|
|
|
|

St. Petersburg Waste Water project benefits the whole region. |

Construction started -- and stopped -- in the soviet era. |

Governor Yakovlev puts his trowel to work relaunching sewage plant construction. |

Lenders, donors and officials prepare a time capsule to relaunch sewage plant construction. |
Lenders, donors unite to clean up St Petersburg sewage.
Hanna Matinpuro is tired of not being free to bathe in the waters of the Gulf
of Finland. "It happens every summer that for several weeks along the Finnish
coast, you can't swim," says Ms Matinpuro of the Finnish Association for
Nature Conservation.
Poisonous algae blooms fed by phosphorus and nitrogen pollution, mainly from
untreated sewage originating in St Petersburg on the other side of the Gulf,
render the water unsafe for part of each summer. "In the summer, if you fly
over the Gulf of Finland between Russia and Finland, it is one big, big field
of noxious algae blooms," says Timo Hokkanen, recently-named manager of the
Northern Dimension Environmental Partnership (NDEP) Support Fund, managed by
the EBRD.
Now a St Petersburg sewage treatment plant, left half-finished when
construction funds ran out in the soviet era, is due for completion.
Shepherded by the NDEP Support Fund, a group of donors and lenders are backing
the €166 million project to remove a major source of pollution threatening
Russia and its neighbours on the Gulf of Finland and the wider Baltic Sea.
"This is a much-needed project," said Vladimir Yakovlev, governor of St
Petersburg, at a ceremony when construction was resumed recently on the
Southwest Waste Water Treatment Plant (SWWTP). "Over 1.2 million cubic metres
of untreated sewage were, until now, being pumped into the sea every day. This
project is a joint effort by the countries that border the Baltic Sea and it
represents a major environmental victory."
The EBRD is lending €35.4 million to the sewage treatment project.
International cooperation
"This is a landmark project on which we have been working intensively with the
City of St. Petersburg and Vodokanal (the city water authority) to bring about
an effective public/private partnership," says Gavin Anderson, EBRD's business
group director for infrastructure investments. "It is a hugely important
undertaking that will bring large benefits both for St. Petersburg and the
countries which share the Baltic Sea coastline, so it is right that this
should be the result of cooperation at an international level."
The Helsinki-based Nordic Investment Bank (NIB) is investing €45 million. The
European Union's European Investment Bank (EIB) is to participate through a
separate €15.5 million loan to Vodokanal. Other investors include Sweden's
Swedfund International, the Finnish Fund for Industrial Cooperation and the
Helsinki-based Nordic Environmental Finance Corporation.
Another €50 million comes from donor funds. The EU's TACIS programme has
donated €24 million, the Swedish International Development Agency, €11 million
and the Finnish Environment Ministry, €10 million.
Support Fund as catalyst
Of the donor funds, the smallest portion -- €5.8 million -- is from the NDEP
Support Fund, which Mr Hokkanen manages out of the EBRD's Environment
Department. Created to address environmental calamities in northwest Russia,
the NDEP aims to enhance cooperation between the Russian Federation, European
Union, Finland, Sweden, Norway, Denmark and international financial
institutions. More countries are expected to join the initiative.
"The whole idea of the NDEP is to use donor money from our support fund to
attract other donor money and catalyse loans from international financial
institutions," says Mr Hokkanen. "The donor funds close the gap in terms of
what municipalities like St Petersburg can afford, and the investment
required." The NDEP Support Fund now stands at €100 million and major new
contributions are expected soon.
300th anniversary
The sewage treatment project is one of a number of environmental initiatives
announced recently for St Petersburg, which this week celebrates the 300th
anniversary of its founding. A jewel of Russian architecture and other
national cultural treasures, Russia's second largest city is beset with severe
environmental problems.
Each day St Petersburg pours raw sewage into the Neva river which opens into
the Gulf of Finland. "Once the river has passed through the city, the water is
very brown and, in summer, it smells on hot days," says Mr Hokkanen, a Finnish
national who lived in St Petersburg for five years. "You wouldn't want to swim
in it, although people do. You can see it's not clean."
The sewage treatment plant is the single most important initiative in cutting
the Gulf's pollution load. When completed, the plant will be able to handle
330,000 cubic metres of sewage a day. Two key related projects - construction
of inlets to collect the sewage for treatment (€15 million) and the SWWTP's
separate sludge incinerator (€22 million) - are earmarked for financing by the
EIB and EU-TACIS.
The EBRD is expected to be lead financial institution for a third related
project, construction of a €52.6 million incinerator for sludge from the
city's northern sewage treatment plant. The EBRD is expected to lend €23.8
million; €9 million may come from the NIB which wants to "strenghten our
particular focus on environmental projects with cross-border effects in the
Baltic Sea region," says NIB senior vice president Oddvar Sten Ronsen. The
NDEP Support Fund has pledged €6.35 million to the north-end incinerator and
other donors have pledged €350,000. Vodokanal will finance the remainder.
The EBRD previously signed two local environmental projects that fit into the
strategy for St Petersburg - one in 2001 to rehabilitate St. Petersburg's sole
official toxic waste dump located close to the main catchment area for the
city's water, and another in 1997 to support Vodokanal with capital
investments.
Plant is "an important step"
"The St Petersburg waste water treatment plant is an important step in
reducing the pollution load in the Gulf of Finland," said Gunnar Norén,
executive secretary of Coalition Clean Baltic, based in Sweden. "St Petersburg
is the biggest city in the Baltic Sea region and the biggest single point
source of pollution via the Neva, the biggest river in the region." He and
Finnish environmentalist Hanna Matipuro told Blueprint they hope the St
Petersburg initiative is just the first of many to address Baltic Sea
eutrophication - the process through which sewage renders waters overrich in
nutrients and minerals, thus promoting algae growth. They said local, national
and regional approaches require addressing smaller municipal, agricultural and
industrial sources of pollution.
The sewage treatment plant loan is the second EBRD commitment under the NDEP.
The first was signed last December when the EBRD committed $245 million - its
largest loan ever for a single project - towards the completion of the St
Petersburg Flood Protection Barrier. For more information please see the
following websites: www.ndep.org
Contact: The EBRD Environment
Department
29 May 2003
|