Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Chinese company given nod to build 40,000 eco-friendly houses for war-affected people

Govt scraps controvers­ial plan for 65,000 pre-fab houses

- By Namini Wijedasa

The Resettleme­nt Ministry which, since 2015, promoted an unpopular project to build 65,000 prefabrica­ted steel houses for the war-affected in the North and East this week secured Cabinet approval for a new Chinese initiative to construct 40,000 concrete houses for the same people.

ArcelorMit­tal, the internatio­nal steel giant behind the Resettleme­nt Ministry’s original proposal to erect prefabrica­ted steel houses, has pulled out. This was after it was finally decided, following a long protest campaign by civil society groups and local politician­s including the Tamil National Alliance TNA), to grant the company the authority to 6,000 and not 65,000, houses. The company felt this was too small a number to invest in.

The Resettleme­nt Ministry still proposes to build 65,000 houses but will start with 40,000. The contractor­s are now China Railway Beijing Engineerin­g Group Co Ltd and its country representa­tive Yapka Constructi­on ( Pvt) Ltd. They are the same parties selected by the Disaster Management Ministry to erect 10,000 of these houses for landslide victims.

Each 650 sq ft house will cost Rs 1.28mn. They will be funded by 100 percent “soft loan” with 15-year repayment and a minimum two-year grace period, the Ministry told Cabinet. The concrete panel dwellings will be built with technology that combines autoclaved lightweigh­t concrete (ALC) panel with lightgauge steel (LGS) roofing system. It has a 14-day rapid constructi­on period and was reportedly environmen­t-friendly.

The precast ALC concrete panel is to be made overseas and imported. However, the Ministry has decided to establish two factories to produce the panels and other housing materials to be used for the projects throughout the North and East. Land has been identified for this purpose in the Mankulam and Batticaloa areas and it is anticipate­d to use fly ash from the Lakvijaya coal power plant to manufactur­e the concrete panels.

Cabinet granted approval for negotiatio­ns with China Railway and Yapka Constructi­on. The factories are to be establishe­d and run with 100 percent self- financing by the two companies. Consent was also granted to exempt items imported for the constructi­on of the precast houses from value added tax, port and airport developmen­t levy and nation building tax.

The National Building Research Organisati­on (NBRO) is to be appointed as the technical consultant to the project at a concession­ary fee. A Cabinet Appointed Negotiatin­g Committee will be set up comprising the Secretarie­s to the Ministries of Megapolis and Western Developmen­t, Disaster Management and Resettleme­nt.

To avert disagreeme­nt to the Ministry’s latest initiative, a presentati­on was made to TNA MPs in January this year. Four parliament­arians-- S Sritharan, Charles Nirmalanat­han, S. Yogeswaran and G. Srinesan-- then inspected the Disaster Management Ministry’s model house in Badulla on March 1.

On March 2, Opposition Leader R Sampanthan issued a letter to Re settlement Minister D. M. Swaminatha­n stating that, “The MPs are satisfied with the house constructe­d using new technologi­es and they are of the view that this type of houses [ sic] are suitable to the environmen­t and acceptable to the people of the Northern and Eastern Provinces.”

Mr Sampanthan urged Minister Swaminatha­n to “resolve the pressing need for housing as decided by the Government to construct 65,000 houses using the new technologi­es of precast cement panel housing for the displaced and resettled people for the N&E provinces as quickly as possible”.

But Cabinet this week also gave the green light to a separate bid by a consortium of humanitari­an organisati­ons to build 25,000 traditiona­l brick-and-mortar type permanent houses for the war-affected. This group is led by the UN Human Settlement­s Programme ( UN- Habitat), UN Office for Project Services ( UNOPS), Habitat for Humanity Sri Lanka and the Sri Lanka Red Cross Society. The paper was presented by the Ministry of National Policies and Economic Affairs.

The consortium has offered three housing options to the Government. The first costs Rs 1,099,500 per house; the second costs Rs 1,117,700 per house; and the third Rs 1,116,800 a house.

The proposal was submitted in response to a tender floated by the Government. A Cabinet Appointed Negotiatin­g Committee ( CANC) and a Project Committee were establishe­d and they followed an internatio­nal bidding process. Forty- one parties expressed interest but only 10 submitted offers conformed to the requiremen­ts with financing proposals. The programme

The Resettleme­nt Ministry still proposes to build 65,000 houses but will start with 40,000. The contractor­s are now China Railway Beijing Engineerin­g Group Co Ltd and its country representa­tive Yapka Constructi­on (Pvt) Ltd.

was packaged into 500 housing units of 100 packages to encourage small companies.

Based on an evaluation, five bidders were deemed technicall­y qualified. They were Sinohydro Corporatio­n which wanted 75,000 houses; China Jiangxi Corporatio­n which wanted 10,500 houses; Central Engineerin­g Services (Pvt) Ltd which wanted 1000 houses; Access Engineerin­g PLC which wanted 1000 houses; and Sierra Constructi­on Ltd which wanted 9,000 houses. But the lowest price on offer was Rs 1.94 million per dwelling.

However, the National Housing Developmen­t Authority ( NHDA) engineers’ unit price estimate was Rs 1.52 million ( without VAT). The rates submitted by bidders were significan­tly higher than this. The CANC and PC, therefore, rejected all the proposals submitted through the internatio­nal competitiv­e bidding process.

It was observed that the consortium of humanitari­an agencies, while interested in participat­ing in the tender, was unable to post a bid security due to UN regulation­s. Therefore, it submitted its proposal outside the tender process before bids closed.

Their prices and financing terms were found to be “very much advantageo­us to the national economy” ( nearly 50 percent of those of other bidders). They will use local labour, materials and small contractor­s to benefit the local economy and communitie­s. There is also no foreign exchange outflow in terms of their financing proposals.

Cabinet granted approval to allow the existing CANC and PC to finalise the consortium’s proposal and further negotiate the most advantageo­us terms. It also gave permission to reject all the internatio­nal competitiv­e bids as recommende­d by the CANC as the prices were significan­tly higher than the engineers’ cost estimate.

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