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This Month's story:
Middle East

Jordan To Top $800-million Groundwater System
Contract negotiations started recently
for a project to augment water supplies to the Jordanian capital
of Amman. The package, estimated to be worth nearly $800 million,
will include a design-build segment for a well system and
more than 300 km of pipeline to transport about 100 million
cu m of water annually.
Accustomed to water rationing, greater Ammans 1.6 million
people need to exploit new sources. For long-term secure supplies,
the Jordanians have decided to tap abundant groundwater in
the Disi-Mudawara area. Though distant, the sandstone aquifer
is located at a relatively shallow 100 m below ground.
This spring, the government chose a consortium led by the
Saudi Arabian construction group Saudi Oger Ltd., Abha, and
a division of the U.S.-based design firm and contractor Black
& Veatch Inc., Overland Park, Kan., along with Greek and
Turkish contractors. The contract also includes financing
and long-term operations and maintenance.
Five Firms Short-listed For $50- million
Egyptian Oil Terminal
Fast-track bidding is being used to procure a design-build
contract for a $50-million oil bunkering and storage terminal
in Port Said, Egypt. Five short-listed companies will be supplied
with outline plans as they are produced by the preliminary
design consultant to give them a running start when bid documents
are issued this summer. The owner, a local oil company, wants
construction started this fall with completion in early 2006.
Firms from Belgium, Germany, The Netherlands, Turkey and
the U.S. will likely bid for the project, says Ozgur Balaban,
project manager with U.K.-based Scott Wilson Kirkpatrick (SWK),
Ashford. The firm began working for the Egyptian owner, Mashreq
Petroleum Co., in March. SWK will develop plans for the terminal
and then take the job through procurement and supervise construction.
To speed the award, designers and potential bidders are collaborating
in an "interactive tendering process," says Balaban.
The project covers about 10 hectares of reclaimed land at
Port Saids East Port on the Suez Canals Mediterranean
Sea approach. It is being designed to handle up to 2 million
tons of oil a year and provide tank storage for some 150,000
cu m. It will accommodate vessels up to 80,000 dry tons.
Bechtel Leads $2.5-Billion
Airport Expansion In UAE
With schematic designs now several months
into production, a huge land-reclamation effort will start
later this year for $2.5 billion of work on Qatars
New Doha International Airport, located in the United Arab
Emirates. Due for completion in late 2008, the project is
the first phase of a three-phase development leading to
an airport capable of handling 50 million passengers a year
by 2015.
The phase-one design-build contract was awarded
in January to Bechtel Inc., San Francisco. Bechtel
developed the projects master plan from which we are
working, says Peter Clarke, a Bechtel spokesman at
its London base for Middle East work. We started with
a clean sheet of paper.
Located just east of the existing facility,
the new airport will cover a 2,200-hectare site extensively
reclaimed from the Gulf. The first phase will have two runways
and a 24-gate, 140,000-sq-m, three-floor terminal. Its initial
capacity will be 12 million passengers a year. Qatar Airways,
the national airline and airport operator, is part of the
owner organization.
Bechtel won the contract against French and
Dutch-led competition. It is using various offices of U.S.-based
Hellmuth, Obata + Kassabaum Inc. for architectural services
on the terminal building. Halcrow Group, London, is handling
land-reclamation engineering and Ecology and Environment
Inc., Lancaster, N.Y., is managing environmental issues.
In the next phase, to be procured in line
with traffic growth, the terminal will be expanded to 219,000
sq m and another 16 gates added. A suspended monorail will
be built to move passengers through the enlarged building.
In the last stage, 40 more gates will be built and the terminal
expanded to 416,000-sq m.
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