After a slow start, construction work on the international airport in Pokhara in western Nepal is moving ahead at a brisk pace. According to the Chinese government-owned construction company CMC, 6 percent of construction has been completed. In the first phase, CMC has begun leveling the land. The work picked up steam after 20 pieces of equipment such as trippers, rollers, excavators and dozers reached Pokhara from China. As many as 20 additional pieces of such equipment will soon arrive in Pokhara via the Kolkata port, according to Krishna Chapagain, CMC’s public relations officer. Earlier, 45 pieces of such equipment were being used for the construction.
Along with new equipment, 35 workers have also been added. Although construction started seven months ago, it has only been four months since work on the main site began, and in those four months, 35 percent of the annual construction target has been met, says Vinesh Munankarmi, chief of the Pokhara Regional International Airport Project.
“During the monsoon, we worked on the terminal building and the runway; now land leveling is going on at a swift pace,” said Chapagain. He claims that the pro-activeness shown by the local government and local residents has expedited the construction and that 80 percent of the work will be completed by Jeth (May/June). “Barring mishaps, the airport will be built and handed over to the Nepal government before the 2021 deadline,” he said.
Model for success?
The government had awarded the contract to CMC in May 2014 under an EPC (Engineering, Procurement and Construction) model. It stipulates that the construction must be completed by July 10, 2021, failing which CMC will have to pay a fine to the government. KP Sharma Oli, during his first term as prime minister, had laid the foundation of the airport on the first day of the Nepali year 2073 (April 13, 2016). He had signed a bilateral loan agreement on the airport’s construction during his visit to China in February 2016. The work on the airport began after the Exim Bank of China loaned Rs 22 billion to Nepal government for its construction.
The international airport is being built over 3,700 ropanis (462.5 acres) of land at Chhinedanda. The government undertook land acquisition in two phases. It will start paying compensation for 60 ropanis of land starting next week, for which it has already allocated Rs 1.5 billion, according to Munankarmi.
The 4D model airport, which will have a 2,500m-long runway and which will meet ICAO standards, will be able to accommodate medium category aircraft like Boeing 757 and Airbus 320 that can carry up to 200 passengers.
By Krishnamani Baral
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