McClatchy Washington Bureau
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/227/story/77681.html
Posted on Sun, Oct. 25, 2009
Cost of Afghanistan project soars, benefits exaggerated
Marisa Taylor | McClatchy Newspapers
last updated: October 26, 2009 10:38:07 AM
Only about 6 percent of Afghans are estimated to have electricity, and in his appearance with President Hamid Karzai east of
To some
Plagued by delays and rising costs, the project reveals how the
Far from representing Afghanistan's budding energy independence, the project also demonstrates how dependent the country remains on its neighbors and the U.S.
The Afghan government is expected to need up to $70 million in aid a year to truck in diesel fuel for the plant and at least another $60 million to maintain and repair it.
"It's a sophisticated power plant," said Guy Sands, an assistant inspector general who's overseeing an inspection of the plant for the special inspector general for
Meanwhile, the plant's construction costs have ballooned from about $240 million to $310 million, according to
In a written response to questions posed by McClatchy, the plant's two contractors, the Louis Berger Group of
"The original target dates were a 'best case' schedule," the statement said.
Critics say that the U.S. Agency for International Development, the government organization that's overseeing the project, should have foreseen many of the power plant's setbacks, but instead made matters worse by setting an unrealistic deadline from the outset, requiring the first phase to be done in five months.
Among Afghans, the power plant became known as "Karzai's winter coat" -- designed to keep him comfortably in power through the winter of 2009 -- and also a project that the Bush administration could hold up as a success before George W. Bush left office -- an achievement needed to counter reports of cost overruns and delays.
A
However, one high-level Afghan official told McClatchy that his government thinks that the region eventually will benefit from the power plant despite the high cost of the electricity.
Kohestani Hamayoon, technical deputy at Afghanistan's Ministry of Energy and Water, said a diesel-fueled plant had appeared to be the only alternative at the time because hydropower would have taken seven years to develop. It was only later that another option emerged: importing electricity from neighboring
"It is an urgent need for
The new plant will use about half as much fuel to produce electricity as an older 45-megawatt facility in
He declined to comment on the quality and cost of the two companies' work overall, however, referring a reporter to the
The plant, near a sprawling industrial park, is part of a five-year, $1.4 billion contract to build many of the roads and energy projects that now are under way in
Like Halliburton, which by some estimates took in more than $10 billion in Iraq reconstruction contracts, Louis Berger/Black & Veatch received a so-called "cost plus contract," which reimburses costs and pays a percentage of those expenses as a fee.
At the time,
Carl Petz, Black & Veatch's associate vice president for strategic marketing and communications, said the two companies worked closely with the USAID to manage the contracts, despite challenges that were "inevitable and often unpredictable" because of the serious and ongoing security problems in the war-torn country.
Even so, cost-plus contracts can encourage waste and overbilling, experts said. Auditors and investigators who scrutinized Halliburton's contracts over several years in Iraq, for instance, found millions of dollars in double-billing and inflated costs.
Republican Sen. Tom Coburn of Oklahoma, who's called for ending cost-plus contracts and has been critical of U.S. oversight of them, describes cost-plus contracts as "an open invitation to contractors to rip off the government."
"By allowing contractors to not have any skin in the game, we allow for billions of dollars to be wasted, because all the risk is born by the
According to
"When we're talking about numbers as high as $50 billion in contracts like we are in
Making matters worse,
The company was accused of overseeing poorly constructed roads, medical clinics and schools. Because of lackluster monitoring by the USAID and the company, a highway from
"Yet this was the (Bush) administration's big, big project," the
The two companies called the criticism of Louis Berger's projects inaccurate, pointing to the USAID's rating of their work as excellent.
So far, the
According to Louis Berger/Black & Veatch's estimates, the companies have billed the
According to the USAID, Louis Berger/Black & Veatch have completed six projects three years into the joint contract, at a total of almost $54 million, or less than 5 percent of the total contract's value.
Projects in the contract overseen by the companies, according to the USAID, include:
-- A $11.9 million study of the viability of using a natural gas field to fuel a 100-megawatt power plant, which was canceled in June because of "poor performance" by the subcontractor, according to the USAID, after the government had paid $7 million. The two companies disputed the allegation that the study was canceled for poor performance, saying the government acted for "its own convenience" and not for cause.
-- A $50 million restoration of the Kajaki dam, which was built more than 50 years ago in
In its response to McClatchy's questions about its projects, Louis Berger/Black & Veatch said it planned to complete the projects required under the five-year contract.
However, the companies said that major security problems had understandably and severely hampered several of their projects. Since Louis Berger began its work in the region, 200 workers have been killed and 300 wounded, a vast majority of them security subcontractors.
"The Taliban and insurgents have made significant efforts to put an end to our projects, and we continue to make progress throughout
They blamed the power plant delays on the subcontractor, which they contended failed "to adhere to its contractual obligations."
Symbion Power, the subcontractor, denies being responsible. R. Scott Greathead, a lawyer for the U.S.-based company, accused Louis Berger/Black & Veatch of "serious" management mistakes.
The Office of the Special Inspector General for
Separately, the special inspector general's office, an independent government watchdog that was set up a year ago to monitor contracts in
DiNunzio, a 24-year FBI agent and certified public accountant, is overseeing the hiring of 12 additional criminal investigators by the end of the year. The 10 agents currently assigned to criminal investigations have about 40 investigations ongoing.
Louis Berger/Black & Veatch said they were working with
Scott "Max" Anthony Walker, who worked for the companies as a security coordinator until he was fired in June, is charged with soliciting at least $250,000 in kickbacks along with Bryan Lee Burrows, a Kabul-based consultant and major in the
In a Skype chat, Burrows told the subcontractor that he could help it win a security contract, according to court records. "I have a good friend on the inside on the committee that can swing this whole thing your way," the federal criminal complaint says Burrows told the subcontractor.
Burrows also told the subcontractor that his friend wanted 1.5 percent of the contract's value in order to steer the deal, the complaint says. He added, "As you know, everything in
Burrows has pleaded guilty.
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Responses of Louis Berger/Black & Veatch to McClatchy
Response of USAID Afghanistan to McClatchy
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