NTension had been building locally for months,
but being a butt for jeers and sarcasm must still have come as
a shock to Marine Transport Department Technical and Planning
Director Vilawan Siringampen. She and her team of bespectacled
engineers from Bangkok had come to Muang Phuket School in Rawai
the afternoon of June 5 to “exchange views” on Phase II of her
department’s Chalong Marina project.
After more than five hours of long-winded explanation and back-peddling
by the consulting engineers – whose problems were compounded by
inept microphone technique – the local people, NGO representatives
and elected officials in attendance were clearly out of patience.
The most animated were sunburnt, long-tail boatmen: “Speak southern
dialect if you must speak, but get it over with!” said one from
the back of the room whose comments elicited cheers.
The three competing plans
presented by the Marine Transportation Office, left and
bottom, were met with jeers from the crowd during a town-hall
style meeting.
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“I’m here to offer my opinion on this project
and you professors will please stay put – we need no more of your
explanations,” said an elected tambon official. His gibe was greeted
by wild applause. In fact, applause was wholly for speakers who
derided the project, now well into Phase I of construction.
So, Planning Director Vilawan, better-spoken than her subordinates,
briefly emphasized the Transport Ministry’s desire to meet the
people’s needs; noted that the project as outlined during the
meeting had been honestly arrived at and was a good one, considering
both budgetary and environmental constraints.
She left the podium – appearing perplexed amid the hubbub. Few
heeded her remarks; all were talking among themselves.
Also caught in the middle was Phuket Provincial Administration
Organization (OrBorJor) President Anchalee Wanich Thepabutr, the
island’s highest elected official. The OrBorJor has signed on
to finance part of the proposed marina’s infrastructure and will
manage the completed project. She is, in effect, the project’s
final arbiter. Just before the meeting’s end, K. Anchalee addressed
her anxious constituents.
University of California at Los Angeles-educated, K. Anchalee
was for eight years Phuket’s sole MP. As a senior member of the
Democrat Party, she was awarded one of the coveted “party-list”
seats in the 2000 election and served on the party’s Management
Committee. She is regarded by many as the island’s most powerful
political figure.
Seafarer Divers owner Guy
“Charlie” Lidureau also circulated a new plan, right, that
he says will better protect the marina from swells and provide
more parking.
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With the Democrats in a strong position to
lead the next government, and with a Cabinet post perhaps at hand
– K. Anchalee can have no interest in projects that cause dissension
or cast her OrBorJor administration in the role of oppressor.
“Nothing is being pushed on anyone. We’re here to exchange views.
This is a democratic system we live in,” she said in her peculiarly
refined brand of southern dialect. “We have the right to [tell
the government] what we think....”
The substance of what the roughly 130 persons in attendance thought
was that the project is wrong: too small and ill-laid out for
a proper yacht marina; damaging to the environment; and providing
nothing for small operators, save additional hassle and expense.
In a nutshell, the Marine Transport Department and its consulting
firms want to construct around the southern half of Chalong pier
a 210-slip yacht harbor: 66 slips for boats up to 12 meters; 82
for boats up to 16m; 36 for vessels up to 20m; 19 for those up
to 30m; and seven for those up to 50m.
Phase 1, costing 70 million baht and slated for completion September
30 after 340 days of construction, involves making only 44 slips
(30 x 12m; 8 x 16m; 4 x 20m; 1 x 30m; 1 x 50m).
It also involves installation of most infrastructure:
dredging a boat basin; marker towers to aid navigation; freshwater
tanks; plumbing; electricity (the slips will have power outlets
for re-charging batteries, etc); a fueling and water station;
and a single-story maintenance building. There is also a new onshore,
underground sewage treatment facility that empties into the klong
running behind the bars and beachside restaurants before discharging
in- to the still, shallow seawater near Kan Eng 2 restaurant.
During Phase 2, budgeted at 300 million baht, a multi-purpose
building on the pier to house administration, immigration and
customs services will be built; the boat basin expanded and a
boat channel dredged; and 166 slips added. Plumbing and electricity
will be appropriately enhanced – and two breakwaters, “made of
large boulders, easily and cheaply sourced in Phuket” put on the
south and southeast sides of the pier.
The riprap would have a combined length of 1,300 meters and the
whole project would cover more than half a square kilometer.
Budget for the fueling station and water tanks comes from the
OrBorJor; the remainder from the Ministry of Transport. Two variations
on the basic plan were offered at the June 5 meeting. All looked
pretty good on paper.
Best of all, the project would generate a 24% “economic return”
and pay for itself within five years. “It’s certainly something
the government should undertake,” the consultants wrote.
The project was initiated in 2004, when the Marine Transport Department
signed contracts with three companies – Golden Plan, Sea Spectrum
and STS Engineering and Consultants – to engineer marinas in four
places: two in the Gulf of Thailand and two on the Andaman coast.
The companies were also charged with surveying the likeliest spots
for construction. Unfortunately, in the Marine Transport report
the three firms are referred to as an undifferentiated unit, so
it is impossible to say who does what.
A key word is “marina”, that is, a port for
pleasure craft. Chalong Bay, it must be recalled, is a port not
only for yachts, but also for small craft of various types: commercial
fishing boats; long-tail boats that transport cargo and passengers
to off-shore islands, and island-shuttle speedboats. The marina
envisioned offers little to owners of such vessels. Indeed it
was engineered, according to the consulting report, solely for
pleasure craft.
But according to Tambon Rawai Moo 3 (Koh Lone Island) administrative
organization (OrBorTor) member Siwakorn “Ibrahim” Chaipakdee,
such craft are clearly a minority of those using the bay at any
given time.
The majority numbers roughly 100 long-tails; 80 locally-owned
fishing and diving boats; 50 foreign-owned dive and tour boats;
and 200 speedboats.
In his opinion, while the operators of all the boats might welcome
appropriate port facilities only the large foreign-owned dive
boats would benefit from the proposed marina.
As it happens, the dive boat owners themselves see little in the
plan. Even yachtsmen who moor in Chalong Bay are not keen on it.
So how was the plan arrived at? Not by talking with those who
use the bay. Instead, the consultants’ report cites surveys, studies
and mathematical models – the latter of prime importance – as
the basis. Some information may have been flawed: dubious assertions
are presented as fact.
For example: “In terms of natural beauty, and the quality of its
unspoiled environment, number one in popularity on the Gulf of
Thailand is Pattaya,” it notes, “followed by Koh Samui [and adjacent
islands] and Koh Chang in Trat province….”
The consultants also insist that murky Chalong Bay – with its
bottom of richly varied gunk, its several prawn farms and hundreds
of boats – is virtually unpolluted. The report is notably silent
regarding how statistical gathering was carried out.
It was determined, however, that, as far as marine-borne tourism
is concerned, “environmental considerations outweigh anything
on the engineering side in choosing a site for the project.”
Indeed, muddled attempts to protect the environment handicapped
every phase of the engineering, as the consultants readily admitted
during the June 5 meeting. Another consideration was that the
marina “must not compete with private sector-owned facilities”.
On the important question of how the project would effect water
flow in the bay – and the resulting impact on the environment
– the report is vague. It references mathematical modeling at
various scales, including the smallest at 50m x 50m covering the
project site, but goes on to compare modeling results against
actual measurements at a site in Krabi – not Chalong. From the
report, there is no way to discern which of the three consultants
carried out the modeling, nor how it was actually conducted.
Although many aspects of the project have been criticized by locals,
the part that evokes
perhaps the greatest contempt is the siting of the southern breakwater.
“Our studies show that Chalong Bay’s protection from wind and
waves is more or less perfect,” the consultants wrote. “In considering
wave action over the last 50 years, we see that it is necessary
only to construct breakwaters at the south and southeast.” To
minimize environmental impact on the bay, which flushes to the
south, the boat channel between the breakwaters is angled so that
currents will be diverted as little as possible.
“Analysis shows that the breakwaters’ impact on currents will
be quite small, hardly different from having no breakwater,” wrote
the consultants. In this, their opponents agree. “It doesn’t happen
much, but it happens every year that a strong swell comes from
the south,” said OrBorTor Rawai’s Siwakorn, who has three fishing
boats in the bay.
“If your boat is tied up at a mooring there’s no harm done – the
boat turns on its mooring with nothing to beat against. But for
boats berthed in slips, the case is different: they need protection
from the swells – otherwise they’ll bang against the floating
docks and be damaged; and some of these yachts cost millions of
dollars. But the southern breakwater’s siting allows waves to
enter the marina, which is bound to cause damage.”
Seafarer Divers owner Guy “Charlie” Lidureau, who has led the
foreign community’s opposition to the proposal, was more specific:
“In winter, there are two-meter swells; this channel opens to
the south – which is where the waves come from!” he observed witheringly.
Lidureau insists, based on 28 years’ experience operating out
of Chalong Bay, that the southern breakwater is worse than useless:
that it will funnel waves onto the beach, destroying embankments
south of the pier. He also notes the proposed marina is far too
small – it should have 800 - 1,200 berths “because 300 to 400
boats are already using the bay” and many operators would like
berths.
“All hotels would be interested in a good marina,” he asserted,
noting how current shortcomings at the pier cause tie-ups that
play havoc with scheduling. He drew up a plan proposing breakwaters
be paved over, connected to the shore, and broad enough for cars
to park.
As those who use it know, the current pier area is heavily congested.
There is insufficient parking and only one narrow access road.
It has no speedboat ramps, and landings low enough for speedboats
and long-tails to use are fixed, instead of reacting with the
tide: they are thus largely useless, and in fact dangerous, as
the lower stairs are covered with slimy, slippery weeds from constant
immersion in seawater.
A particular sore point is the existing filling station: Lidureau’s
22-meter, 60-ton dive boat, Andaman Seafarer takes more than three
hours to load a full 3,800-liter tank of fuel and its 7,000-liter
water tank takes four to six hours to load, according to Lidureau.
Long queues are the norm, moreover, because the filling station
pier is too small.
To rectify these and other shortcomings, Lidureau drew up a plan
of his own, resiting the channel entrance to the north and staggering
the breakwaters to ensure quiet seas in the marina. The plan,
which he passed round to some 80 persons both in government and
in the private sector, engaged discussion and galvanized opposition
by the latter. An informal meeting he arranged June 4 was attended
by 22 senior provincial officials and tour boat operators.
“If I am made marketing manager of the Thai Dive Association,
as I expect, we shall be even more active,” he said.
But reaction was so hostile during the June 5 meeting from local
Thais – that is, from voters – the marina may be stillborn in
whatever shape: “It seems the information we’ve heard [from the
consultants] was unreliable,” said OrBorJor president K. Anchalee.
She suggested that re-drawing the plans may be necessary and would
require a new budget. That, of course, will depend on a new government.
So the project completion date of Phase II is anybody’s guess.
In the meantime, one can only wonder how the 44 berths and attendant
facilities of the 70-million-baht Phase I will fare without a
breakwater.