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Pakistan to Seek Debt Relief From China Belt and Road Loan: Bloomberg

bro in any of our future conversation I would appreciate If you can drop this formal style of conversation we can can talk more as an equivalent member of the forum .... so would request you not to address me as Sir again ... you call me bro or even by my Forum display name
I am talking in a sense that after we are done with PPP era plants (little that we can salvage) after that we will have to persuade China for some concessions. The key to realize CPEC true potential lies in making these power plants more affordable.

This is exactly what is happening with currently installed IPPs Chinese power generation units are new some are still in under construction but I believe once the example is set with local IPPs we would negotiate with Chinese IPPs as well
 
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Pakistan to Seek Debt Relief From China Belt and Road Loan
By
Faseeh Mangi
February 9, 2021
  • China-financed power plants in Pakistan resulted in oversupply
  • Relief part of Pakistan’s plan to reduce power payments
Pakistan plans to ask China for relief on payments for power projects Beijing financed over the past eight years, the latest developing nation that’s struggling to repay debt under President Xi Jinping’s Belt and Road Initiative.

In informal talks, Pakistan and China have discussed easing terms on the repayment of debt on about a dozen power plants, according to a person with knowledge of the matter, who said Islamabad hasn’t made a formal request yet. The parties have canvassed Beijing’s willingness to stagger debt payments, as opposed to lowering equity returns, the person said, requesting anonymity as the plan is private.


An enormous build-out of Chinese-financed power plants in Pakistan, which was originally intended to solve its electricity shortages, has resulted in a surplus that Islamabad isn’t able to afford. Infrastructure projects funded by China’s initiative in other developing nations, such as Sri Lanka and Malaysia, have suffered issues ranging from heavy debt loads to corruption.

A spokesperson at China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said they aren’t aware of Pakistan’s plan to seek debt relief.

“Energy projects have provided Pakistan with a large amount of stable and low-priced electricity, effectively reducing the overall price of electricity in Pakistan,” the spokesperson said in a written response. “China-Pakistan energy cooperation has progressed smoothly and brought about real economic and social benefits.”


Pakistan’s power division didn’t respond to a request seeking comment.

China has previously denied U.S. criticism that the initiative leads to debt traps, while acknowledging that countries have had difficulties repaying loans due to the pandemic-induced global recession. Last year, Beijing canceled interest-free loans to 15 African countries due to mature by the end of 2020, and it has delayed other payments.

Electrifying

The Belt and Road program had found new life in Pakistan last year with the signing of $11 billion worth of projects, most of which went to revamping the nation’s railway system.


While Chinese financing has helped Pakistan diversify fuel supplies, it has also resulted in a surplus of electricity, which is problematic for the government in Islamabad because it is the sole buyer and pays producers even when they don’t generate. To help tackle the issue, the government has negotiated with power plants, which produce roughly half of its electricity, to lower rates.

Pakistan will formally make the request to defer debt payments to China, as well as other plants that were part of the latest power policy, after it concludes deals with those local power producers to reduce electricity tariffs, said the person with knowledge of the matter. Debt relief from China will also help the government reduce power payments.

— With assistance by Lucille Liu, and Jing Zhao
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Happy now are we? Where is game changer CPEC?

@Horus @waz @TaiShang @muhammadhafeezmalik @Mav3rick @Muhammad Omar @Joe Shearer @ziaulislam @Path-Finder @PakSword @Patriot forever @Black.Mamba @Indus Pakistan @koolio @Morpheus @beijingwalker


I've said it before and I'm saying it again - your country has been trapped, and it is not at all clear that you will be able to escape the consequences.
 
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When India is signing solar power for as low as ₹2 a unit, why is Pakistan stuck with ₹10 a unit power? How does it help Pakistan compete?
Because we have millions of Khota Biryanis in Pakistan that shout Sheeer every time country is destroyed. @Mav3rick @Muhammad Omar @muhammadhafeezmalik @POPEYE-Sailor
83EFC23F-7F59-46B8-A3A5-EBECAE0C8A71.png

I've said it before and I'm saying it again - your country has been trapped, and it is not at all clear that you will be able to escape the consequences.
I tagged many Chinese members on this thread but none responded. Why can't they just admit that Cpec is only in their own favor?
 
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Because we have millions of Khota Biryanis in Pakistan that shout Sheeer every time country is destroyed. @Mav3rick @Muhammad Omar @muhammadhafeezmalik @POPEYE-Sailor View attachment 715516

I tagged many Chinese members on this thread but none responded. Why can't they just admit that Cpec is only in their own favor?
Lets be clear. Most of the loans will get converted into grants eventually. Everyone knows that including the Chinese.
Till then the Chinese can leverage good control in Pakistan. Pakistan has too many oul and gas lng powered power plants. They are expensive as oil prices are not constant.
Google , ideaspak coal vs gas power generation in Pakistan
You can go right to the summary. Gas powered are around 4 pkr per unit more expensive than coal plants. Though surprisingly in Pakistan, even coal plants are more expensive than other countries.
 
. . .
Pakistan to Seek Debt Relief From China Belt and Road Loan
By
Faseeh Mangi
February 9, 2021
  • China-financed power plants in Pakistan resulted in oversupply
  • Relief part of Pakistan’s plan to reduce power payments
Pakistan plans to ask China for relief on payments for power projects Beijing financed over the past eight years, the latest developing nation that’s struggling to repay debt under President Xi Jinping’s Belt and Road Initiative.

In informal talks, Pakistan and China have discussed easing terms on the repayment of debt on about a dozen power plants, according to a person with knowledge of the matter, who said Islamabad hasn’t made a formal request yet. The parties have canvassed Beijing’s willingness to stagger debt payments, as opposed to lowering equity returns, the person said, requesting anonymity as the plan is private.


An enormous build-out of Chinese-financed power plants in Pakistan, which was originally intended to solve its electricity shortages, has resulted in a surplus that Islamabad isn’t able to afford. Infrastructure projects funded by China’s initiative in other developing nations, such as Sri Lanka and Malaysia, have suffered issues ranging from heavy debt loads to corruption.

A spokesperson at China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said they aren’t aware of Pakistan’s plan to seek debt relief.

“Energy projects have provided Pakistan with a large amount of stable and low-priced electricity, effectively reducing the overall price of electricity in Pakistan,” the spokesperson said in a written response. “China-Pakistan energy cooperation has progressed smoothly and brought about real economic and social benefits.”


Pakistan’s power division didn’t respond to a request seeking comment.

China has previously denied U.S. criticism that the initiative leads to debt traps, while acknowledging that countries have had difficulties repaying loans due to the pandemic-induced global recession. Last year, Beijing canceled interest-free loans to 15 African countries due to mature by the end of 2020, and it has delayed other payments.

Electrifying

The Belt and Road program had found new life in Pakistan last year with the signing of $11 billion worth of projects, most of which went to revamping the nation’s railway system.


While Chinese financing has helped Pakistan diversify fuel supplies, it has also resulted in a surplus of electricity, which is problematic for the government in Islamabad because it is the sole buyer and pays producers even when they don’t generate. To help tackle the issue, the government has negotiated with power plants, which produce roughly half of its electricity, to lower rates.

Pakistan will formally make the request to defer debt payments to China, as well as other plants that were part of the latest power policy, after it concludes deals with those local power producers to reduce electricity tariffs, said the person with knowledge of the matter. Debt relief from China will also help the government reduce power payments.

— With assistance by Lucille Liu, and Jing Zhao
---

Happy now are we? Where is game changer CPEC?

@Horus @waz @TaiShang @muhammadhafeezmalik @Mav3rick @Muhammad Omar @Joe Shearer @ziaulislam @Path-Finder @PakSword @Patriot forever @Black.Mamba @Indus Pakistan @koolio @Morpheus @beijingwalker

US should worry about paying their own debt to China.
 
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Because we have millions of Khota Biryanis in Pakistan that shout Sheeer every time country is destroyed. @Mav3rick @Muhammad Omar @muhammadhafeezmalik @POPEYE-Sailor View attachment 715516

I tagged many Chinese members on this thread but none responded. Why can't they just admit that Cpec is only in their own favor?

oh u r the only one who is intelligent - brilliant analysis , stop marketing by urself keep your opinion with you.
Do this as mention in below picture...!!

d4e81066ae559250c0f729c9c57a26eb556f96d6fe982e4aa53f3112f5901b6d_1.jpg


Make sure follow all steps properly - otherwise it will come out again !!!!!
 
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CPEC management should plan on building a transmission line between Xinjiang and Islamabad, and then upgrading and connecting to all the other power stations on the grid.

In this way, excess electricity can be sold back to China and costs can be recovered in a sustainable way for both sides. Ideally, China should convince its labor intensive companies to shift production to Pakistan, but at the moment, due to the pandemic, I presume, they want to keep as many jobs in China, while they refrain workers for higher end work. Labor intensive industries, that take into account the geographical position of Pakistan; a location between Africa and China, should consider value added or just processing work for raw materials coming from Africa.
 
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@FuturePAF

CPEC management should plan on building a transmission line between Xinjiang and Islamabad, and then upgrading and connecting to all the other power stations on the grid.

PAF sb,

This would be too expensive and infeasible.

Regards
 
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