Developers
push up project pace amid capital deficiency
The developers of transport infrastructure projects
funded with Japanese official development assistance capital have eased their
stance on the timeframe for receiving counter-funding capital, and
accelerated construction on their expressway projects.
The Japanese consortium building the VND11.85 trillion
($541 million) Tan Vu-Lach Huyen expressway – a major component of VND25
trillion ($1.14 billion) Lach Huyen international gateway port in the
northern port city of Haiphong – is on track to hit construction speed and
capital disbursement targets assigned to them by the Ministry of Transport
(MoT) earlier in the year.
According to Project Management Unit 2 (PMU2), which represents the MoT in overseeing the project’s implementation, about VND6.51 trillion ($297.3 million) out of VND7.63 trillion ($348.4 million) – equal to 85 per cent of the contract value – had been realised by the end of last month.
In addition,
PMU2 had disbursed VND1.28 trillion ($58.7 million) out of VND1.3 trillion
($59.3 million) of the official development assistance (ODA) capital volume
the government and the MoT assigned them in 2016.
The
consortium consists of Japanese contractor Sumitomo Mitsui and local
contractors Truong Son Construction Corporation and Civil Engineering
Construction Corporation 4 (Cienco 4). The Tan Vu-Lach Huyen expressway
project entails 15.6 kilometres of road-building, including a 5.6km
sea-crossing bridge.
The
project’s managing director Bui Huy Kiem said that, once being allocated more
capital, the target of disbursing more than VND3 trillion ($137 million) of
counter-funding capital from the Vietnamese side before year’s end is within
reach.
The project,
which is on schedule to be completed in first-quarter 2017, could provide a
big impetus for northern key economic zone development.
A string of
other ODA-funded transport infrastructure projects under MoT management have
also seen accelerated progress after a standstill.
Once listed
among the 17 ODA-funded infrastructure projects facing capital disbursement
problems in mid-June 2016, the construction and disbursement pace on the
mammoth $1.4-billion Danang-Quang Ngai expressway project has seen marked
improvements lately.
By the end
of August 2016, the project had completed 55 per cent of construction volume,
through disbursing more than VND10 trillion ($456 million) of total
investment capital. Construction started in May 2013.
The
state-owned Vietnam Expressway Corporation (VEC) has been spearheading the
effort.
VEC has
imposed sanctions on slow-paced contractors, such as reducing their work
assignment, and advanced more than VND1.13 trillion ($51.8 million) raised
from toll collection to ensure land acquisition progress, instead of just
waiting for government counter-funding.
VEC is
confident it can beat the set target of opening the Danang-Tam Ky section to
traffic in early 2017, as earlier proposed.
Positive
signs from Tan Vu-Lach Huyen, Danang-Quang Ngai, and other expressways have
contributed to softening the tension over counter-funding capital
allocation.
MoT’s recent
figures show that by the end of last month, more than VND36.35 trillion
($1.65 billion) of total investment capital earmarked to state-funded
construction projects under its management was disbursed, reaching 47.3 per
cent of the projection.
By Anh Minh, VIR
|
Thứ Hai, 19 tháng 9, 2016
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