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MEGA Engineering in the World by China

Norway's 2nd largest bridge built by Chinese firm opens to traffic
Source: Xinhua| 2018-12-10 04:08:50|Editor: Li Xia


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A Chinese worker takes photos of the Halogaland Bridge near Norway's northern port city of Narvik, Dec. 9, 2018. A ceremony was held Sunday to officially open Norway's second largest bridge that has been built by a Chinese company and its partners some 220 km inside the Arctic Circle. With a total length of 1,533 meters and a free span of 1,145 meters, the Halogaland Bridge near Norway's northern port city of Narvik is the longest suspension bridge within the Arctic Circle. (Xinhua/Liang Youchang)

NARVIK, Norway, Dec. 9 (Xinhua) -- A ceremony was held Sunday to officially open Norway's second largest bridge that has been built by a Chinese company and its partners some 220 km inside the Arctic Circle.

With a total length of 1,533 meters and a free span of 1,145 meters, the Halogaland Bridge near Norway's northern port city of Narvik is the longest suspension bridge within the Arctic Circle.

It is China's Sichuan Road and Bridge Group (SRBG) that delivered the steel constructions and was responsible for the mounting of the bridge, which contributes to a significant shortcut on European route E6 -- the main north-south road through Norway and the west coast of Sweden.

"It's been great to see Chinese participation in this project," Norwegian Prime Minister Erna Solberg told reporters at the inauguration ceremony on the Halogaland Bridge over the Rombaken fjord.

"It is a very beautiful bridge that is very important for the local community," she said.

Chinese Ambassador to Norway Wang Min, who was also present at the inauguration ceremony, said the bridge has shown Chinese companies' efforts to carry out the Belt and Road Initiative.

The project "is an important result of the mutually beneficial cooperation between China and Norway," Wang said. "It will set an important example to further promote economic and trade cooperation between the two countries."

In 2013, the SRBG won the steel contract for the bridge in a tough competition with the world's leading builders.

The steel contract includes preproduction of all the parts -- cables and steel boxes and site construction. The production of the steel parts was carried out in four different factories in China.

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Qatar unveils Foster + Partners design for World Cup centrepiece
Qatar has unveiled Foster + Partners’ design for the Lusail Stadium, the venue to the north of Doha that will host the opening and closing matches of 2022 FIFA World Cup.

According to the Supreme Committee for Delivery & Legacy (SC), the 80,000-capacity ground will be the largest in the tournament.

In 2015, the SC selected Foster + Partners, Populous and Arup to design the project, and in 2016 it announced that a joint venture between Qatari firm HBK Contracting and China Railway Construction Corporation would build it.

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The Lusail Stadium’s design is inspired by Arabic craft traditions such as “fanar” lanterns and intricately detailed bowls.

The SC said after the tournament was over, the stadium would become a community space, containing schools, shops, cafes, sports facilities and clinics. To make way for the revamp the ground’s modular seating will be donated to sporting projects across the globe.

Based 15km outside Qatar’s capital Doha, the venue will be an attraction of the new Lusail City, 90% of which is completed.

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Fatma Samoura, FIFA general secretary, said: “Qatar’s stadiums are among the most eye-catching ever seen and the venue proposed for the final is absolutely gorgeous.

“I particularly enjoy the fact that Middle Eastern culture is reflected in Lusail’s and several other designs, and look forward to seeing football fans from all over the world discover the culture and history of the region.”

Construction of the Lusail Stadium is due to be completed in 2020.

Images courtesy of Supreme Committee for Delivery & Legacy


Qatar unveils Foster + Partners design for World Cup centrepiece - News - GCR
 
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China-built Isimba hydroelectric power station in Uganda nears completion
New China TV
Published on Dec 20, 2018

Another landmark project in Africa! China-built Isimba hydroelectric power station in Uganda nears completion as its main plant structure and transmission line are finished.
 
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China's energy giant inks deal with leading British company for Bangladesh power plant
CGTN
2019-01-18 20:26 GMT+8

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China's energy giant PowerChina signed an agreement and a contract with GCM Resources, a leading British resource exploration company, for development of a coal-fired power plant in Bangladesh's Dinajpur district, some 338 km northwest of the capital Dhaka.

Both the joint venture (JV) deal and the engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contract were signed at a ceremony in Dhaka on Thursday.

The proposed project, which is part of a broader strategy by GCM to generate 6,000MW of low-cost electricity for the Bangladesh market utilizing domestic coal, is in line with the government's energy development master plan.

The power plant, with two units of a capacity of 1,000MW each, will be built by ultra supercritical technology, which provides lower levels of emissions and delivers the lowest cost of power.

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Power cuts have affected water supplies in Bangladesh. / VCG Photo

The project would deliver a sustainable power solution for the development and progress of Bangladesh and would have a substantial multiplier effect on the country's economic and social advancement, according to a statement of the companies.

Ding Zhengguo, chairman of PowerChina International, said they were delighted to be a partner with GCM to deliver an integrated mine and power plant for the people of Bangladesh.

He said that completing the two contracts are very important steps in progressing the combined project. "As the power plant contractor, we are committed to a positive relationship with the community and to constructing an environmentally friendly power plant for the benefit of the local people," Ding said.

Michael Tang PJN, executive chairman of GCM, said, "The JV agreement and EPC contract are key milestones for the development of the second proposed 2,000MW power plant project at the mine site and aligns with GCM's strategy to present a holistic power solution to the government of Bangladesh which can generate 6,000MW at the lowest cost for the country.

"The Phulbari Coal and Power Project will deliver a significant multiplier effect on the nation's advancement."

PowerChina is an investor and contractor for three large projects in Bangladesh – two coal-fired power plants with a combined capacity of 1,670MW and a JV for the Dhaka Elevated Expressway.
 
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Construction of China-funded mega dam on course

(Xinhua) 09:13, January 23, 2019


MASAITI, Zambia, Jan. 22 (Xinhua) -- Construction works of a dam in Zambia's Masaiti district on the Copperbelt Province funded by the Chinese government was on course, the contractor said on Tuesday.

Construction works of the 450 million U.S. dollars Kafulafuta Dam was commissioned in October last year by President Edgar Lungu.

Bruce Zhu, a business manager with the China National Complete Engineering Corporation, said about 23 percent of works have so far been done and that everything was on schedule.

"We are on schedule and we expect to complete the works by 2020," he said.

In remarks delivered when Copperbelt Province Minister Japhen Mwakalombe and other senior government officials inspected the construction works, the official said over 1,600 jobs have been created during the construction of the dam.

The official further dispelled reports that the firm was subcontracting other foreign firms instead of empowering local firms, adding that so far four local firms have been subcontracted.

On his part, the Zambian minister expressed satisfaction over the progress so far in the construction of the dam, adding that the government was committed to supporting Chinese firms working on various projects as it was meant to uplift the living standards of people.

The Kafulafuta water supply system project involves the construction of a dam and other infrastructure for the supply of water to some districts of the province.

It also includes the construction of two pump stations, raw water pipelines to four treatment plants as well as the extension of the pipe network to un-serviced areas and repairing of old leaking pipes.

The multi-purpose dam will hold about 125 million cubic meters of water and benefit about 1 million people.

http://en.people.cn/n3/2019/0123/c90883-9540612.html
 
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Water project to quench thirsty cities in Yunnan
By LI LEI | China Daily | Updated: 2019-02-01 10:04

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Jinsha River in Northwest Yunnan province, Nov 21, 2018. [Photo/IC]

The Ministry of Water Resources said it invested more than 5 billion yuan ($745 million) in 2018 in a water diversion project that aims to relieve severe water shortages in the central part of Yunnan province.

Another 7 billion yuan is expected to be invested this year, according to a news release provided by the ministry.

The project, approved in March, aims to draw water from a section of the Jinsha River in Yunnan's northwest to its central cities, including Chuxiong, Yuxi and Kunming. The area, which contains about one-third of the province's population, contributed more than half of the province's GDP, but has been severely hampered by a lack of water resources.

The total cost of the project is estimated at 82.6 billion yuan, and the time for construction will be 96 months, the ministry said. Construction has begun at about 90 percent of the planned project sites, it said.

When finished, the project is expected to break the bottleneck of economic development in the region, and help improve its aquatic ecosystem.

By the ministry's estimate, about 3.4 billion cubic meters of water will be diverted to the region annually by 2040 as a supplementary resource for residents and industries.

The diversion is the largest of its kind in scale and investment in Southwest China. As a result of the region's difficult geology, which is unfriendly to construction, it is also among the most demanding projects ever to be undertaken, the ministry said.

In addition to supplementing the region's water supply, the 664-kilometer diversion project will help improve the ecology of rivers and lakes, it said.

The Jinsha River is an upper section of the Yangtze River, the longest in Asia and the third-longest in the world. It flows through the provinces of Qinghai, Sichuan and Yunnan in western China.
 
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Chinese firm to construct Ethiopia-Djibouti natural gas pipeline
Source: Xinhua| 2019-02-17 00:39:38|Editor: yan

ADDIS ABABA, Feb. 16 (Xinhua) -- Chinese firm Poly-GCL Petroleum Group Holdings Limited (Poly-GCL) is to construct the 767-km Ethiopia-Djibouti natural gas pipeline, the Ethiopia Ministry of Mines and Petroleum (MoMP) announced on Saturday.

In a press statement, MoMP said Ethiopian and Djiboutian government officials have agreed that Poly-GCL will start the natural gas pipeline project construction this year.

Both countries hope to earn much needed foreign currency once the natural gas pipeline project is constructed and commissioned.

The Ethiopian government had back in April announced plans to generate 1 billion U.S. dollars annually from extraction of natural gas and crude oil deposits.

Poly-GCL is expected to install a pipeline to transport the gas from fields in landlocked Ethiopia up to ports in neighboring Djibouti in a period of two years. Around 700 kilometers of the natural gas pipeline will be located in Ethiopia, while the rest of the natural gas pipeline will be located in Djibouti.

Recently, Poly-GCL discovered 7 to 8 billion cubic trillion feet of natural gas in Ethiopia's Somali regional state located in the eastern part of the country.

Poly-GCL is a mixed ownership clean energy company engaged in exploration and development, storage and transportation and processing, trade marketing and terminal utilization.
 
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For China, a Bridge Over the Adriatic Is a Road Into Europe - The New York Times

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A major new bridge will link a disconnected sliver of the Croatian coast with the rest of the country. There is an overland route now that runs through Bosnia.Credit: Zoran Marinovic for The New York Times

By Marc Santora and Barbara Surk
Oct. 11, 2018

KOMARNA, Croatia — As a quirk of history and the Balkan wars, a corner of Croatia is cut off from the rest of the country by a 12-mile interruption of land belonging to neighboring Bosnia. It is a rift that Croatia has long wanted to repair with a bridge that would unite the disconnected sliver of its coast with the rest of the country.

For decades — foiled by war, corruption, political bickering and global financial turmoil — work never got much further on the bridge than abandoned concrete pylons and two bronze angels overlooking the glittering waters of the Adriatic Sea.

That is, until the Chinese arrived this summer.

With drills churning and its engineers arriving daily, a state-owned Chinese construction firm, the China Road and Bridge Corporation, is the latest company to take on the project.

For many Croatians, just the possibility that the long-awaited bridge project is now on track to be completed is reason for celebration.

But the project is also a test case for the European Union, which has been wary of allowing state-owned Chinese firms into the market for big European infrastructure projects, fearing that Chinese companies can undermine competition, trample the bloc’s labor laws and depress wages.

The bridge, which will span the water separating a peninsula in the disconnected region with the village of Komarna and the rest of Croatia, is the first time that a project funded largely with European Union money has been won by a Chinese firm.

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China Road and Bridge won the contract with a proposal that undercut the nearest competitor by nearly $100 million, leading to a legal challenge. The European Commission is also investigating whether Croatia awarded the contract in line with European Union rules.

On top of the concerns officials have over competitive practices and lower wages, many of the jobs that come with the project may not even go to workers in the slow-growing economies of Europe.

Typically, Chinese state firms bring most of their own workers for construction projects, an often contentious practice. It is not clear if Croatian authorities even know how much the Chinese workers will be paid. China Road and Bridge did not respond to queries, and the Croatian authorities said they did not want to officially comment.

“European companies are increasingly finding themselves in the situation that they cannot compete with Chinese-subsidized companies on price levels,” said Jens Bastian, an economic analyst who has detailed Chinese investments and loans in the Balkans in a report for the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development.

China is in the midst of a global infrastructure spending spree known as the Belt and Road Initiative, which is intended to increase Beijing’s economic and diplomatic clout — but which is bringing rising criticism and scrutiny. China is actively cultivating leaders in the Balkans and Eastern Europe, an overture that some in the European Union regard as a veiled effort to undermine the bloc.

In a 2016 report, the European Union Institute for Security Studies concluded that the bloc may “have to acknowledge its limited leverage when it comes to influencing Chinese corporate behavior.”

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Chinese workers at the beach in Komarna, Croatia. There is uncertainty about how many workers will come from China, how much they will be paid, and how many locals will get jobs.Credit: Zoran Marinovic for The New York Times

Yet for Croatia, which joined the European Union in 2013, the project has become a neat and relatively cheap fix for a once insolvable problem in a Balkans region where bridges have long played outsize roles in politics and diplomacy.

When rulers sought to unite the region’s ethnic and religious groups, bridges were built across rivers and over valley passes. When leaders wanted to divide people along ethnic lines, those same bridges were often fought over or destroyed to keep communities apart.

The gap in Croatia’s territory occurred after the socialist Yugoslavia dissolved and frontiers between its former republics became international borders. The Neum corridor, the strip of Bosnia’s coastline that cuts Croatia in two, is Bosnia’s only access to the Adriatic Sea.

As things stand, people traveling from Croatia’s southern coast must endure four border checkpoints to reach the rest of the country, which can mean delays of hours that disrupt one of the nation’s chief economic drivers, tourism.

In June 2017, the European Union announced an allocation of 357 million euros, or $413 million — about 85 percent of the bridge’s cost — with a touch of fanfare.

“This project genuinely embodies our commitment to removing barriers, uniting territories and bringing people together,” Corina Cretu, the union’s commissioner for regional policy, said at the time.

Yet six months later, the situation became more complicated when Croatia awarded the project to China Road and Bridge. Rivals were furious. A Croatian court later dismissed a complaint from a losing bidder, the Austrian firm Strabag, which accused the Chinese consortium of charging a price that was lower than the actual value of the project.

On a recent afternoon at the construction site, Jeroslav Segedin, a civil engineer, gave a tour of the early stages of the project. Mr. Segedin, a representative of Croatia Roads, which contracted with the Chinese company for the project, stressed the importance of the bridge, despite the concerns about Beijing’s involvement.

“It means a lot to both Croatia and this region,” he said. “It will be a national symbol for Croatia.”

Mr. Segedin, whose team of civil engineers will oversee the project, said construction should reach its peak in about 18 months, when there are expected to be 490 workers on the bridge, most of them Chinese living in trailers on the sparsely populated peninsula. Croatian workers will take part in the construction, but only on a small scale.

European Union officials say they will be watching China’s recruitment process for workers closely, once it gets underway, for possible violations of the bloc’s labor laws. Even so, the Chinese have already been allowed to set the wages for the workers they bring to the site — something that European companies fear is an unfair advantage.

The uncertainty around how many Chinese workers will be employed at the site, and what they will be paid, has spawned rumors.

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Jeroslav Segedin, whose team of civil engineers will oversee the project, said the bridge “will be a national symbol for Croatia.”Credit: Zoran Marinovic for The New York Times

For months, the Croatian news media has been reporting that thousands of Chinese workers would be living on a cruise ship converted to a dormitory, overwhelming the small fishing village of Komarna where the construction site is based.

“It’s incredible, the calls I’ve been getting regarding the Chinese workers in our region,” said Smiljan Mustapic, the governor of the Slivno area where the bridge is being built. “It’s like a group of aliens has landed.”

For now, the bridge construction is focused under water and requires only a few dozen Chinese engineers.

Beyond the bridge project, China is seeking closer ties to Croatia in other ways, such as an agreement on joint police patrols — as was done in the heart of the old city of Dubrovnik this summer at the peak of tourism season.

The ostensible reason for the joint patrols was to help resolve issues related to Chinese tourists. But it also served as a dry run for Croatia’s plans to host a meeting of the Chinese-led investment initiative, known as 16+1, in Dubrovnik next year. It includes 11 European Union members in Central and Eastern Europe along with five Balkan nations.

Mato Frankovic, the mayor of Dubrovnik, which is in the cutoff corner of Croatia, said that unlike other Chinese projects in other Balkan nations, the bridge is not financed by debt and loans from Chinese banks, which would have saddled Croatia. “It is a win-win,” he said.

Mr. Mustapic, the governor of the area where the bridge is being built, said, “For us, the construction of this bridge is priceless.”

He could not help but be overcome, he said, as he saw the lights on the water that marked the start of the work on the bridge’s foundation.

“It meant that this time, it is going to happen,” he said.

Chinese bidders welcome to build road for Croatian port: minister
Source: Xinhua| 2019-02-16 05:40:37|Editor: Liangyu

ZAGREB, Feb. 15 (Xinhua) -- Croatian Minister of the Sea, Transport and Infrastructure Oleg Butkovic told reporters on Friday that Chinese bidders are welcome for a major road construction project in Rijeka, local daily newspaper Novi list reported.

"If Chinese companies have the best offer, they would be selected," Butkovic told reporters in Crikvenica, a coastal town in northern Adriatic. He said that a tender for the project will be announced soon and that it will be open to all companies.

The future road will connect a western part of the Rijeka port and the container terminal with the city's bypass road. It should be one of the most important infrastructure projects in Rijeka, Croatia's biggest port in northern Adriatic.

The Minister said the experience with China Road and Bridge Corporation (CRBC) in Croatia is good so far. CRBC is currently building the biggest infrastructure project in the country, Peljesac Bridge, which will connect the southern Peljesac peninsula to the mainland.

Croatian media reported on Wednesday that the project might not be finished on time because the contractor of the access roads to the bridge is yet to be chosen.

The minister told reporters that the state-owned Hrvatske Ceste (HC) road construction and management company was not surprised by the appeal against the tender for the construction of access roads to the future Peljesac Bridge. He stressed that the appeal should not jeopardize the project or slow it down.

"Within 30 days, Hrvatske Ceste will respond to this appeal and the state commission should quickly adopt a solution because it is an EU-funded project," explained Butkovic.

He said that the construction of the Peljesac Bridge and access roads must be completed within the deadline. Otherwise, EU funding would be questioned.

"We are not late and it is not important to complete the construction of the bridge and the roads on the same day," Butkovic said.
 
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Ethiopia signs deal to develop 70 MW geothermal energy project

Xinhua, February 26, 2019

State utility firm Ethiopian Electric Power (EEP) on Monday signed an agreement with two Chinese firms and one Kenyan firm for the 70 MW geothermal energy drilling project.

The two Chinese firms were Shandong Kerui Oilfield Service Group and Shandong Kerui Oilfield Service Group Co. Ltd. Another firm Kenya Electricity Generating Company was also part of the agreement.

In a press statement, EEP said the two Chinese firms and one Kenyan firm are expected to supply drilling materials as well as drill wells for possible geothermal energy sources in central Ethiopia.

Named the Aluto- Langano geothermal project, it's part of the Ethiopian government's plans to generate up to 5,000 MW of geothermal energy in the coming few years. Ethiopia currently produces only 7.3 MW of geothermal energy.

EEP said the agreement with the three firms will see the drilling initially of 22 wells to probe their geothermal energy generation potential.

EEP further said the geothermal energy project is expected to consume 173.2 million U.S. dollars, with the World Bank expected to cover the total project's cost through loans and grants.

Ethiopia has the longest section of the 7,000-km East African Rift Valley, which boasts an estimated geothermal potential of 10,000 megawatts (MW), but the country has been unable to match the neighboring Kenya's installed geothermal power capacity of about 630 MW.

Geothermal energy is considered a reliable renewable energy sources although it involves a greater start-up cost.

http://www.china.org.cn/business/2019-02/26/content_74503997.htm
 
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Chinese company Yuhuang's methanol plant in southern U.S. making significant progress
Source: Xinhua| 2019-03-02 07:15:02|Editor: Yamei

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The photo taken on Feb. 28, 2019 shows the construction site of Yuhuang's methanol project in St. James Parish, Louisiana, the United States. Yuhuang's methanol project, the largest greenfield investment in methanol by a Chinese company in the southern U.S. state of Louisiana, is making significant progress in its construction, according to China's Yuhuang Chemical Inc. (YCI) on Friday. (Xinhua)

BATON ROUGE, the United States, March 1 (Xinhua) -- Yuhuang's methanol project, the largest greenfield investment in methanol by a Chinese company in the southern U.S. state of Louisiana, is making significant progress in its construction, according to China's Yuhuang Chemical Inc. (YCI) on Friday.

"Starting from the year 2019, we're in a critical stage called moving from the below ground, which is the foundation stage, into the above ground," said Charlie Yao, CEO of YCI in an interview with Xinhua.

All the major equipment that has been delivered to the site will be erected in the first half of this year, he said.

YCI, a wholly owned subsidiary of Yuhuang Chemical Company in east China's Shandong Province, is constructing a 1.85-billion-U.S.-dollar methanol production facility in St. James Parish, Louisiana.

This methanol project was announced in 2014. After selecting Louisiana for its site, Yuhuang Chemical began building the production complex in January 2017.

The plant facility, to be wholly constructed in three phases, is expected to start commercial production in mid-2020, following the completion of the first-phase YCI Methanol One.

According to Yao, the project is expected to achieve the major milestone of construction delivery this year.

"Early next year, the contractor will start to turn the unit over to YCI ownership, ready for commission, and we will train operators ready to start the production by mid of next year," he added.

YCI Methanol One will include 100 permanent direct jobs after creating more than 1,000 construction jobs, said the company.

Koch Methanol, an affiliate of Koch Industries, agreed to buy into the new facility last year.

As part of its investment, affiliates of Koch Methanol will receive the exclusive methanol offtake rights from the new facility, as well as construct, own and operate the methanol terminal assets for the outbound flow of methanol.

Methanol is used in the manufacturing of many everyday products, including plywood, carpet, fuel and plastics.

The plant will have a capacity of producing approximately 1.7 million metric tons of methanol per year.

"We plan to have 70 percent of the product sold in the U.S. domestic market and about 30 percent export. And our large export country would be China," said Yao.
 
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MARCH 8, 2019 / 2:31 PM / 4 DAYS AGO
China's Touchstone to invest $17 billion in Helsinki-Tallinn tunnel | Reuters
Tarmo Virki

HELSINKI (Reuters) - A train tunnel linking Helsinki with Estonia’s capital Tallinn has got a provisional 15 billion euros ($17 billion) in financing from China’s Touchstone Capital Partners, the latest infrastructure investment in Beijing’s Belt and Road plan.

FinEst Bay Area Development said on Friday it had signed a memorandum of understanding providing a third of the funding in private equity, which will give Touchstone a minority stake in the planned 100 km (60-mile) tunnel, and two-thirds in debt.

Beijing’s Belt and Road initiative seeks to link China by sea and land with southeast and central Asia, the Middle East, Europe and Africa, through a network along the lines of the old Silk Road as well as an Arctic route.

Finland and Estonia have for years considered linking their capitals, which are divided by the Gulf of Finland and the subsea tunnel would cut the travel time to around 20 minutes from the two-hour ferry ride used by tens of thousands of Estonians who commute weekly to the Helsinki area.

“The long term vision for Finland includes that we can get through the tunnel to Tallinn,” Finland’s Prime Minister Juha Sipila said this week during a visit to Estonia, which is a popular tourist destination for Finns.


FinEst Bay Area, which had earlier estimated the total cost of the tunnel at 15-20 billion euros, said financial details will be thrashed out with Touchstone over the next six months.

The firm raised the first external funding of 100 million euros from Dubai-based construction company ARJ Holding in December and is seeking European investors.

“Now, the financing is sorted and we can move ahead,” project leader Peter Vesterbacka, a former executive at the Angry Birds game maker Rovio, told Reuters.

A feasibility study commissioned by the governments of Finland and Estonia and published in 2017 said the planned tunnel could open in 2040 but Vesterbacka reiterated that it would be built by the end of 2024.

The project is yet to secure backing from the two governments and the European Union.

Earlier this week Estonia’s prime minister Juri Ratas stressed the need for security reviews of the project, along with the environmental studies which have already been started by the relevant authorities.

Reporting by Tarmo Virki; additional reporting by Johannes Hellstrom; Editing by Tom Brown and Alexander Smith
 
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The World’s Largest Oil-fired Power Plant Unit 2 Completes Synchronization Successfully
2019-3-15 16:15:08

At 8:00 a.m. of March 13th, 2019, Saudi Yanbu Phase III Project Unit 2 completed synchronization successfully at the first time. The steam turbines, generators, main transformers, plant transformers and other equipments are operated smoothly with excellent parameters & various systems, and gets highly praise from owner, supervisor and other related parties.

Saudi Yanbu Phase III 5×660MW Oil-fired Project is the world’s largest oil-fired project and is also the important livelihood & political project. This project gets the highly attention from Saudi government and social sectors, and Saudi minister has been visited the site for 3 times. It has the vital strategy significance for SEPCOIII improving brand image.

The project EPC contract was signed on May 7th, 2017 and the construction work was started on May 17th, 2017. During the construction period, SEPCOIII uses the international quality & safety management system and strong EPC chain to guarantee the project efficiency progress. Meanwhile, this project provides more than 13,000 work opportunities for more than 10 countries that along The Belt and Road, and also helps Saudi government to achieve Saudi Vision 2030.

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http://www.sepco3.com/news_article.aspx?NewsId=2696&CateId=137
 
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Sri Lanka clinches loan pact with Chinese bank on expressway project
Source: Xinhua| 2019-03-22 20:59:53|Editor: Yang Yi

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Chinese Ambassador to Sri Lanka Cheng Xueyuan (L, center) and R.H.S. Samarathunga (R, center), Secretary to Treasury and the Ministry of Finance and Mass Media of Sri Lanka sign a concessional loan agreement in Colombo, Sri Lanka on March 22, 2019. Sri Lankan Finance Ministry on Friday signed a concessional loan agreement with the Export-Import Bank of China (China Exim Bank) on a mega expressway project. (Xinhua/Tang Lu)

COLOMBO, March 22 (Xinhua) -- Sri Lankan Finance Ministry on Friday signed a concessional loan agreement with the Export-Import Bank of China (China Exim Bank) on a mega expressway project.

The agreement, valued at 989 million U.S. dollars, was inked by Chinese Ambassador to Sri Lanka Cheng Xueyuan and R.H.S. Samarathunga, Secretary to Treasury and the Ministry of Finance and Mass Media of Sri Lanka.

The loan from China Exim Bank will cover 85 percent of the project cost for section one of the Central Expressway project.

The Central Expressway runs through the central part of Sri Lanka connecting the Western, North Western, Sabaragamuwa and Central Provinces with other densely populated and economically developed provinces.

It also connects capital Colombo to the central hills of Kandy, the two major cities and economic centers.

The government of Sri Lanka attaches great importance to the expressway project, hoping it will boost the development of the country's infrastructure.
 
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Chinese contractors in talks to build two highways in Moldova, extending China’s infrastructure order book in eastern Europe | South China Morning Post
  • The two highways will run a combined length of 300km, and will cost an estimated US$400 million
  • Financing for the two projects may take two options: wholly funded by China, or split between China and Moldova 85:15
Xie Yu
Published: 3:55pm, 26 Mar, 2019

Two Chinese contractors are in final negotiations to build two highways in Moldova, marking the first time China has extended the nation’s engineering and construction prowess to the eastern European nation.

China Hyway Group and China Railway Group Limited are in talks to build two highways with a combined length of 300 kilometres in Moldova, according to Vitalie Lurcu, the Modolvan State Secretary of the ministry of Economy and Infrastructure.

The first highway will encircle the Moldovan capital of Chisinau, while the second will connect Moldova’s northern districts with neighbouring Ukraine, Lurcu said. Financing for the two projects, estimated at a combined US$400 million , may take two options: wholly funded by China, or split between China and Moldova 85:15.

“The projects will significantly improve traffic and contribute to economic growth,” Lurcu said in an interview with South China Morning Post in Hong Kong. “Negotiations on the financing will be concluded this year, and construction is expected to be completed in three years.”

The projects marks the first time Chinese construction companies are extending their projects into the landlocked country, sandwiched between Ukraine and Romania. The country, which declared its independence in 1991 with the dissolution of the former Soviet Union, fits into the European end of China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), comprising a string of infrastructure projects along the ancient Silk Road from China to Africa and Europe.

China and Moldova had been in talks since December 2017 to establish a free-trade agreement between the two nations, which would remove import barriers on each other’s products and bolster commerce.

Investments by Chinese companies in the 56 countries that make up the BRI rose by 8.9 per cent last year to US$15.65 billion, according to data by China’s Ministry of Commerce. China has been tilting towards overseas investment in central and east Europe, as the country seeking to deepen its footprint and spread its influence on the continent.

The country is tapping investment dollars presented by active Chinese presence in eastern Europe, even if Moldova isn’t among the so-called “16+1” framework of China’s economic cooperation with 11 European Union members and five Balkan countries. The framework was introduced in 2012, a year before the BRI kicked off.

Other Chinese companies have also been active in eastern Europe. China’s state-owned builders and banks are involved in building a US$1.4 billion highway in Bosnia and Herzegovina, linking Banjaluka with Mliniste.

“Moldova is committed to active participation in the BRI,” Lurcu said.

The country has been actively promoting an immigration programme since November, which grants citizenship to applicants who can invest €100,000 (US$113,000) in the country.

China Railway, based in the Chinese capital, could not be reached for comment. Beijing-based Hyway confirmed that the company is in talks to build a road in Modolva. The company already has construction projects in Angola and Serbia, according to its website.
 
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