An elevated section of HCM City’s Ben Thanh-Suoi Tien metro line runs along the Ha Noi Highway. — VNA/VNS Photo Manh Linh
Progress on the metro continues, but a tax dispute has left some necessary equipment languishing at port, Le Nguyen Minh Quang, head of the HCM City Management Authority for Urban Railways told a press briefing on Friday.
The elevated sections of the Ben Thanh-Suoi Tien metro line from Ba Son terminal to Long Binh maintenance depot will install tracks next month, Quang said. Nearly 70 per cent of the metro’s elevated sections have been completed, according to Quang. He added that the installation of tracks would be carried out on the completed sections simultaneously with the building of the uncompleted ones.
Equipment used for metro track installation, however, is now “stuck” at port, he added.
He said that previously the Ministry of Finance had announced a zero per cent tax rate on imported equipment and goods used for the construction of the metro, but recently it has reconsidered this tax policy, so a new shipment of equipment remains in its port of entry.
“The HCM City People’s Committee has worked with the city’s Customs Department and the General Department of Customs to find a solution to the problem so that the construction schedule will stay on track,” he said.
According to Duong Huu Hoa, director of the Metro Line 1 project, Japanese contractors are working on the train for the city’s first metro line and will send it to Viet Nam by October next year for early testing.
He said he has sought the opinions of foreign experts on the construction of the Dien Bien Phu flyover, one of the five of its kind on the metro route, to minimize the impact on traffic.
The other four overpasses are being built above the Ha Noi Highway, the Sai Gon River, the Rach Chiec Canal and Van Thanh Canal.
Funding shortage
Regarding the shortage of ODA capital for the metro, Quang said last month that the city had to withdraw VND500 billion (US$22 million) from its budget to pay debts to contractors, but that this could not be considered a long-term solution.
“This is just a temporary solution as in reality the city needs VND500-600 billion a month to pay the contractors,” he said.
The city is looking forward to receiving ODA capital from the central budget in the medium term from 2016 to 2020 to pay for consulting companies and contractors this year, he said.
The Ben Thanh-Suoi Tien metro, on which construction began in August 2012, is valued at $2.49 billion.
The nearly 20-km metro, connecting HCM City’s District 1 and Binh Duong Province’s Di An District, is expected to be operational in 2020. — VNS