China Readies $46 Billion for Pak Trade Route: WSJ

If PML-N able to execute this project successfully, it will turn the dynamics and very fabric of this whole region by integration of South Asia,Central Asia and China. Gwadar would eventually outperform Dubai , Chah Bahar, Bandar Abbas, Port Oman, Mumbai and Port of Hong Kong.

China Readies $46 Billion for Pakistan Trade Route

Beijing plans to pour $46 billion into infrastructure projects, open new trade routes

ENLARGE
A cornerstone of the Chinese investment project will be to develop the Pakistani port of Gwadar, on the doorstep of the Middle East.PHOTO: XINHUA/ZUMA PRESS

By SAEED SHAH in Islamabad and
JEREMY PAGE in Beijing

Updated April 16, 2015 10:58 p.m.

Chinese President Xi Jinping is set to unveil a $46 billion infrastructure spending plan in Pakistan that is a centerpiece of Beijing’s ambitions to open new trade and transport routes across Asia and challenge the U.S. as the dominant regional power.

The plan, known as the China Pakistan Economic Corridor, draws on a newly expansive Chinese foreign policy and pressing economic and security concerns at home for Mr. Xi, who is expected to arrive in Pakistan on Monday. Many details had yet to be announced publicly.

**“This is going to be a game-changer for Pakistan,” said Ahsan Iqbal, Pakistan’s planning minister, who said his country could link China with markets in Central Asia and South Asia.
**

“If we become the bridge between these three engines of growth, we will be able to carve out a large economic bloc of about 3 billion living in this part of the world…nearly half the planet.”

Beijing’s primary concern is that instability in neighboring Pakistan and Afghanistan is spilling into China’s predominantly Muslim northwest, and could grow worse with the withdrawal of U.S. troops from the region.

China sees a historic opportunity to redraw the geopolitical map by succeeding where the U.S. has largely failed, building critical infrastructure that could kick-start economic growth and open new trade routes between China and Central and South Asia. A cornerstone of the project will be to develop the Pakistani port of Gwadar, a warm-water port run by the Chinese on the doorstep of the Middle East.

‘If ‘One Belt, One Road’ is like a symphony involving and benefiting every country, then construction of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor is the sweet melody of the symphony’s first movement.’
—Wang Yi, China’s foreign minister

If realized, the plan would be China’s biggest splurge on economic development in another country to date. It aims over 15 years to create a 2,000-mile economic corridor between Gwadar and northwest China, with roads, rail links and pipelines crossing Pakistan.

The network ultimately will link to other countries as well, potentially creating a regional trading boom, Pakistani and Chinese officials say.

The Pakistan program has been described by Chinese officials as the “flagship project” of a broader policy, “One Belt, One Road,” which seeks to physically connect China to its markets in Asia, Europe and beyond.

“If ‘One Belt, One Road’ is like a symphony involving and benefiting every country, then construction of the China Pakistan Economic Corridor is the sweet melody of the symphony’s first movement,” Wang Yi, China’s foreign minister said during a visit to Pakistan in February.

Terrorism-plagued Pakistan is a risky bet for Beijing, however. During the Chinese president’s coming visit, Islamabad is set to announce that it will raise a special security force of thousands to protect the Chinese workers and engineers who will flood into Pakistan to carry out the work alongside locals, Pakistani officials said.

**The largest part of the project would provide electricity to energy-starved Pakistan, based mostly on building new coal-fired power plants.

**The country is beset by hours of daily scheduled power cuts because of a lack of supply, shutting down industry and making life miserable in homes—a major reason for the election in 2013 of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, who promised to solve the electricity crisis.

The plans envisage adding** 10,400 megawatts of electricity at a cost of $15.5 billion by 2018. If those projects deliver, plugging the electricity deficit, Mr. Sharif would be able to go into the 2018 election saying he has lived up to his pledge.
**

After 2018, adding a further** 6,600 megawatts is outlined—at a cost of an additional $18.3 billion****—that in cumulative total would double Pakistan’s current electricity output**.

The plan has gained political momentum—and new funding sources—since Mr. Xi outlined his vision to build modern-day equivalents of the** ancient Silk Road between East and West.**
Despite the more-muscular Chinese ambitions, U.S. officials say the new economic strategy complements Washington’s vision for the region.

“We think there’s a great amount of potential complementarity between a China-Pakistan infrastructure corridor and the interests we’ve talked about in South and Central Asia for some time,” said a State Department official. The U.S. and China “have coincident interests in seeing a stable, peaceful and prosperous Pakistan.”

ENLARGE

Still, Beijing’s plan would dwarf the multibillion-dollar U.S. assistance program in recent years for Pakistan. Under the 2009 Kerry-Lugar-Berman Act, the U.S. poured more than $5 billion in aid to Pakistan between 2010 and 2014, including $2 billion on infrastructure, some of which is still being spent. In the energy sector, the U.S. program is adding some 1,500 megawatts of generating capacity.

Unlike the U.S. approach of giving traditional development aid, which some say has yielded only incremental improvements to Pakistani infrastructure, most of the Chinese money would be spent on a commercial basis, through investments or loans.

Andrew Small, author of “The China-Pakistan Axis: Asia’s New Geopolitics,” said China was reacting to the perceived failure of Western aid to make a significant difference to Pakistan. “The Chinese response is that you haven’t done it on a large enough scale,” Mr. Small said. “They’re saying that it is only by doing it on this kind of big-bang scale that you’re going to have the transformative economic effect that Pakistan needs.”

Gwadar, operated by a state-run Chinese firm, is set to begin commercial operations this year, and one of the deals to be signed by the Chinese president while in Pakistan is a final agreement on building a new international airport there, Pakistani officials said.

Mr. Small said propping up Pakistan economically furthers China’s regional competition with India. China sees Pakistan as a strategic counterweight to India. Conversely, "]the U.S. is backing India](http://www.wsj.com/articles/[http://www.wsj.com/articles/obamas-appearance-at-indias-republic-day-sends-message-to-china-1422245039), which President Barack Obama visited in January, as a counterweight to China, despite Washington’s long relationship with Islamabad.

The U.S. aid program in Pakistan is winding down, while American forces have largely pulled out of Afghanistan, where China is trying to initiate peace talks between Afghan President Ashraf Ghani’s government in Kabul and the Taliban insurgents.

Beijing fears that without its intervention, chaos, extremism and economic stagnation in Pakistan and Afghanistan will blow across into its bordering northwestern region of Xinjiang, which has a large Muslim population. China has grown increasingly concerned in the past two years about an surge in jihadist and separatist violence in Xinjiang.

Northwest China is far from the Chinese coast, and shipping goods to and from there through Pakistan would potentially be quicker and cheaper than using any Chinese port, cutting costs and time in half, according to Pakistani calculations.

**Beyond the economics of the Pakistan corridor are strategic advantages: China is concerned that too much of its trade depends on the narrow sea channel of the Strait of Malacca, analysts said. In the event of a future war in Asia, the Strait of Malacca could be blockaded by the U.S. Navy or another competing power. Pakistan would provide an alternative land route for Chinese trade.
**

During his visit, Mr. Xi will sign off on billions of dollars worth of the more-advanced projects in the corridor project, allowing the start of groundwork, Pakistani officials said. In addition the economic corridor framework, more than $10 billion in other new Chinese infrastructure projects for Pakistan are in the works.

Frederick Starr, a professor at Johns Hopkins University and an expert on Central Asia, said the new corridor has potential to link Europe to China through Central Asia and the Caucasus, and reach onward through Pakistan and India to Southeast Asia, a route that he said “will in 30 years be more important even than China’s [current] route to the West.”

Write to Saeed Shah at [EMAIL=“[email protected]”][email protected] and Jeremy Page at [EMAIL=“[email protected]”][email protected]

http://www.wsj.com/articles/china-to-unveil-billions-of-dollars-in-pakistan-investment-1429214705#livefyre-comment

Re: China Readies $46 Billion for Pak Trade Route: WSJ

Re: China Readies $46 Billion for Pak Trade Route: WSJ

Allah Nawaz shareef ki Khair karay aur Shareefon kay shar say bachaiay
Otherwise after another six decades sons/daughters of my grand children will know
Shaheed e Millat , Liaqat Ali Khan , Shaheed awal

Re: China Readies $46 Billion for Pak Trade Route: WSJ

Best of luck to the government to execute this project…

Re: China Readies $46 Billion for Pak Trade Route: WSJ

Is this true?

Pakistan shale gas, oil reserves estimated at 105 TCF, 9.1bn barrel, Senate told

Re: China Readies $46 Billion for Pak Trade Route: WSJ

I think we should stay away from shale oil, it causing big problems in US, there are many environmental side effects many of which will not be known immediately.

Re: China Readies $46 Billion for Pak Trade Route: WSJ

Didn’t Pakistan sign MOUs right after the elections in 2013 with all the dhoom dhamala?

Time to actually get to work like musharraf made gawadar unlike tamasha akin to propaganda electrification of villages that used to happen in the nineties in bb govt.

Re: China Readies $46 Billion for Pak Trade Route: WSJ

Rout of the honorable President of China is few yards of my home and we see great preparation but due to tight security we shall be not able to see him , however
Welcome
this visit can be a real game changer for Pakistan

Re: China Readies $46 Billion for Pak Trade Route: WSJ

Cyril Almeida of Dawn is skeptical,

Chinese whispers - Pakistan - DAWN.COM

Re: China Readies $46 Billion for Pak Trade Route: WSJ

Hes right about the Baloch insurgents. They would go out of their way to wreck the entire thing.

Shhh پٹواریوں کا بہنوئ پاکستان آ رہا ہے کوئی رنگ میں بھنگ ڈال کر جمہوریت کو خطرے لاحق نا کرے.

Re: China Readies $46 Billion for Pak Trade Route: WSJ

Not only Balochs, look at PTIans in this forum.. un kay paiT maiN India say zayada MaRoR uTh rahay haiN.. wonder why?

Re: China Readies $46 Billion for Pak Trade Route: WSJ

Yeah we are from Jewish lobby and want Pakistan destroyed. Just because some people don’t agree with your leader Nawaz Sharif doesn’t mean we don’t want Pakistan to fail. Any investment for Pakistan should be welcomed and i hope it all goes well and actually benefits an average person rather than the ruling elite.

Re: China Readies $46 Billion for Pak Trade Route: WSJ

:slight_smile:

Re: China Readies $46 Billion for Pak Trade Route: WSJ

:hehe:had hoti ha yaar. kia kehtay wo ji hazoori ko punjabi main ?

Re: China Readies $46 Billion for Pak Trade Route: WSJ

good you admitted it!!!

Wait Till IK comes on road raising issue (which is fake like his all other issues) of changing the route of EC… and then tell me that he is not part of Jewish Lobby …

Re: China Readies $46 Billion for Pak Trade Route: WSJ

Chinese investments dwarf American package: US media - Pakistan - DAWN.COM

Re: China Readies $46 Billion for Pak Trade Route: WSJ

Well you better confirm with your Pervez Rasheed uncle whether we are ISI or Yahoodi agent :slight_smile:

Re: China Readies $46 Billion for Pak Trade Route: WSJ

DID na’ee ammi of PTI told you that?

ok i admit, i cannot beat any PTIian in slangs and dirty language/… and now some mod will come and warn me and let all of you walk away…

Re: China Readies $46 Billion for Pak Trade Route: WSJ

^ Stop acting desperately obsessive with anything PTI. You are first one who needlessly slagged PTI posters in this thread while none of them even made a single negative post here. Attention seeking much? So I don’t know what you are crying here.

How about you stick to singing songs about Nawaz Sharif and his family if you really appreciate this development instead of making cheap shots at PTI for bit of attention. Surely petty petty politics has its own place and time?