Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

CICT invests over US $ 10mn towards green infrastruc­ture at Colombo Port

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Colombo Internatio­nal Container Terminals (CICT) has completed a project to convert the company’s diesel-operated rubber-tyred gantry cranes to electric-powered rubbertyre­d gantry cranes or E-RTGS, making a major contributi­on to efforts by the Port of Colombo to go green.

Costing more than US $ 10 million, the project has resulted in CICT deploying 40 zero-emission E-RTGS at the company-managed Colombo South container terminal, achieving a 45 percent reduction in the terminal’s overall carbon dioxide emissions to the environmen­t and a reduction of more than 95 percent in diesel consumptio­n.

Commenting on the E-RTG project, CICT CEO Ray Ren said, “This initiative demonstrat­es CICT’S as well as our parent company CM Port’s commitment to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in the Port of Colombo and the maritime industry as a whole. We believe in leading from the front in the sphere of caring for the environmen­t, even at a time when some stakeholde­rs in the global industry are still said to be driven by costs rather than green ethics. This is just one of several environmen­t-related CICT projects in the pipeline and we intend to continue investing on initiative­s to reduce emissions.”

The electrific­ation of CICT’S rubber-tyred gantry cranes involved modificati­on work of fitting electricit­y collector trolleys in the RTG cranes and constructi­ng a Conductor bar system (Bus-bar) in the terminal for the cranes to function with electricit­y. Recognised around the world as an innovative port technology, E-RTGS have been proven to deliver significan­t environmen­tal, technologi­cal and financial benefits to terminals.

Their environmen­tal benefits include reducing air and noise pollution; in economic terms they reduce operating and maintenanc­e costs and in terms of technology, represent an optimisati­on of productivi­ty and performanc­e.

From its inception in 2013, CICT took the first step towards addressing environmen­tal concerns by specifying and installing stateof-the-art hybrid-diesel engines for the full fleet of rubber-tyred gantry cranes. These engines had minimal impact on the emission of environmen­timpacting gases.

However, with the growing emphasis on addressing and reducing environmen­tal damage on a continuous and sustainabl­e basis in the maritime and port industry, CICT decided to make further significan­t capital investment­s in its contributi­on to reduce green-house gases.

In recognitio­n of the importance of the E-RTG project, the ceremonial commission­ing of the electrifie­d gantry cranes was attended by several dignitarie­s including Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA) Chairman Dr. Parakrama Dissanayak­e, Vice Chairman P.G. Dassanayak­e, Board of Investment (BOI) Director Investment Appraisal Ranjan Sibera, BOI Executive Director Imports Ananda Rajakaruna, CICT Chairman Hang Tian and senior representa­tives of CICT, CM Port, Haiqin (project consultant) and ZPMC Internatio­nal Group and ZPMC Lanka, the project constructo­r.

CICT, which commenced operations in July 2013, manages the Colombo South Terminal of the Port of Colombo, the first and currently the only deep water terminal in South Asia equipped with facilities to handle the largest vessels afloat. The commenceme­nt of CICT’S operations is widely credited as the factor in the Port of Colombo achieving doubledigi­t growth in 2014 after a lapse of over 10 years.

In just three years of operation, CICT has brought some of the largest vessels plying the Asia-europe routes to Colombo. Of these, Milan Maersk (20,568 TEU), MSC Maya (19,224 TEU), Mogens Maersk (18,300 TEU), MSC New York (16,652 TEU), CMA CGM Marco Polo (16,020 TEU), Edith Maersk and EMC Thalassa Hellas (each 14,000 plus TEUS) and their sister vessels are now regular callers at CICT.

 ??  ?? Guests and senior officials of CICT at the commission­ing of E-RTGS (from right): CICT CEO Ray Ren, SLPA Chairman Dr. Parakrama Dissanayak­e, ZPMC Internatio­nal Group Managing Director Chen Jiaqing, SLPA Vice Chairman P.G. Dassanayak­e, CICT Chairman Hang...
Guests and senior officials of CICT at the commission­ing of E-RTGS (from right): CICT CEO Ray Ren, SLPA Chairman Dr. Parakrama Dissanayak­e, ZPMC Internatio­nal Group Managing Director Chen Jiaqing, SLPA Vice Chairman P.G. Dassanayak­e, CICT Chairman Hang...
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