À̶óÅ© ³²ÂÊÁö¿ª BasrahÀÇ ´ëÇü´ã¼öÈ Ç÷£Æ® °Ç¼³À» À§ÇÑ EPC °è¾àÀÌ È÷Ÿġ, º£¿Ã¸®¾Æ ÀÚÈ»ç OTV, ÀÌÁýÆ® °Ç¼³»çÀÇ ±Û·Î¹ú ÄÁ¼Ò½Ã¾ö¿¡ ÀÇÇÏ¿© ÃßÁøµÈ´Ù. À̹ø ÇÁ·ÎÁ§Æ®´Â È÷Ÿġ»ç ÁÖ°üÀ¸·Î ½ÃÇàµÇ¸ç 2¾ï4õ300¸¸ ´Þ·¯ °ø»ç·Î 5³â°£ÀÇ ¿î¿µ¡¤À¯Áöº¸¼ö ¾÷¹«°¡ Æ÷ÇԵȴÙ.
Basrah Áö¿ªÀÇ ÇöÀçÀÇ Á¤¼öó¸®Àå ±Ô¸ð´Â ÃÑ 40¸¸§©/ÀÏ ±Ô¸ð·Î ÇöÀçÀÇ 90¸¸§©/ÀÏ ±Ô¸ð ¼ö¿ä¸¦ °ø±ÞÇÒ ¼ö ¾ø´Â »óȲ¿¡ ÀÖ´Ù. À̹ø ÇÁ·ÎÁ§Æ®´Â À̶óÅ©³»ÀÇ °¡Àå Å« ±Ô¸ðÀÇ Á¤¼öÀå Ç÷£Æ®·Î 40¸¸ Áֹο¡°Ô °ø±ÞµÇ¸ç ¿ø¼ö´Â ¿°ºÐµµ°¡ ºñ±³Àû ³ôÀº ÇؾȰ¡ ±ÙóÀÇ °¹°À» ²ø¾îµé¿© ó¸®ÇÏ°Ô µÈ´Ù.
ÃÑ 19¸¸9õ§©/ÀÏ ±Ô¸ðÀÇ RO Ç÷£Æ®·Î °Ç¼³µÇ¸ç 2014³â 2¿ù Âø°øÇÏ¿© 2016³â 7¿ù ÁØ°ø¿¹Á¤ÀÌ´Ù. ¶ÇÇÑ ÀϺ»Á¤ºÎ Â÷°üÁ¦°øÁ¶°Ç ¾Æ´Ñ À̶óÅ©Á¤ºÎ³» ³»ºÎ ÆݵåÀڱݿ¡ ÀÇÇÏ¿© ÃßÁøµÇ´Â ù ¹ø° ÇÁ·ÎÁ§Æ®ÀÌ´Ù.
[¿ø¹®º¸±â]
Hitachi-led consortium gets large Iraq desalination job
A consortium comprising Hitachi, Veolia Environnement subsidiary OTV and The Arab Contractors, a nationalised Egyptian construction company, has received an order from the Iraqi Ministry of Municipalities & Public Works for the engineering, procurement, and construction of a large desalination plant in Basrah, in the south of Iraq.
The ¥ 25 billion (US$ 242.8 million) order will also include operation and maintenance management for a period of five years. Hitachi will oversee the project as the leader of consortium.
Construction of the 199,000 m©ø/d reverse-osmosis plant is scheduled to begin in February 2014, with completion scheduled for July 2016.
Existing water purification facilities in Basrah, with a total capacity of 400,000 m©ø/d, are unable to keep up with the city's huge demand for fresh water - estimated at up to 900,000 m©ø/d - and are deteriorating.
The new plant will purify river water drawn from close to the river mouth, where salinity is relatively high. This will be Iraq's highest capacity single water-purification plant, capable of supplying 400,000 people.
This is the first time since the end of the Iraq war that a Japanese company has received an order for a large-scale water infrastructure project based on internal funds from the Iraqi government, rather than Japanese government yen loans.