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2008
2009
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2011
2012
Ground Broken for the Start of the Palisadoes Shoreline Rehabilitation and Protection Project

TEAMWORK: (L-R) Deputy Project Manager of China Harbour Engineering Company, Yanming Xiao; Minister of Transport and Works, the Hon. Mike Henry; Chief Executive Officer of the National Works Agency, Patrick Wong; Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Transport and Works, Dr. Alwin Hales; Project Manager at the National Works Agency, George Knight; and General Manager of China Harbour Engineering Company, Zhong Dong Tang, join forces to commence work on the Palisadoes Shoreline.
In light of
persistent natural hazards and disasters which have damaged
the Palisadoes Peninsula,
causing significant environmental and infrastructural challenges, the Ministry
of Transport and Works, in collaboration with the National Works Agency and the
China Harbour Engineering Company, has broken ground for the commencement of the
Palisadoes Shoreline Rehabilitation and Protection Project. Chief Executive
Officer at the National Works Agency (NWA), Patrick Wong, underscores the
importance of the project to Kingston
and its environs. “The Palisadoes Shoreline protects access to the
Norman Manley
International Airport, to
the people of Port Royal; it protects the
Kingston shoreline, Newport East and West etc. This is a project of
national importance. Thorough analysis was carried out by all the stakeholders
and upon completion we will be able to withstand a category 4 or 5 hurricane.”

Minister of Transport and Works, the Hon. Mike Henry, operates the forklift to officially begin work on the Palisadoes Shoreline.
In addition to the protection of the shoreline, the project
will also include:
- The widening of 4 kilometers of roadway to and from the airport
- The road will be raised to 3.2 metres above sea level in
anticipation of future development of Port Royal
- A 10 metre wide boardwalk will be constructed on the Harbour
side of the Palisadoes shoreline where persons can go jogging and cycling, as
well as lay-by with benches for fishing
- The power-grid from Harbour
View to Port Royal will be underground in order
to react effectively to storms and hurricanes.

Speaking at the ground
breaking ceremony, Transport and Works Minister, Mike Henry, said that the
rehabilitation and protection of the Palisadoes shoreline is part of the
Ministry’s multi-modal plan for the transportation sector. He emphasized that
the Kingston Harbour
is the seventh largest Harbour in the world, and is a critical link in the
development of Port Royal into a terminal for
cruise ships, as this presents glorious economic opportunities to the country.
He said that Jamaica recently
accommodated the Zim Antwerp, the
largest cargo ship in the world (which is too big to enter the New York Harbour).

Minister Henry added that
despite the scope of work to be carried out, the protection of the environment
is also of critical importance, and said that the team will be working closely
with the National Environment and Planning Agency (NEPA) to ensure that the
marine environment is protected.
The project is expected to
last two years, and will be completed at a cost of just over US$65 million.
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