{"id":50170,"date":"2015-12-13T15:30:46","date_gmt":"2015-12-13T22:30:46","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/?p=50170"},"modified":"2015-12-13T15:30:46","modified_gmt":"2015-12-13T22:30:46","slug":"government-capitulates-on-port-city-rain-gods-make-colombo-mega-flood-polis","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/2015\/12\/13\/government-capitulates-on-port-city-rain-gods-make-colombo-mega-flood-polis\/","title":{"rendered":"Government capitulates on Port City; rain gods make Colombo mega-flood-polis!"},"content":{"rendered":"<h2><span style=\"color: #0000ff;\"><em>by Rajan Philips\u00a0Courtesy Island<\/em><\/span><\/h2>\n<p><span class=\"article_date\">December 12, 2015, 12:00 pm<\/span><br \/>\nIt looks more like capitulation than compromise. Rather than downsizing Port City as a compromise, let alone scrapping it as it vowed it would in the now-forgotten 100-Day Program, the government has all but approved the restarting of the suspended project at its bloated 450+\/- hectares off-shore footprint. News of the approval appeared almost simultaneously in Beijing and in Colombo. The Chinese authorities are pleased, and the Sri Lankan government has spelt out the \u2018next steps\u2019 in the approval process. Before long contractors will resume dredging, blasting and digging operations in the Gampaha District that would ultimately remove nearly 70 million cubic meters of sand and rock (equivalent to: one mile by one mile by 85 feet deep hole) and dump it off-shore across from the Galle Face Green. What Prime Minister Wickremesinghe deadpanned as &#8220;few landfills&#8221; is a massive dig and fill operation undertaken in one fell swoop, but for the interruption following the January 8 election.<\/p>\n<p>This is rape of nature, and nature will unleash its fury in one form or another. For now, the monsoons are having fun in Colombo while devastating Chennai and Tamil Nadu. A few showers are enough to inundate Colombo\u2019s streets and make it look like Venice in a flash. While Singapore planners are labouring to create the outlines for a future megapolis in Colombo, the rain gods are turning it into a mega-flood-polis, as Lucien Rajakarunanayake inimitably lampooned in yesterday\u2019s Island. The impacts to marine life, the shoreline, and the dredged and excavated areas in the Gampaha District should be of huge concern. Those who highlighted these issues during the presidential election have now gone quiet under cover of their new ministerial portfolios.<\/p>\n<p>Things could be done differently, a whole lot differently. Truth be told, there isn\u2019t a whole lot difference between how things were done under the Rajapaksas and how they are being done now. Port City is prime example, but not the only example. The ratification process for Port City, as reported in the media, is no more than political window-dressing: a 1000-page Environmental Impact Assessment tome has been placed for 30-day public review ending on January 13, 2016; the public can make comments (what will come of them no one knows); the so called Technical Committee (is this the same cover-our-backsides bureaucratic contraption started in the 1980s to give collective kumbaya approval to Prime Minister Premadasa\u2019s urban development schemes bypassing the ARs &amp; FRs of old?) will \u2018evaluate the proposal\u2019 (so what has the EIA done?) and make recommendation to the Committee of Secretaries; from there, for the final lap of the ratification relay, Minister Champika Ranawaka will take the Final Agreement to the cabinet for approval.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/www.island.lk\/modules\/modPublication\/article_title_images\/1368995327SI-P04-13-12-(P)-ksn-1.jpg\" alt=\"article_image\" \/><\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Where does the Final Agreement come from?&#8221; you ask. Oh, the Attorney General\u2019s Department is already drafting the final lease agreement to be sent to the cabinet (no room for reservations here for the AGD, unlike in the Avant-Garde case where it needed multi-layered in-house and out-house consultations to make the ultimate non-decision). The lease agreement is reportedly expected to provide for a 99-year lease over 446 hectares of Port City. The apparently redeeming omission from the Rajapaksa deal is that the Chinese developer will not get the 20 ha freehold land he was given earlier. Politically this is quite a somersault, a wholesale betrayal of the grand promise made in the 100-day Programme one year ago. Now that the Prime Minister, sounding like Lee Kuan Yew, has started to threateningly identify sections of the population who in his view did not &#8220;contribute to the January 8 revolution&#8221;, those who know they did contribute should ask the PM as to who will take care of those who betray the promises of the January 8 revolution.<\/p>\n<p>The more serious question is how will the people, the City and even the country deal with the fallouts from the Port City development and the unfolding of the future megapolis? Last week, I alluded to transportation and underground services as two major challenges that the megapolis project will have to deal with. Drainage and flooding will have to be added as a third challenge. Colombo\u2019s flooding after rains has now become a recurrent reality of city living. What are now passing inconveniences could become major disasters if concerted preventive measures are not taken. Chennai\u2019s recent flood disaster has been attributed to both human (reservoir management) failure to balance storage and water release and structural drawbacks (overbuilding in floodplains and destroying drainage systems). Structural drawbacks are already aplenty in Colombo and onshore and offshore developments will only multiply them.<\/p>\n<p>Inspiration and Lessons from Singapore<\/p>\n<p>Inasmuch as Prime Minister Wickremesinghe\u2019s megapolis vision draws its inspiration and its planners from Singapore, there are also practical lessons that could be drawn from Singapore\u2019s experience. Singapore learnt by trial and error in dealing with land reclamation and inland flooding. Extensive land reclamation (25% increase in total area from 581 square kilometres in 1960 to the current size of 723 square kilometres) and shoreline building led to chronic flooding in the city that became particularly significant given the island\u2019s equatorial location and propensity for heavy convectional rainfall throughout the year. Singapore had the resources to hire experts, including expatriate Sri Lankan engineers, to identify and implement flood control solutions. Sri Lanka is in a precarious situation having abandoned the time honoured urban drainage practices that had begun during Dutch and British rules, and now aggravating it by overbuilding with no consideration for drainage management. Port City construction and other development projects will only worsen Colombo\u2019s drainage problems. Without a drainage master plan, megapolis development will eventuate into frequent mega-flood-polis disasters.<\/p>\n<p>Singapore was the role model when Sri Lanka opened its economy to free market and global trade. But in the critical area of urban transportation the Jayewardene government, instead of following Singapore\u2019s example of public transportation, embarked on a disastrous journey of privatisation egged on by World Bank experts, who wanted to showcase Sri Lanka as a success story in privatising transport. In 1977, Sri Lanka had a reasonably good public transport system. What it needed was \u2018unbundling\u2019 and decentralization to make it more efficient and locally responsive, and not its dismantling by an uncontrolled and un-coordinated system of private buses. In 1976, one year before privatisation began in Sri Lanka, Singapore began the world\u2019s first Area Licensing Scheme (ALS) for road pricing, charging single occupancy vehicles entering or leaving a six square kilometre area of the Central Business District. The scheme was operated by traffic watchers taking position in 34 overhead gantries. Now electronic tolling has become common practice in many countries. Within 10 years of introducing the ALS, Singapore completed the first phase of its Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) system. Today, Singapore has one of the most state-of-the-art, efficient, reliable and convenient public transportation systems in the world. A key component of Singapore\u2019s transport policy is the discouragement of private car travel especially from home to work and back. The imposition of high car registration fees and other disincentives are not a budgetary exercise but components of a transport policy regime.<\/p>\n<p>It is one thing to develop a Megapolis Plan using Singaporean planners, but it is quite a different and more difficult matter to introduce and implement a public transportation system in the Western Megapolis. Implementing individual Megapolis development projects, without first launching a public transportation system will only lead to traffic congestion and gridlock. A first step would be to identify the agency who will be responsible for transportation in the Western Megapolis. Who will it be? The new Ministry of Western Megapolis? The Ministry of Transportation? The UDA? The Western Provincial Government? The Colombo Municipality or other municipal and local bodies in the Western Province? Singapore is an island City State, 100 times smaller than Sri Lanka, where national governance and municipal governance are virtually congruent. Not so in Sri Lanka, and not even in the Western Province. According to Provincial Chief Ministers, the government\u2019s new budget did not make any allocations for the Provinces. Will the new Megapolis Ministry smother over the existing provincial and local government institutions in the Western Province? What will be their role, if any, in the unfolding of the new Megapolis?<\/p>\n<p>Another key area where the Jayewardene and later Premadasa governments failed to learn from Singapore, while emulating its open economy, was in the area of housing. Publicly provided, privately owned housing is another key component of Singapore\u2019s economic success story. As an entrep\u00f4t economy from British times, housing has been a constant problem in Singapore. From its inception in 1959, the People\u2019s Action Party government set out to address this problem in a creative way. The Housing and Development Board (no private developer) took over the business of planning and building public housing, not for renting but ownership. Homeownership was not merely facilitated but enforced by directing employees to draw from the Central Provident Fund to pay their down payment. What began as low cost, low income housing development later evolved into upscale condominiums, but all under the auspices of the HDB. Of course, there is a private housing market in Singapore, but the PAP government knew that market by itself could not solve Singapore\u2019s housing problem. Is there an opportunity to channel EPF\/ETF funding and overseas employee remittances into homeownership development in Sri Lanka? It might be 40 years late, but still worth exploring.<\/p>\n<p>Funnily enough, even today the labour strikes of the 1950s are blamed as the main reason why Sri Lanka did not become a success story the way Singapore did. But the real failure at least in the areas of urban transportation and housing began after 1977, when Sri Lankan governments, while imitating its open economy, failed to emulate the exemplary experience of Singapore in public housing and public transportation. Sri Lanka blundered in creating state corporations for industrial production, but Singapore played smart in leaving industrial production to the market while keeping housing and transportation in the public sector. What will happen in the Megapolis?<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>by Rajan Philips\u00a0Courtesy Island December 12, 2015, 12:00 pm It looks more like capitulation than compromise. Rather than downsizing Port City as a compromise, let alone scrapping it as it vowed it would in the now-forgotten 100-Day Program, the government has all but approved the restarting of the suspended project at its bloated 450+\/- hectares [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[12],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-50170","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-forum"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/50170","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=50170"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/50170\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=50170"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=50170"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=50170"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}