Aerial view: The Santiago de Guayaquil project will eventually benefit 1.5 million inhabitants |
As the main hub of social and economic development, with three million inhabitants, Guayaquil is one considered one of the most important cities in Ecuador.
The sanitary sewerage system of the city of Guayaquil consists of 3,950 km of collectors and 61 pumping stations of wastewater, which provide coverage in excess of 90% of the service area. The city also has a separate sanitary sewer system and rainwater drainage; however, these sanitary sewage networks discharge into the Daule-Guayas Rivers.
During the dry season, a total of 280,000 m3/day of wastewater is generated, increasing to 350,000 m3/day during the rainy season.
The proposed project will benefit a population of 1.5 million inhabitants of the southern sector of the city of Guayaquil, and in particular, the inhabitants of the sectors called Isla Trinitaria, Guamo and Suburbio Oeste, where the sewage system will be rehabilitated and home connections will be installed. To finance this large work, a line of credit was requested from the World Bank and European Investment Bank for USD$102.5 million, with a contribution of USD$18 million, which is financed with funds from the Municipal Water and Sewage Company of Guayaquil EMAPAG EP, whose role is to control the execution of contracts in order to meet the schedule, cost and quality of the works.
The project is composed of three main components.
- Intra-home connections. The south of Guayaquil has 100% coverage of the Sanitary Sewage service and 82% of connectivity. This component aims to achieve 100% of connectivity by installing an approximate 30,000 new intra-household sanitary connections.
- Rehabilitation of the sanitary sewer La Chala. The La Chala basin, which represents approximately 65,000 families, currently has a poor sanitary sewer system with high levels of infiltration, will rehabilitate an approximate 40 km of collectors.
- The Treatment Plant Las Esclusas and their Complementary Components. Currently wastewater from the center and south of Guayaquil is transported to a preliminary treatment plant called La Pradera.
This component of the project will transform this plant into a pumping station that will drive the wastewater through a tunnel led drive line, one of the components of the Treatment Plant Las Esclusas.
Currently under construction, the Las Esclusas project has faced several challenges, according to José Luis Santos, general manager of utility Emapag-ep.