The Karadiyana Waste Management Project, held up for nearly a year due to delays in signing the Standardised Power Purchase Agreement (SPPA), has recommenced. With the signing of the SPPA, Fairway Waste Management has moved expeditiously to recommence construction given the criticality of the current waste disposal situation at Karadiyana, where the waste is land [...]

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Fairway recommences Karadiyana Waste Management Project

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The Karadiyana Waste Management Project, held up for nearly a year due to delays in signing the Standardised Power Purchase Agreement (SPPA), has recommenced.

With the signing of the SPPA, Fairway Waste Management has moved expeditiously to recommence construction given the criticality of the current waste disposal situation at Karadiyana, where the waste is land filled. The company, in a media release, said it has remobilised the suppliers and contractors from Europe, India and China to recommence the work soon after financial closure.

The project, which was initiated in October of 2017 exceeded the project milestones completing the land preparation and piling on schedule. Unfortunately the delay in signing the SPPA prevented financial closure, which disrupted the progress of construction. The cost of initial project work; technology consultancy, site preparation, piling and engineering design of the plant was borne by Fairway Holdings as it was determined to meet the strict timelines imposed by the project technical evaluation committee (TEC) appointed by the government. The project was vetted and approved by international funding agencies, and it is still the only project under execution that has met strict World Bank guidelines on environmental, social and health impacts for a project of this nature, the release added.

“The delay in the project is of grave consequences to the community around the waste site at Karadiyana. It is presently operating over capacity and is in danger of slope failure according to a report by the National Building Research Organisation (NBRO). Following a review of the project and the site, the report by the NBRO has highlighted the need for immediate commencement of the waste management project. Subsequent to the review, the NBRO also recommended to relocate, with immediate effect, as many as 14 families from the vicinity of the landfill. Further delay in the project will only exacerbate the current pitiful condition at the site,” it said.

The Karadiyana Waste Management project that was competitively bid and won by Fairway Holdings is a hybrid scheme designed for the waste that is specific to the site. It integrates two technologies, an Anaerobic Digester for high moisture biological waste and a Mass Burn Incinerator for the mixed waste.

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