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CLIFFORD G. MUMM
(Photo courtesy of Bechtel/Jonathan
Eliiman)
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Clifford G. Mumm,
Bechtel National Inc.s project director overseeing the
$680-million U.S. Agency for International Development rebuilding
contract in Iraq, admits that looting and other security concerns
have hindered work.
In a wide-ranging interview
with ENR on July 15 in Bechtels Washington, D.C., office,
Mumm said that the assessment phase of the reconstruction
is finished and the tough task of determining the best use
of contract dollars to repair and rebuild seven sectors soon
will begin. Some aspects of emergency work, particularly the
dredging of the Umm Qasr seaport, are nearly finished. Emergency
work under way at Umm Qasr is expected to be largely completed
in August.
Saboteurs continue to
target the nations infrastructure, with the power sector
a primary target of looters. Mumm says 13 towers of a 400-kv
transmission line extending from Baghdad to the north were
down when Bechtel crews first surveyed the line. Earlier this
month, the number jumped to 65. Looters are "harvesting
the copper" that they strip from the transmission lines.
This looting is not
easy, says Mumm. Looters chop the wires by hand and burn off
the insulation to obtain the copper. Several substations also
have been destroyed.
Mumm says that "point security,"
which includes a barrier around a site or facility with a
security guard, is helpful to secure a site. But looting and
other damage tends to occur at facilities that cannot be protected
by point security, such as transmission lines, or when work
is finished and the security moves on.
Still, Bechtel is moving on a
primary task of putting Iraqis back to work. Bechtel has teamed
with the Iraq Housing Ministry to repair 1,400 schools and
clinics before the start of the school year on Sept. 15. Workers
are primarily patching walls and tiles and installing plumbing
fixtures and ceiling fans, says Mumm. Its not technical
work but there is a lot of volume, he says. The damage was
not a casualty of the war, but of looters afterward. "Schools
were looted like everyplace else," he says.
Bechtel maintains now, as it did
after receiving the rebuilding contract in April, that it
intends to subcontract out about 90% of the work. "Our
goal is to put the maximum amount of work with Iraqi contractors,"
Mumm says. This will help achieve the top USAID priority of
getting the Iraqi economy back on track.
As of July 14, Bechtel has awarded
46 subcontracts, 16 of which went to 14 different Iraqi companies,
according to Bechtel spokesman Howard N. Menaker.
Mumm and Menaker say continued
attacks on coalition forces and other security concerns have
not swayed contractors from seeking a piece of the rebuilding
work. More than 8,000 companies have registered on its supplier
Website. Many firms seeking the work have experience in the
Middle East, says Mumm.
The awarding of subcontracts is
likely to escalate as U.S. military officials with the Coalition
Provisional Authority review Bechtels comprehensive
assessment. An implementation plan, based on the assessment,
was submitted in June to USAID and CPA officials in Baghdad.
Specific reconstruction priorities and scope of work will
be decided, likely within the next few weeks. USAID and CPA
are really looking at "systems" and not just going
doing repair work and reconstruction, Mumm says. Officials
will determine the most effective way to spend the contract
dollars across seven sectors. Mumm notes that about $193 million
of the $680 million has actually been committed.
The power sector, which drives
almost every other sector, is in need of the most work, particularly
after years of prewar neglect. About $200 million has been
set aside for power. "Thats not a lot of money,"
he says.
The entire sector will have to
be replaced over the next two years, says Mumm. But that is
not part of the current scope of work. Officials have to decide
priorities: Should workers spend money now to temporarily
fix plants that are not transmitting power because the transmission
lines are disrupted, or should they work to feed the local
grid with temporary power thats not so vulnerable to
looting?
Mumm says the Iraqi ministries
have proven stronger and more resilient than originally expected.
They have their own engineers and workers. In many instances
this has given Bechtel leverage to "get more bang for
its buck." When the Ministry of Housing stepped forward
to provide workers to repair the schools and clinics, it also
sent engineers who werent working to do the assessments.
"Its a real integrated activity," says Mumm.
The power ministry is
also helping with transmission line repair. Bechtel provides
the towers, materials and tools, as well as the inspection
and project management skills, and the ministry provides workers
to perform installation. The ministry is paying those workers,
allowing Bechtel to leverage its project funds.
Another top priority, to restore
the telecommunications backbone, also is under way. About
$50 million is earmarked to put the core of the system in
place. That means installing microwave cable switches and
other components but not restoring the whole phone company,
Mumm says. Telecommunications are essential for every component
of rebuilding, he explains. All of the systems are interdependent,
he adds.
Mumm says he believes that the
$680 million is enough to get the rebuilding far enough on
the right track "if it is used right." He notes
that those funds will be spent in conjunction with other contracts,
frozen Iraqi assets, money from Iraqi oil sales and funds
from other sources such as the United Nations and nongovernmental
organizations. If used properly it will be enough to "help
the Iraqi economy to bootstrap its way back up," he says.
NGOs, including the Red Cross, tend to gravitate to schools,
clinics and water projects, he says.
No one can say how much it would
cost to totally rebuild the country, he says. There is a lot
of work to be done over time and that eventually will be financed
by the Iraqis, he says. Mumm says it also is too early to
predict if USAID will award future rebuilding contracts. He
expects an assessment will be made after the first year and
then again after 18 months.
Mumm says that if the work is
all laid out and the security issues dont grow, the
18-month term of the contract will be sufficient. "If
the security issues grow," he says, "it is anyones
guess how long it will take."
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