These are the expressways and infrastructures that we are going to build for Sri Lanka:
Sri Lanka to build new roads with Chinese funds
14 September 2012
http://www.roadtraffic-technology.com/news/newssri-lanka-build-new-roads-chinese-funds
South Sri Lanka is set for new roads and flyovers in a LKR40bn ($303m) investment. The construction contract has been awarded to China State Construction Engineering, which will build roads and flyovers in Hambantota, a city in the Southern Province.
Of the $303m, the Chinese government is providing 85% ($240m) in loans through Exim Bank of China, while the rest is being met by the Sri Lankan government.
Sri Lanka Media and Information Minister Keheliya Rambukwelle said that the project will turn Hambantota into a transport hub.
The new road and flyover contract has been awarded as a part of Hambantota Hub Development Project, Rambukwelle noted.
The infrastructure project involves the construction of 64km of roads and flyovers, including a 23.34km stretch from Mirijjewila to Sooriyawewa, an 18.28km road from Sooriyawewa, Moraketiya to Embilipitiya, and a 16.18km road from Ranna to Wetiya.
In addition, the Chinese firm will build a 6.64km outer circular road in Hambantota and an 18.53km road from Sooriyawewa to Wetiya, along with other flyovers at Wetiya-Narnadagaswewa.
The Chinese government is also financing a $361m port, a $209m airport and various other infrastructure projects in the city.
Exim Bank had previously provided funds for similar road projects in Sri Lanka - 126km Southern Expressway running from Colombo to Matara on the south coast, which was inaugurated in November 2011, was constructed with investment of over $700m; and A9 Expressway, a 321km-stretch connecting Kandy with Jaffna, was reconstructed with $520m.
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These are the projects that we are contracted to build for Sri Lanka‘s ports:
China Sri Lanka Development project – The
Hambantota Development Zone, which the China will help build, will include an International Container port, a bunkering system, an oil refinery, an International Airport and other facilities. It is expected to cost about US$1 billion and the China are said to be financing more than 85% of the project.
Construction on the first phase of the project is begun and is due to be completed in three years. The entire project is scheduled to be completed in the next 10 years.
China Sri Lanka Cooperation on the project in Hambantota, 240 kilometers South of the Sri Lanka capital, Colombo, into a major transshipment hub.
Hambantota Infrastructure will help service hundreds of ships that ply the waters to the south of Sri Lanka.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/China%E2%80%93Sri_Lanka_relations
and it opens for business!
Sri Lanka's Chinese-built port opens for business
http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5ixGLCDX0supLQ6LBy0UxHfc-qpDw?docId=CNG.7a4b171af9c3a48e7611d1e1cda88a09.571
(AFP) – Jun 5, 2012
COLOMBO — Sri Lanka's first Chinese-built port, a strong symbol of Beijing's investment in South Asia, opened for international shipping on Wednesday with the handling of 1,000 cars from India.
The $1.5-billion deep-sea port in southern Hambantota, the home constituency of President Mahinda Rajapakse, straddles a major east-west shipping lane used by 200 to 300 international vessels daily.
The idea of the project, which was delayed by just over a year, is to create a new logistics hub to handle trans-shipments from the Asian region and provide a boost to Sri Lanka's economy as it recovers from decades of civil war.
Regional power India turned down the offer to construct the deep-sea port saying it was not commercially viable, but China's presence created unease in New Delhi which views Sri Lanka as being firmly in its sphere of influence.
China has since agreed to build a second port in Sri Lanka's capital Colombo and Chinese firms have pledged investments amounting to $50 billion spread over the next 10 to 15 years, according to Sri Lanka's trade ministry.
Elsewhere in South Asia, China has funded port facilities in
Pakistan, a long-standing ally, and has plans for rail projects in
Nepal, a traditionally India-aligned country where Beijing is increasingly influential.
Bangladesh has asked for Chinese help to build a port and Beijing recently opened an embassy for the first time in the
Maldives.
According to Charu Lata Hogg, an analyst at Chatham House, a London-based think-tank, India has come to terms with China in its backyard.
"There seems to be a tacit understanding that their commercial interests can be complementary," Hogg told AFP. "Indian cars going through a Chinese-built port in Sri Lanka reveals a lot about this relationship."
The first shipment of cars on Wednesday in Hambantota, 240 kilometres (150 miles) south of Colombo, came from the south Indian port of Chennai and is destined for Algeria.
The car carrier Asian Sun docked on Wednesday morning to be received by Sri Lanka Port Authority Chairman Priyath Wickrama.
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China firm to build Sri Lanka's new port city
Updated: 2012-07-11 11:18(Xinhua)
Chinadaily
COLOMBO -- China Merchant International has already embarked on a $500 million port expansion project in the Colombo harbor, Priyath Bandu Wickrama, chairman of Sri Lanka Ports Authority, said on Tuesday.
Sri Lanka is expecting $15 billion in investment from a new "port city" that will be built on land reclaimed by the sea in the capital, the official said.
"China Harbour Engineering Corporation has already been given the contract for the project," he said.
The government hopes to commence work in October on the ambitious project that will reclaim 243 acres (98.4 hectares) from the sea near the Colombo port, according to Wickrama.
While addressing a forum in the capital, Wickrama noted that the investment was expected to flow in during the next ten years, mainly from hotels, apartments and shopping malls.
"A Formula One racetrack, mini-golf course and yacht marina are also among the plans that are expected to bring in billions of dollars," he added.
When the proposal was earlier announced in local media it drew objections from environmentalists who raised the issue of destroying the ecosystem on the coastal belt near some of the most expensive real estates in the country.