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The magnitude 6.2 earthquake that rocked West Sumatra on 25 February 2022 caused heavy damage to thousands of houses and buildings in the province and triggered landslides that disconnected access to affected areas as several critical roads were rendered impassable. The difficulty in delivering food aid has led to starvation, threatening the lives of thousands of residents.
The SMEC donation will benefit close to 300 families or around 1,500 individuals living in two of the worst-hit areas, the Kajai Village and Simpang Timbo Abu Village. The beneficiaries have remained in evacuation shelters months after the disaster struck due to the challenges in helping them to relocate or rebuild their homes. The residents in these villages rely mainly on agriculture to make a living and the damage caused by the earthquake and landslides has left them in urgent need of assistance.
West Pasaman is a nine-hour drive from Pekanbaru City, one of the project sites of the Metropolitan Sanitation Management Investment Project (MSMIP) where SMEC is engaged as the Project Implementation Support Consultant. This is the second time SMEC has responded to help earthquake victims in Indonesia; the first was in the wake of the Central Sulawesi earthquake in 2018.
Photo caption: Habibie Razak, Regional Manager SMEC Indonesia (second from right), is shown handing over the SMEC donation to Amirul Muttaqin and Mujiman of HSI Peduli (first and second from left, respectively) at the SMEC office in Jakarta. Also in the photo is Febrianto, SMEC CSR Representative Indonesia.
The Tbilisi Development Fund has engaged SMEC to develop the Dighomi floodplain rehabilitation strategy. The Dighomi Floodplain is an area of special conservation interest, which includes riparian forest, protected Otter habitat and other unique flora and fauna ecosystems that have been assessed as critical by the International Finance Corporate Performance Standard.
SMEC has been contracted by Electricidade De Timor-Leste (EDTL) for the role of Project Supervision Consultants for the Power Distribution Modernisation Project in Timor-Leste. Supported by a loan from the Asian Development Bank (ADB), the project aims to assist EDTL in modernising the country’s power distribution system and strengthening institutional capacity.
Geotechnics will play a key role in helping our society achieve a safe, prosperous and sustainable future. Recent droughts have resulted in a need for more dam design and construction. Recent rainfall has resulted in extensive slop failures impacting our roads, rail and urban infrastructure. Energy transformation is driving large scale solar, wind and pumped hydro construction. These projects will all require geotechnical input to future plan for our communities.
Richard Parsons, one of SMEC’s key leaders in Social Value and Engagement is presenting on their technical paper ‘Considering Social Impact Assessment from a public interest perspective - some critical questions’ at the Environmental Institute of Australia and New Zealand 2023 Impact Assessment Symposium in Canberra.