In Fiji engineers and assessors are counting the cost of the damage to roads and infrastructure caused by Cyclone Winston.
Transcript
In Fiji engineers and assessors are counting the cost of the damage to roads and infrastructure caused by Cyclone Winston.
Repairs to the country's roads alone are estimated at nearly 64 million US dollars.
Sally Round reports:
The total damage bill is still being counted and government departments and agencies have been told to have their assessments in by the end of the week. Damage to Fiji's roads was severe and many are still only suitable for four-wheel-drives with long detours in place some areas. Aram Goes from the Fiji Road Authority says repairs could take up to three years to complete.
ARAM GOES: "It ranges from coastal damage and washouts of jetty causeways, coastal roads completely undermined and washed out, in the order we estimate at the moment of up to 50 kilometres of coastline roading infrastructure damage and up to five major jetty causeways affected."
Mr Goes says the country's newly upgraded roads fared well during the cyclone and he says it's worth spending on engineering to intense cyclone standards.
ARAM GOES: "We definitely would like to engineer betterment into the replacement of infrastructure and in some cases there would be merit in provision of additional strengthening, rock armouring, coastal protection and the like. There'll be some tough decisions to be made by government and other funding agencies regarding where and how monies wil be allocated."
The Fiji Sugar Corporation's executive chair, Abdul Khan, says thought will have to go into whether at least one of Fiji's badly damaged sugar mills is completely rebuilt. He says sugar production will be down by half this year because most of Viti Levu's crop was ruined and all the island's mills need repairs.
ABDUL KHAN: "The Rarawai mill has had some substantial structural damage but reparable. The worst of all is the Penang mill. That mill is the one that's critical for us at the moment and we're looking at what do we do - whether we repair or whether we look at building a new mill. We've just got to do the economic exercise so we do the right thing."
Mr Khan says it's important to learn from the disaster and rebuild more robustly. The director of Fiji's National Disaster Management Office, Akapusi Tuifagalele, says there is an onus now on the country to rebuild in a fashion to withstand future intense storms.
AKAPUSI TUIFAGALELE: "One of the issues that has come up now is to actually look at that category five tropical cyclone engineering standards seriously. Tropical Cyclone Winston was something beyond our imagination and yes the government is actually aware of the need to raise the level of standard of housing here to cat five."
Meanwhile Fiji's opposition parties say Parliament must meet without delay to discuss the crisis caused by Cyclone Winston. They say the government must report to the people the extent of the damage and how much Fiji will need to raise to pay for rebuilding. The donor nations they say are entitled to be told about the government's plans for managing the crisis and the large flow of aid.
To embed this content on your own webpage, cut and paste the following:
See terms of use.