that the Government insisted on “rushing it through”. The Highways Ministry eschewed transparen­t, competitiv­e tenders from the outset and, on CCEM instructio­ns, chose limited bids from Japanese companies claiming this was a prerequisi­te to securing concession­al terms from Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd (BTMU). Such tenders are not advertised and other bidders typically do not know when they are floated.

Then, instead of opening the project out to all Japanese firms, the Highways Ministry asked the Japanese Embassy to nominate contractor­s. The Embassy came back with just three: Taisei Corporatio­n, Penta Ocean Constructi­on Co Ltd and Wakachiku Constructi­on Co Ltd. It said they were recommende­d by the Japanese Chamber of Commerce and Industry in Sri Lanka but did not reveal selection criteria. It is not clear why the Embassy did not ask the Overseas Constructi­on Associatio­n of Japan which, with 50 members and 43 associate members, promotes internatio­nal cooperatio­n and constructi­on abroad.

In the first round, only Taisei Corporatio­n submitted a bid. Penta Ocean Constructi­on specialise­s in marine works and land reclamatio­n, not road building. Wakachiku Constructi­on has mostly been involved with bridge work in Sri Lanka. But Taisei’s bid was rejected because it had neglected to submit the mandatory bid bond.

The Japanese Government expressed displeasur­e to its Sri Lankan counterpar­t at the cancellati­on of the bid. Prompted by the CCEM, the Highways Ministry then wrote to the Japanese Embassy requesting preselecte­d companies to submit fresh bids within two weeks, complete with bid bonds. It was in this round that Fujita Corporatio­n and Taisei submitted proposals.

There are other concerns about CEP III, which runs 32.5 kilometres from Pothuhera to Galagedara. The Central Environmen­tal Authority (CEA) has approved implementa­tion of the project without waiting for the outcome of a series of vital geological surveys and tests. Consent was expedited due to the Government’s focus on speed over caution.

The Environmen­tal Impact Assessment (EIA) for CE III clearly states that, while bore-hole tests were done during feasibilit­y studies, further studies on geological and soil conditions around three proposed tunnels were necessary prior to implementa­tion. There are 93 conditions attached to the CEA’s licence.

CE III will be four-lane carriagewa­y with four interchang­es, 12 main bridges and 17 viaducts across the floodplain­s of three major rivers— Rambukkan Oya, Kuda Oya and Kospothu Oya. It will have 106 culverts, 23 underpasse­s, 14 overpasses and three tunnels. Certain sections run through steep mountain slopes while others run across paddy fields and low-lying areas.

More than 1,162.5 acres occupied by 2,069 households (8,465 people) in 97 villages will be hit, requiring permanent relocation for 857 of them. The CEA has instructed the RDA to compensate for the loss of buildings and private lands, and to determine the entitlemen­ts of persons on a project- specific entitlemen­t matrix based on the National Involuntar­y Resettleme­nt Policy. The RDA has not followed the NIRP in recent years, opting to take over lands under emergency procedures that leave affected parties without compensati­on for years.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka