STEC Firstly Wins the Bidding for Overseas Water Affair — India Jaipur River Channel Improvement Project
2016-03
A few days ago, STEC SUCG International Engineering Co., Ltd. won the STEC’s first successful bidding for overseas water affair, namely India River Channel Comprehensive Improvement Project with the bidding amount of 1.5 billion yuan. Amanishah, the main rive of Jaipur (a tourist attraction of India), has been seriously polluted by domestic and industrial sewage in recent years. Against this background, STEC, which once carried out flood prevention and pollution control work of many China’s rivers including Suzhou River, cooperated with TATA Group, which is the largest commercial group, to endow life to the river of life of Jaipur from the perspective of river basin regulation. STEC SUCG International Engineering Co., Ltd. will take the comprehensive control measures taking flood prevention, pollution control and ecology landscape into account based on guaranteeing flood prevention safety and removal of black-odor and recover the green landscapes and aquatic ecosystems on both banks of the river channel gradually by storage of rainwater resource so as to make Amanishah a green ecological corridor where people live in harmony with nature. It is full of rivers and river pollution control has been put on the agenda for a long time in India. Government of India has also proposed the aim of “making the country cleaner”. In 2014, more than 2 billion US dollars were allocated to support “river saving plan” in India. Amanishah River Channel Improvement Project is the “first project” of water affair that STEC wins the bidding in the overseas markets. In the face of India’s urgent demands and large market in water governance, STEC will continue to participate in river improvement projects of India as well, explore its new development opportunity and direction in India’s infrastructure construction market, further expand scopes of international market businesses and open up a new blue ocean market in other fields excluding rail transit, housing construction and energy resources etc.