Melamchi in a mess again

Nepali Times issue #184 20-26 February 2004

Melamchi is still a mess. The 2021 floods partially destroyed this water supply project, the most expensive in Nepal which took 30 years to complete. 

Exactly 20 years ago this week, Nepali Times carried a story about how Melamchi was once again in limbo because the Maoists ordered staff to stop work. Irony of the ironies, Melamchi was inaugurated for the third time by Prime Minister and Maoist supremo Pushpa Kamal Dahal earlier this year. 

Excerpt of the report from issue #184 20-26 February 2004:

After years of slow motion, the Melamchi project has finally ground to a complete halt. The ambitious $464 million scheme to bring glacial melt water to parched Kathmandu through a 28km tunnel is Nepal’s biggest infrastructure project, and is now on hold because of Maoist threats.

Officials from the Melamchi Water Supply Project (MWSP) said their staff had to return to Kathmandu this week after Maoists ordered them to stop work. 

“The Maoists pasted notices on walls, and we just can’t compromise on the safety of our staff,” one official said. Although Maoist activity has delayed work, this is the first time the rebels have actually forced the project to stop.

The only tangible outcome of the project so far has been a 9km stretch of access road from Melamchi to the headworks of the tunnel in Helambu. 

The international contractor, Hanil Koneko, has already been paid nearly 30% of its fee for less than 15% of the finished road.

The controversial Melamchi project aims to pipe 170 million litres of water a day to Kathmandu. 

Critics and experts have charged that it is too expensive, and will only benefit an already pampered capital. They also say cheaper options of storage reservoirs on the Valley rim and upgrading the water supply system should have been the priority.

For archived material of Nepali Times of the past 20 years, site search: nepalitimes.com