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According to the bank document, "the project involves the development, construction, and operation of a greenfield 225 MW Combined Cycle Gas Turbine (CCGT) power plant in the Mandalay region of Myanmar. It will increase much needed reliable and clean energy to the country's demand (currently installed power capacity in Myanmar is around 4,700 MW). When completed, the new facility will help to ease the country's severe power deficit. The Project is located in Taungtha, a township of Myingyan District in Mandalay Division. It is 108 km to Mandalay City and 226 km to Naypyitaw, the administrative capital of Myanmar.
The project will increase much needed reliable and clean energy to the country’s demand (currently installed power capacity in Myanmar is around 4,700 MW). When completed, the new facility will help to ease the country’s severe power deficit.
The Myingyan project is an investment to “build, own and operate a greenfield 225 MW Combined Cycle Gas Turbine (CCGT) power plant in the Mandalay region of Myanmar.” In addition to IFC, ADB, and potentially AIIB funding, A consortium of Sembcorp Utilities Pte. Ltd and MMID Utilities Pte. Ltd will develop and operate the project. The Project includes the construction and operation of the following facilities:
APPLICABLE SOCIAL & ENVIRONMENTAL STANDARDS
Based on IFC documents, the following environmental and social safeguard policies are triggered:
PS 1 – Assessment and Management of Environmental and Social Risks and Impacts - triggered due to construction effects identified by project documents, including: air quality impacts, surface water quality, “noise during site preparation, … as well as increased traffic in access roads; …soil and groundwater from potential leaks and spills of oil, lubricants, or fuel from heavy equipment; construction waste management; and community health and safety impacts due to increased traffic and influx of construction workers.” Operational effects identified by project documents include: “impacts to air quality…(mainly [nitrogen oxide] emissions); surface water quality due from domestic wastewater discharge; noise associated with the operation of the power plant;… generation of various types of non-hazardous and hazardous wastes from plant [operations & maintenance] activities; and community health and safety” in the event of a natural gas leak.
PS 2 - Labor and Working Conditions - triggered due to the workforce required for the construction and operation of this project. The average workforce during construction is 600 people, with a peak of 900 people “at the height of construction activities.” The expected operational workforce is 48 people.
PS 3 - Resource Efficiency and Pollution Prevention - triggered due to issues related to noise, vibrations, dust and wastewater emissions, and hazardous waste generation during project construction and operation. Emissions may impact air quality in the project area and surrounding villages.
PS 4 – Community Health, Safety and Security - triggered due to “the risk of accidents for the general public during construction,” “raw water intake from the Ayeyarwady River,” which may impact other users of the river, possible community exposure to diseases with the influx of laborers, the possibility of emergencies such as a“fire or explosion due to the use of natural gas at the proposed project site,” and the deployment of “unarmed security personnel” at the project site.
PS 5 – Land Acquisition and Involuntary Resettlement - triggered because “land acquisition for the approximate [12 kilometer] cooling water supply line and the approximate [3 kilometer] overhead power transmission line...will be managed by the Myanma Electric Power Enterprise (MEPE) and will involve an area of about 8 [hectares].” Additionally, approximately 8 to 10 “families of settlers without land titles or legal claims occupying the irrigation canal [right-of-way] will be affected with the potential effects including physical displacement of small businesses (i.e tea shop or food stores), homes, and removal of small plantations of fruit trees.”
OUR RISK ASSESSMENT
Based on the IFC’s project documents, this project poses potential risks to the following human rights:
Right to Property & Adequate Housing
According to the Asian Development Bank’s Resettlement Framework, the project site is located within a larger site that “economically displaced about 130 villagers from the Sa Khar, Hnan Hwa, and Hpet Taw villages, in a Government-led land acquisition process” from 1998-2000. The larger 280 hectare site is fenced. However, as of 2015, “it was observed that fences were opened in some 2 places by the villagers from Sa Khar to use the site for informal fire wood collection and cattle grazing.” The Asian Development Bank’s Resettlement Framework states that in addition to land informally used for agriculture, “there are approximately 8 to 10 families of settlers without land titles or legal claims with the potential effects including physical and economic displacement of small businesses (i.e tea shop or food stores) and residences.”
Right to Livelihood
The physical displacement of small businesses due to land acquisition for the water supply and overhead power transmission line may impact the right to livelihood for the 8-10 families living in the project area. Additionally, according the IFC’s Social Impact Assessment, agriculture is the main source of income for local villagers, and much of the pipeline route “typically forms a part of a large plot of land” used for seasonal crop production. To the extent that people rely on the crops and fruit trees that will be removed during project construction as a source of livelihood, that right may be impacted.
Right to Food
To the extent that local villagers use the land along the water pipeline to grow crops for their households, the right to food may be impacted when this land is acquired by the project.
Right to Water
Without adequate safeguards, there is a risk that hazardous waste generated by the project may contaminate surrounding groundwater and surface water sources used by local villagers for consumption and household activities.
Right to a Healthy Environment
Construction is expected to create 27,803.65 tonnes carbon dioxide-equivalent, and operation of the combine cycle gas turbine will emit approximately 731,000 tonnes carbon dioxide-equivalent annually. According to project documents, the construction activities with the most significant “potential air quality impact is fugitive dust emissions from the power plant site.” During the operational phase, the most significant air quality impact is “power plant stack emissions due to combustion of natural gas.” Air quality is already degraded in the project area due to the adjacent presence of an operating steel mill also undergoing construction and an operating natural gas fired reciprocating engine power plan. Levels of nitrogen oxide and particulate matter are already high, and “[c]onstruction activities will temporarily contribute to increased levels of dust.”
- Of the anticipated sources of wastewater discharges and runoff, “the most significant by volume is considered to be sanitary wastewater which will be generated at an estimated rate of 48,000 liter/day.” The most significant source of emissions during the operational phase “will be the power plant’s closed circuit cooling systems blowdown which will generate approximately 70.5 m3/hr of cooling water discharge, followed by sanitary wastewater from operations (from an estimated workforce of 48 employees).”
- The project documents identify four “noise sensitive receivers” that may be affected by the use of powered mechanical equipment, as well as other construction and operation noise sources: “a permanent steel mill construction worker (EPC) accommodation in Taung Tha Township (approximately 1890 m to the south of the project site); a monastery and pagoda in Taung Tha Township (approximately 2400 m to the south); Hnan Ywa Village in Taung Tha Township (approximately 1960 m to the south-east); and Sa Ka Village in Myingyan Township (approximately 980 m to the north-east).” Vibrations also may damage community infrastructure.
- Hazardous waste materials potentially generated during the construction and operational phase include: “used paint, engine oils, hydraulic fluids, spent solvents, spent batteries, and other potentially hazardous materials generated from construction equipment maintenance and repair.” Hazardous materials will also be stored on site, including: “liquid fuel (diesel), gas cylinders, hydrochloric acid, sulfuric acid, caustic soda, sodium hypochlorite/chlorine, solvents, lubricating oils, transformer oil and other chemicals.”
Right to Health
The influx of construction workers and in-migration may introduce and increase the spread of communicable and sexually transmitted diseases. According to the Environmental and Social Impact Assessment, “Myanmar has one of the highest rates of HIV/ AIDS infection in Southeast Asia, which increases the risk of HIV/ AIDS being transmitted.” Tuberculosis is also prevalent in the villages surrounding the project area. Additionally, heavy rainfall during the wet season in Myanmar may create vector habitats where construction activities create trenches and other areas of standing water. As a result, project activities may contribute to an increase in vector borne diseases, with malaria being a notable risk. According to project documents, the populations most likely impacted by community health risks are: “Sa Khar, Hnan Ywa and Tha Pyay Thar villages and the steel mill workers.”
- According to project documents, safety-related issues include: traffic accidents, community member injuries due to the presence of new infrastructure, and hazardous material and waste management.
Labor Rights
During the construction process, the 600-900 construction workers who will be on the project site may be at risk for injuries and illnesses. Tuberculosis, vector-borne diseases like malaria, and sexually transmitted diseases such as HIV/AIDS are of particular concern. According to the Social Impact Assessment, the client will “implement a community health management plan and an occupational health and safety plan in consultation with relevant stakeholders (e.g. local health practitioners)” to ensure that worker illnesses and injuries are handled properly.
The project is co-financed with other Multilateral Development Banks and commercial banks. The AIIB financing will be in parallel with other lenders including the International Finance Corporation (“IFC”), the Asian Development Bank (“ADB”) and certain commercial lenders.
Amount of bank loan or investment: IFC - $40 million. AIIB - $20 million.
Private Actor 1 | Private Actor 1 Role | Private Actor 1 Sector | Relation | Private Actor 2 | Private Actor 2 Role | Private Actor 2 Sector |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
- | - | - | - | SembCorp Utilities Pte Ltd | Client | - |
Project Team Leader
Ruben Hideo Noguchi
Senior Portfolio Monitoring Specialist
ACCOUNTABILITY MECHANISM OF AIIB
The AIIB has established the Accountability Mechanism for Project-Affected People (PPM). The PPM provides “an opportunity for an independent and impartial review of submissions from Project-affected people who believe they have been or are likely to be adversely affected by AIIB’s failure to implement the ESP in situations when their concerns cannot be addressed satisfactorily through Project level GRMs or AIIB Management processes.” Two or more project-affected people can file a complaint. Under the current AIIB policy, when the bank co-finances a project with another development bank, it may apply the other bank's standards. You can refer to the Project Summary Information document to find out which standards apply. You can learn more about the PPM and how to file a complaint at: https://www.aiib.org/en/about-aiib/who-we-are/project-affected-peoples-mechanism/how-we-assist-you/index.html.
The complaint submission form can be accessed in Arabic, Bahasa Indonesia, Bengali, Chinese, English, Tagalog, Hindi, Nepali, Russian, Turkish, or Urdu. The submission form can be found at: https://www.aiib.org/en/about-aiib/who-we-are/project-affected-peoples-mechanism/submission/index.html.