As part of the Hambantota Sea Port Development Project, three berths are to be constructed inside the Karagan Lawaya Lagoon. Phase-I includes the construction of quays; the construction of the cofferdam between two sets of berths; and the dredging of the lagoon in the Basin and Channel area.
GeoTech Limited - Hambantota Seaport Development – Phase I

Client

Sri Lanka Ports Authority

Date / Period

November 2006 to January 2007

Scope / Work Done

19 nos of boreholes drilled on and off-shore and covered quay, basin, and channel areas.

Gallery


GeoTech Limited - Hambantota Seaport Development – Phase I
GeoTech Limited - Hambantota Seaport Development – Phase I

India, China compete in Indian Ocean1

Posted by hambantota | 6:21 AM

HAMBANTOTA, Sri Lanka: This battered harbor town on Sri Lanka`s southern tip, with its scrawny men selling even scrawnier fish, seems an unlikely focus for an emerging international competition over energy supply routes that fuel much of the global economy.

An impoverished place still recovering from the devastation of the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, Hambantota has a desolate air, a sense of nowhereness, punctuated by the realization that looking south over the expanse of ocean, the next landfall is Antarctica.

But just over the horizon runs one of the world`s great trade arteries, the shipping lanes where thousands of vessels carry oil from the Middle East and raw materials to Asia, returning with television sets, toys and sneakers for European consumers.

These tankers provide 80 percent of China`s oil and 65 percent of India`s — fuel desperately needed for the two countries` rapidly growing economies. Japan, too, is almost totally dependent on energy supplies shipped through the Indian Ocean.

Any disruption — from terrorism, piracy, natural disaster or war — could have devastating effects on these countries and, in an increasingly interdependent world, send ripples across the globe. When an unidentified ship attacked a Japanese oil tanker traveling through the Indian Ocean from South Korea to Saudi Arabia in April, the news sent oil prices to record highs.

For decades the world relied on the powerful U.S. Navy to protect this vital sea lane. But as India and China gain economic heft, they are moving to expand their control of the waterway, sparking a new — and potentially dangerous — rivalry between Asia`s emerging giants.

China has given massive aid to Indian Ocean nations, signing friendship pacts, building ports in Pakistan and Bangladesh as well as Sri Lanka, and reportedly setting up a listening post on one of Myanmar`s islands near the strategic Strait of Malacca.

Now, India is trying to parry China`s moves. It beat out China for a port project in Myanmar. And, flush with cash from its expanding economy, India is beefing up its military, with the expansion seemingly aimed at China. Washington and, to a lesser extent, Tokyo are encouraging India`s role as a counterweight to growing Chinese power.

Among China`s latest moves is the billion dollar port its engineers are building in Sri Lanka, an island country just off India`s southern coast.

The Chinese insist the Hambantota port is a purely commercial move, and by all appearances, it is. But some in India see ominous designs behind the project, while others in countries surrounding India like the idea. A 2004 Pentagon report called Beijing`s effort to expand its presence in the region China`s `string of pearls.`

No one wants war, and relations between the two nations are now at their closest since a brief 1962 border war in which China quickly routed Indian forces. Last year, trade between India and China grew to US$37 billion (€ 24.8 billion) and their two armies conducted their first-ever joint military exercise.

Still, the Indians worry about China`s growing influence.

`Each pearl in the string is a link in a chain of the Chinese maritime presence,` India`s navy chief, Adm. Sureesh Mehta, said in a speech in January, expressing concern that naval forces operating out of ports established by the Chinese could `take control over the world energy jugular.`

`It is a pincer movement,` said Rahul Bedi, a South Asia analyst with London-based Jane`s Defense Weekly. `That, together with the slap India got in 1962, keeps them awake at night.`

B. Raman, a hawkish, retired Indian intelligence official, expressed the fears of some Indians over the Chinese-built ports, saying he believes they`ll be used as naval bases to control the area.

`We cannot take them at face value. We cannot assume their intentions are benign,` said Raman.

But Zhao Gancheng, a South Asia expert at the Chinese government-backed Shanghai Institute for International Studies, says ports like Hambantota are strictly commercial ventures. And Sri Lanka says the new port will be a windfall for its impoverished southern region.

With Sri Lanka`s proximity to the shipping lane already making it a hub for transshipping containers between Europe and Asia, the new port will boost the country`s annual cargo handling capacity from 6 million containers to some 23 million, said Priyath Wickrama, deputy director of the Sri Lankan Ports Authority.

Wickrama said a new facility was needed since the main port in the capital Colombo has no room to expand and Trincomalee port in the Northeast is caught in the middle of Sri Lanka`s civil war. Hambantota also will have factories onsite producing cement and fertilizer for export, he said.

Meanwhile, India is clearly gearing its military expansion toward China rather than its longtime foe, and India has set up listening stations in Mozambique and Madagascar, in part to monitor Chinese movements, Bedi noted. It also has an air base in Kazakhstan and a space monitoring post in Mongolia — both China`s neighbors.

India has announced plans to have a fleet of aircraft carriers and nuclear submarines at sea in the next decade and recently tested nuclear-capable missiles that put China`s major cities well in range. It is also reopening air force bases near the Chinese border.

Encouraging India`s role as a counter to China, the U.S. has stepped up exercises with the Indian navy and last year sold it an American warship for the first time, the 17,000-ton amphibious transport dock USS Trenton. American defense contractors — shut out from the lucrative Indian market during the long Cold War — have been offering India`s military everything from advanced fighter jets to anti-ship missiles.

`It is in our interest to develop this relationship,` U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said during a visit to New Delhi in February. `Just as it is in the Indians` interest.`

Officially, China says it`s not worried about India`s military buildup or its closer ties with the U.S. However, foreign analysts believe China is deeply concerned by the possibility of a U.S.-Indian military alliance.

Ian Storey of the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies in Singapore said China sent strong diplomatic messages expressing opposition to a massive naval exercise India held last year with the U.S., Japan, Singapore and Australia. And Bedi, the Jane`s analyst, added `those exercises rattled the Chinese.`

India`s 2007 defense budget was about US$21.7 billion (€ 14.1 billion), up 7.8 percent from 2006. China said its 2008 military budget would jump 17.6 percent to some US$59 billion (€ 38.3 billion), following a similar increase last year. The U.S. estimates China`s actual defense spending may be much higher.

Like India, China is focusing heavily on its navy, building an increasingly sophisticated submarine fleet that could eventually be one of the world`s largest.

While analysts believe China`s military buildup is mostly focused on preventing U.S. intervention in any conflict with Taiwan, India is still likely to persist in efforts to catch up as China expands its influence in what is essentially India`s backyard. Meanwhile, Sri Lankans — who have looked warily for centuries at vast India to the north — welcome the Chinese investment in their country.

`Our lives are going to change,` said 62-year-old Jayasena Senanayake, who has seen business grow at his roadside food stall since construction began on the nearby port. `What China is doing for us is very good.`

___

Associated Press writer Christopher Bodeen contributed to this report from Beijing

After the Tsunami struck Sri Lanka in December 2004, waste management systems virtually collapsed and waste was disposed of indiscriminately. The local authorities were faced with a post-tsunami situation which was beyond their resources. This lead to unplanned coastal zone dumping practices, poor urban environment planning, substandard water management and sanitation practices and a general waste of resources.

The project “Rapid implementation of community based short and middle term measures to improve the
functioning of solid waste management in Tsunami affected areas of Ampara and Hambantota districts” was approved by CORDAID on March 1st 2006.

As of such, the project team arranged interventions in the following thematic areas:

  • Health care solid waste management (Report series 1);
  • Faecal sludge management (Report series 2);
  • Master Composting (Report series 3);
  • Solid waste management: Policy and Strategy (Report series 4);
  • Health care liquid waste management (Report series 5);
  • Plastic recycling (Report series 6), and
  • Debris management (Report series 7).

The documents starts with an overview of general issues with solid waste management in a southern context, and underlines the need for solid waste management in post-disaster areas. Chapter 3 gives the project objectives, the results as proposed, and gives an overview of the activities of the project team. Chapter 4 is a case study of implementation of Integrated Waste Management in Hambantota, and includes a proposal with relevant components. Chapter 5 focuses on the formation of the ISWM National Policy Platform, and the formulation of National Policy for Solid Waste Management in Sri Lanka. The ISWM National Policy Platform has in the last 2 years come to a first set of strategies to implement the National Policy. These strategies are reflected in Chapter 6. Finally, Chapter 7 provides a set of conclusions and recommendations for follow-up.

- Download:
PR Sri Lanka SWM Pol & Str.pdf (1,004 kB)
- Price:
€ 15.00


Hambantota Urban Council

Posted by hambantota | 6:02 AM

Hambantota Hambantota Urban Council Members:

1. Mohomad Thawfik Sirajadeen
2. Wanniarachchi Kankanamge Priyantha Lalith
Kumara
3. Mohomad Rafais Salasa
4. Mohomad Husain Mohomad Risan
5. Dahathun Arachchige Gamini
6. Mohomad Sharifdeen Faris
7. Kamilin Mohammath Samsudeen