In egypts
remote desert near Sudan, a fleet of floating pontoons is
drilling, blasting and excavating a canal nearly 50 meters
into Lake Nassers rock bed to feed one of the worlds
biggest irrigation pumping stations, now being built on the
reservoirs west shore. The $390-million job, to be completed
in late 2002, will be followed by a $400-million project 130
miles south of Luxor to tap Nile River water.
Work is now 60% finished
on housing for the 21-pump Mubarak Pumping Station in a 2-million
cu-m dewatered pit. There, two drill barges are blasting rock
to form a canal 4.6 kilometers into the lake. "We are
still fine-tuning the blasting....We are taking it down in
10-m lifts," says Eddie McEwan, project director with
London-based Skanska Cementation International. It leads the
Egyptian European Japanese Consortium, which, won the turnkey
contract three years ago.
Since starting its drill barge
operation in early 1999, the consortium has dug about half
the 5.5 million cu m of rock that will come out of the 2.8-km
wet section of canal. "Weve only just put our second
drill and blast pontoon into the water," says Nigel King,
Skanskas technical director. Two excavator arms on pontoons
are removing rock down to 28 m, while hydraulic grabs on a
catamaran extract from greater depths.
The consortium hopes to make up
time lost due to mobilization snags in the remote location,
says King. Pontoons, each weighing up to 500 tonnes, were
trucked in pieces from Safag, an Egyptian Red Sea port three
days away along special routes. Most other supplies come from
Europe. The consortium is more advanced along the 1.8-km canal
section, where it is excavating another 5.5 million cu m in
dry areas up to the 60-m-deep pump basin. Hitachi Ltd., a
Japanese consortium member, will soon install the 21 pumps.
Together, they will raise by 54 m as much as 334 cu m per
sec of water. The government may also order three more pumps.
Project officials say there is room for two sets of 12 pumps,
back to back, in the 139-m-longx39.5-m-wide housing.
So far, the rock is good for pumphouse
foundations, says Alain Deforche, chief structural engineer
with French design firm Sogreah, which is helping monitor
work for the Ministry of Water Resources and Irrigation. But
dozens of micropiles are needed to seismicly bolster the 53-m-tall
building. Germanys Lahmeyer International and Cairo-based
Hamza Associates are project designers.
Lahmeyer is also on the
governments design team for the follow-on 330-m-long
dam at Naga Hammadi that would replace a structure built in
the early 1900s. The estimated $400-million contract, soon
to be let, involves diverting the Nile through a 1.1-km-long
canal. This would allow the barge to build in the dry, with
foundations up to 25 m below the normal river level. Acting
as a weir, the seven-gate dam will raise water by 4 to 8 m
for irrigation and drive a 64-Mw hydroelectric plant, says
Winfrid Guth, Lahmeyers project manager.
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