After the 2010 floods that devastated parts of Pakistan, NBC
reported the following:
The cost of rebuilding Pakistan after its devastating floods
could exceed $10 to $15 billion…He said this was a rough estimate because an
assessment of the extent of the damage caused by the floods — which have
affected 20 million people — had yet to be carried out.
But the number gave an indication of the scale of the
reconstruction needed after the floods swept away roads, bridges and
telecommunications, and destroyed crops for food supplies, exports and cotton
for its vital textile industry.
"It will take at least five years," High
Commissioner Wajid Shamsul Hasan told Reuters in an interview. Asked about the
cost of rebuilding, he said, "I think more than $10 to $15 billion."
Here is the complete article from NBC.
Lord Neil Benjamin Gibson, in response to the recent
flooding Pakistan has been experiencing, a frightening near repeat of the
natural disaster events of 2010, commented, “Pakistan may not have to face the
same, high rebuilding costs as before. We can offer solutions that are
significantly less in construction costs, require much less time to build and
substantially more effective in meeting Pakistani housing needs.”
Lord Neil Gibson is a global businessman, humanitarian and
philanthropist who has retained enormous experience and success in designing,
coordinating and initiating projects that have and continue to benefit the less
fortunate in all walks of life.
One such project that has been of focus as of late is low
income, ISBU (Inter Model
Steel Building Units), or shipping container, housing project. Since the 1960s,
the United States military has benefited from discarded shipping containers as
structures for a variety of functions, ranging from miniature command units to
extensive, fully functioning hospitals.
Neil Gibson has proposed that these shipping containers be used in such
as manner as to house those who are homeless, such as the victims of the flood
disaster.
The containers, as a residential domicile,
will be painted with an exterior ceramic particle paint which blocks UV rays
and deflects up to 94% of all heat from the sun. The interior is painted with a
similar substance shielding anti-microbial forms of bacteria and fungus growth,
which also assists in maintaining a comfortable living temperature inside the
homes.
Additionally, ISBU structures minimally affect the
surrounding green matter, leaving the natural environment largely untouched. An
increased ISBU, or shipping container footprint used in this manner,
incidentally, also reduces the typical daily carbon footprint significantly by
comparison to more traditionally constructed housing structures.
The average build time for shipping container homes
is approximately 6 months or less, naturally contingent upon the specific
environment. Faster build times occur using pre-fabricated shipping container
homes.
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