Olympics to blame as builders shun £48m isles school bid

April 26th, 2007

LONDON’S successful Olympic bid risks sinking plans for a lavish new school at the other end of the UK.

Shetland Council is being forced to hunt for contractors to build its 48m new school after failing to receive enough bids for the project.

While the building is a hefty contract by Scottish, let alone Shetland, standards, building firms have decided that there is so much work to bid for around the London Olympics there is no point heading to the Northern Isles for work.

The new Anderson High School in Lerwick is supposed to house up to 1,100 pupils in a spectacular horseshoe-shaped building. More expensive than the original estimates for the Scottish Parliament at Holyrood, it was hoped it would have contractors rushing to take part in the project.

But the council has failed in its bid to attract a minimum of three potential contractors to enter into talks for the design and build of the school. It had hoped to squeeze the cost of the school by attracting enough bidders.

But the head of the council’s capital project team, Chris Medley, has said there is simply so much construction work available in the UK and Europe that even a lucrative contract like the school is of little interest to companies.

He said: “The companies we have spoken to have asked why they need to come to Shetland and take that sort of risk when they can get contracts as big as that, if not bigger, on the mainland with less risk.

“We did foresee that this was a possibility because of the Olympics and the general UK building boom. But we had hoped that there would nevertheless be enough interest.”

Medley added that the authority would be targeting larger companies on the UK mainland in an effort to attract them to the Northern Isles.

He said: “We’ll be going to them and asking just what would attract them to come and work on the school.”

But he ruled out a hefty increase in the projected price of the building as happened with the Scottish Parliament, which saw a tenfold price increase, in part due to the knock-on effect of the UK-wide building boom which forced up labour costs.

Medley, himself a former tradesman, said: “The fact that companies can basically pick and choose like this, does make you think a bit.

“Maybe a few of us should get the overalls back on and have a go at it ourselves.”

The estimated budget for the 2012 London Olympics has ballooned from initial estimates of 2.35bn to as much as a possible 9bn.

Related topics

- http://news.scotsman.com/topics.cfm?tid=856
http://news.scotsman.com/topics.cfm?tid=856
- http://news.scotsman.com/topics.cfm?tid=860
http://news.scotsman.com/topics.cfm?tid=860

Mapping out real impact of climate change

April 26th, 2007

ENVIRONMENTALISTS have long warned that climate change will bring heatwaves and monsoon-like rains, causing chaos across the world, but for the first time a map has been drawn up showing how the planet will be affected.

Swiss scientists used climate-modelling techniques to work out which areas will have the biggest increases and decreases in rainfall, and where the greatest temperature rises will occur.

They then produced an aggregate map showing those parts of the Earth that will face the worst problems.

The Amazon, sub-Saharan Africa and the polar regions will experience the most dramatic changes, according to the map, which is highlighted in New Scientist magazine today, while Europe, the United States and Australia will be affected less.

The map, broken down into squares measuring 230 miles by 230 miles showing the “climate change index”, is designed to show the best estimate of what the world will be like in 2100.

Dr Martin Wild, of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich and one of the authors of a scientific paper on the map, said: “In a quick overview, you see which places have been more affected than others.

“We tried to summarise the results in a way that’s easier for people not involved in climate research to understand … based on extreme events in precipitation and temperature.

“One of the interesting things here is probably that the nations which are already quite vulnerable from an economic point of view seem to face quite significant climate change.”

While Scotland is on the lower end of the scale, Dr Wild warned this was not a reason for complacency. “It may be a little bit below the average, but I think climate change is also significant in Scotland,” he said.

“And everything is more connected on a global scale. What happens in Scotland or Switzerland depends a lot of what’s happening in other countries. It cannot be said that ‘our part of the world is fine so we don’t need to worry’.”

The index shows how one-in-20-year heatwaves or rainstorms will become more common, with up to 19 extra extreme events - which would mean they could happen every year.

The map of the additional number of hottest years shows an ominous deep red across the world. According to the projections, based on scenarios developed by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, temperatures previously experienced only once every 20 years will also become annual events.

Tom Downing, of the Stockholm Environment Institute and author of The Atlas of Climate Change, said: “What we take now as a surprise will be normal. Places that become hotter will face different problems to places that become wetter, but the index implies that they have the same level of risk.”

Related topic

- http://news.scotsman.com/topics.cfm?tid=52
http://news.scotsman.com/topics.cfm?tid=52