>> ASIAONE / BUSINESS / MY MONEY / PROPERTY / STORY
Underground 'city' to free up space
Ronnie Lim
Thu, May 15, 2008
The Business Times

(SINGAPORE) Singapore is looking at building underground power stations, water reclamation plants, wafer fabs and R&D labs, data centres, warehouses and port and airport logistics centres to free up surface land for other economic uses.

Industrial landlord Jurong Town Corporation has called a tender for a wide-ranging 'underground rock cavern (URC) usage feasibility study' to see how best caverns beneath the island can be used.

The consultant awarded the study will have to work with various government agencies on possible uses for the caverns.

For instance, it will have to work with the Energy Market Authority on power stations, the Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore on airport logistics, or the Public Utilities Board on water reclamation plants.

The study will cover such 'space, technical and functional requirements, operation and maintenance requirements and identification of issues of concern', the tender document says.

The tender, called on Friday last week, closes on June 6. Due to the specialised nature of the project, only tenderers with proven URC expertise and experience are eligible.

The winning consultant will have to identify and study proven URC usage in other countries and determine the technical and operational feasibility of such usage here.

The consultant will also have to look at the environment, health and the likely public reaction on such matters as radiation and pollution, harmful airborne particles and damage to existing buildings or infrastructure, among other things.

A JTC spokeswoman said yesterday JTC will be the facilitator for the multi-agency study. 'The study will look at possible uses for URCs as well as costs,' she said. 'The latter include costs for excavation and facility construction for each specific use.'

JTC declined to say which areas of Singapore have potential for URCs. 'The latest feasibility study is looking just at usage, and not sites,' the spokeswoman noted.

Singapore has so far used underground caverns for munitions storage for the defence forces. It blasted caverns out of granite beneath the disused Mandai Quarry.

And it is currently constructing Phase 1 of the $700 million Jurong Rock Cavern (JRC) project beneath Jurong Island to store 1.485 million cu m of crude oil and oil products like naphtha, condensate and gas oil.

JRC will be used by petrochemical companies such as Jurong Aromatics Corporation, which is building a US$2 billion aromatics complex and is the first committed customer.

The first of five caverns being built under Phase 1 will start operating at end-2010. Phase 2 of the project will add another 1.3 million cu m of storage.

In March, when Defence Minister Teo Chee Hean commissioned the underground munitions facility at Mandai, he said it would free up 300 ha of land - half the size of Pasir Ris Town - and need 20 per cent less manpower to operate than a surface facility.

Likewise, JRC will free up 60 ha of surface space - bigger than Bishan Park - to accommodate the storage needs of the oil industry here.

Land on Jurong Island is being snapped up by new petrochemical investors. BT understands that no more land is available from JTC for above-ground oil storage terminals, after Hin Leong's Universal Terminal and Emirates National Oil Company's Horizon Terminal.

Industrial landlord Jurong Town Corporation has called a tender for a wide-ranging 'underground rock cavern usage feasibility study' to see how best caverns beneath the island can be used.


This article was first published in The Business Times on May 13, 2008

Is this article useful to you?
 

 
STORY INDEX
 
  No decision yet on funeral parlour site
   
 
  NZ house sales slump to 16-yr low
   
 
  Japan's housing glut adding to growth fears
   
 
  Underground 'city' to free up space
   
 
  CapitaLand and partner unveil Abu Dhabi project
   
 
  Luxury home prices down 2.1%, says report
   
 
  HDB greenery includes growing vegetables at ground level
   
 
  Former MHA complex up for office lease
   
 
  For lease: Former Home Affairs Ministry complex for office use
   
 
  Buffer plan for funeral parlour hub in Sin Ming
   
>> RELATED STORY
NZ house sales slump to 16-yr low
Japan's housing glut adding to growth fears
Underground 'city' to free up space
CapitaLand and partner unveil Abu Dhabi project
Luxury home prices down 2.1%, says report

Elsewhere in AsiaOne...

Investor Relations: Full-year profit for 79 companies up 29%

News: Black Knights wow Bangkok

Wine,Dine&Unwind: Smith Street Food Complex reopens after two years

Travel: AirAsia flying twice daily to Singapore from today

Health: The art of eight limbs

Motoring: Formula One future in Asia looks bright

Digital: Leading 3D software provider picks S'pore as regional HQ

Just Women: Should we show the world our DAMSEL IN THIS DRESS?

Multimedia: Better local searches

 

We welcome contributions, comments and tips.
a1admin@sph.com.sg
   

Search: