US company awarded US$15 million Amalia Falls road project
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U.S. company Synergy Holdings has been awarded a US$15 million project to  build roads and bridges necessary for the start-up of the Amalia Falls Hydro  project, Head of the Privatisation Unit, Winston Brassington, confirmed last  evening.
President Bharrat Jagdeo announced the award of the contract at his  office yesterday, noting that efforts are being made to conclude the financial  arrangements for the Hydro project.
The Inter-American Development Bank and  the China Development Bank have agreed to finance the US$450 million  project.
Jagdeo said that the financing from the IDB and the China  Development is not a loan to the government but to the project. However, because  of the importance of the project, the government is engaged in the arrangements  to finalise the financing.
Synergy Holdings contract is for the upgrade of  approximately 85 kilometers of existing roadway and the design and construction  of approximately 110 kilometers of new road. The works also include building  bridges across the Essequibo and Kuribrong rivers, Jagdeo said.
In addition,  the contract takes into account clearing the way for the installation of a  65-kilometre transmission line.
The Amalia Falls hydro-project is expected to  supply 150-megawatts of electricity to the country and this will significantly  free up resources used to buy fuel to generate electricity.
Guyana’s annual  fuel import bill is US$350M. Five bids were received from interested parties to  construct the hydropower plant in November 2008, and these bids were forwarded  to the project developers and the equity partner, Sithe Global Power.
Sithe  Global Power, LLC, based in New York, is an international development company  involved in the construction, acquisition and operation of electric power  generation facilities.
The Amalia Falls Hydropower Project is just part of a  larger effort to revolutionise Guyana’s power generation infrastructure.
Also  ongoing is a US$39.6M project to upgrade the transmission and distribution  (T&D) system, establishing a continuous network from Skeldon, Berbice to  Parika, Essequibo, including the East and West Bank Demerara networks.
It  will also see the construction of a state-of-the-art control centre at Sophia  and will be capable of connecting to the Amalia Falls project once it is  completed.
The Amalia storage dam site would be located near the top of  Amalia Falls and would impound the waters of both the Kuribrong and Amalia  Rivers.
The Amalia site is located on the Kuribrong River, a tributary of the  Potaro River in west central Guyana (see map).  The nearest point of access is  the airstrip at Kaieteur Falls on the Potaro River, approximately 15 miles to  the south.
An overland trail exists from Kaieteur to Amalia.  Access is also  provided over land by an all-weather road through Tumatumari on the Potaro River  and on to Mahdia and Kangaruma.
River access along the Potaro-Kuribrong  Rivers to the foot of Amalia Falls involves several portages around rapids and  waterfalls.  The road from Tumatumari was recently extended to Mahdia/Kangaruma  that brings you closer to the site but approximately 30 miles of additional  roads will need to be built to the top of Amalia Falls.
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