Speaking at a talk programme on
‘Urban challenges and the role of private sector in Nepal’, they said that the
new urban areas should be developed in a planned manner and should be equipped
with the modern facilities.
The urban population makes up 42
per cent of the total population after government announced new municipalities
in the last couple of years.
The country has 217
municipalities now.
But, they can generate only 27
per cent revenue for their total expenditure.
Executive member of the National
Reconstruction Authority (NRA) Kishor Thapa, who is also former secretary of
the Urban Development Ministry, said, “All the municipalities are facing
problems of low revenue, absence of resources and poor capacity. They don’t
have land use and management policy. Severe energy crisis has dealt another
setback to the urban development.”
According to Thapa, cities are
the centre for civilization, development and political affairs.
Experts said that the absence of
elected local bodies was another setback to the recently developed urban
centres.
“We are facing unplanned and
unregulated urban growth,” said Thapa.
Former vice-chairman of the
National Planning Commission and president of Nepal Institute for Urban and
Regional Studies (NIURS) Dr. Jagadish Chandra Pokharel said that urbanization
was a force for growth through social and economic transformation.
“The government's decision to
develop 10 modern cities along the Mid-Hill Highway will create opportunities
for engineers, architects and planners,” he said.
He stated that the urban planning
should be focused on managing the space as the open spaces had been rapidly
shrunk in cities.
Chair of Urban Development
Committee at the Federation of Nepalese Chambers of Commerce and Industry
(FNCCI) Om Rajbhandary demanded that the country should devise an urban
development policy at the earliest.
“Even the capital and other
sub-metropolitan cities lack basic facilities such as drinking water,
sanitation and good environment,” he said.
He said that the private sector
was supporting people in the cities with drinking water, entertainment, health
and sanitation facilities.
According to Rajbhandary,
increasing urban areas provide good opportunities for the investors as there
were demands for rental housing and other infrastructure where the private
sector had an important role to play.
Former planner Suresh Prakash
Acharya said that although the banks and financial institutions provide
financing for the investment in the cities, they should not accept property
that is at risk as collateral.
The talk programme was jointly
organized by the FNCCI and NIURS.
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