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Pakistan's $100B deal with China: What does it amount to?
By Nadia Naviwala @NadiaNavi24 August 2017
gTsH0eyTA0At6enbOaRmEDkxX91H06huly6ZTnJ4lOOxIrvL9poIOu2NzkRBMYF8DTFKH3CeP_YZNhKnJ47LtYVFMZJBHdU9S4-XBSKP6fN7UIzPxkNh7ECSrbME1iawIjRRY2pg

The Gwadar port in southern Pakistan is part of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor and will serve as China's trade center. Photo by: umairadeeb / CC BY
ISLAMABAD — Early last year, the Pakistani government sent USAID officials in Islamabad a mystifying letter via snail mail: please stop doing feasibility studies for Diamer Basha Dam.

Pakistan had been lobbying the U.S. Agency for International Development and the Asian Development Bank since 2010 to complete the dam. A USAID assessment found that it would have “monumental” development impacts in terms of power generation, agriculture and flood control, making it “more beneficial for the national economy than any other project.” The problem was the equally monumental cost of construction. Even if the U.S. government dedicated its entire $7.5 billion, five-year planned development assistance budget (the second largest in the world after Afghanistan) to the project, it would build only half the dam.

The Rise of Chinese Aid series


As China continues to grow as a global power, so too does its footprint on the development sector. Its rise comes at a moment when the status quo is shifting in the aid industry. Traditional standard bearers such as the U.S. and EU may still drive the majority of funds and set the agenda, but protectionist policies and changing domestic priorities are setting in motion significant changes.


In this six-week special series, Devex examines China's expanding role in aid and development across the globe. From tensions in Ghana to projects in Pakistan, from climate financing to donor partnerships, from individual philanthropy to state-financed investment, this series traces the past, present and future of Chinese aid and development.


Join the conversation on our Facebook discussion forum.

It took three years for USAID to work out a compromise. The agency would put $20 million into feasibility studies so that international lending agencies such as the ADB would feel more confident funding the project.

When USAID got the letter in 2016, they suspected that Pakistan had found funding with the Chinese. They were right. (USAID eventually got permission to continue the studies, but the ADB turned down the project anyway.)

In May 2017 Pakistan and China signed a $50 billion agreement that included full funding for Diamer Basha and four other dams.

Although enormous, the new agreement hardly merited coverage in Pakistan. China already captured headlines and public imagination in 2013 when the two countries signed memorandums of understanding worth $46 billion to build the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor. CPEC has since quietly grown to a $62 billion investment.

The latest $50 billion in memorandums now brings Chinese loans and investments in Pakistan to well over $100 billion. A senior member of the CPEC team at Pakistan’s Ministry for Planning, Development, and Reform predicts that figure will ultimately grow to $150 billion. If the dams face cost overruns — which are 96 percent on average — then that will be a conservative estimate.

The financing is coming to a country that is starved for cash, fatigued with western donors, and led by a political party that believes infrastructure is key to re-election.

At Mekong Forum, a focus on US disengagement and China's rise

While the United States insists its priorities in the Mekong are unchanged, few remain convinced. This year’s forum was all about the new geoeconomics and how Greater Mekong countries can adapt to the changes in the region.

“It takes many years to have any project approved by international financial institutions,” says a recently retired senior Pakistani official, who did not want to be quoted by name when commenting on donors, especially Chinese financing. “You want to borrow a billion dollars from the World Bank? It would take 20 delegations and 15 consultants coming in and making reports.”

“The Chinese model is very much bricks and mortar, because they think bricks and mortar has a much greater trickle-down effect compared to the Bretton Woods model,” says a CPEC team official, referring to the western model of assistance where loans are given out on the condition that recipient governments make policy changes. The official — who also asked not to be named — reviews Chinese and other donor projects and referred to the Pakistani government as “skittish about upsetting the Chinese.”

“The Bretton Woods model is to give technical assistance, but that technical assistance is $15 million that we have to pay back,” he continues. “And then there are consultants that make $20,000 or $30,000 a month. Frankly speaking, the quality is pretty poor. If you really hold their feet to the fire, by corporate standards, there are very few people [who are worth it].”

one of six land routes envisioned under China’s Belt and Road Initiative. BRI is intended to intensify trade connections across Asia, Europe and the Middle East. Confusingly, “belt” refers to roads and “road” refers to maritime routes.

But roads and rail are actually a small part of Chinese money in Pakistan — less than $11 billion of the original $46 billion agreement. It’s small because, contrary to popular perceptions, much of the CPEC route is actually financed by Pakistan.

“Much of the roads being built are being built by our money,” says Miftah Ismail, who was Pakistan’s minister for investment until late last month, when the cabinet was dissolved because the Supreme Court voted to remove the prime minister on grounds of corruption.

What Ismail estimates Pakistan will take on in Chinese projects this year — $4 billion in loans and investments — equals what the Pakistani federal and provincial governments have allocated for roads and highways in their own annual budgets.

China is also financing the expansion and improvement of Pakistan’s neglected railway system, doubling its speed from 60 to 120 kilometers per hour.

CPEC roads will connect landlocked Xinjiang province in western China through a new port city that it is building on Pakistan’s coast, Gwadar. China needs these roads to transport goods out, but it is hard to think of what will go in the other direction. China’s exports to Pakistan account for two-thirds of Pakistan’s trade deficit.

“There are two dynamics,” explains Ali Salman, founder and executive director of the Policy Research Institute of Market Economy. “One is the trade-related dynamic, which is how Pakistan might use the CPEC corridor once the roads are established. For example, will Pakistani industries be able to export more to China than they are exporting right now? The second question is, will there be more industries in the [special] industrial zones being set up? If the answers are yes, that will be a very good thing for Pakistan. But I suspect the answer will be no.”

Pakistan will, at least, collect tolls on the roads. “If out of 10 Chinese containers that move out of Gwadar, one is from Pakistan, then we should consider ourselves successful. Otherwise, we will be reduced to toll collectors,” says the recently retired official.

See more related stories:

China's new Silk Road: A link to sustainable development?

Q&A: Chinese diplomat Li Hong on the country's 'win-win' approach to development

In Asia, US withdrawal from Paris sends ripples

At Mekong Forum, a focus on US disengagement and China's rise

Current officials, however, argue that Pakistan can be an attractive destination for Chinese companies to relocate to.

“In China, the wage growth is exponential, so the Chinese now want to move some of their light manufacturing to western China and overseas to Vietnam, Myanmar, Cambodia,” says the senior official on the CPEC team. He cites an estimate of 80 million surplus jobs that will be moved overseas. “We’re going to try and grab some of those — 5 or 10 million; whatever we can. That’s part of the puzzle for us.”

Ismail has the same idea, saying that rising wages means that some industries in China are becoming uncompetitive. He suggests that China can produce raw materials, and workers in Pakistan can stitch or assemble them.

Officials also expect investors from other countries to follow China into Pakistan.

“We are already getting interest from all the European countries — the U.K., Italy, Austria, Poland, Belarus. They all want to get on the CPEC bandwagon with us,” says the current official at the Planning Commission. “So for us it’s an opportunity to rebrand the country, make it an attractive [investment] destination.”

Pakistan’s Board of Investment plans to set up nine special economic zones, or SEZs, around the route that will host Chinese factories and be linked to trade flows. But Ismail defers that to “phase 2” of CPEC. Salman points out that “most of our SEZs are very underutilized.”

“A lot more is needed to jack up exports than just infrastructure,” argues Salman. “Real confidence is required to get entrepreneurs and investors to establish these factories. Our taxation policies and business regulations are not that business friendly. Not much is happening on that front. They are just spending heavily on infrastructure. But China has done this in many parts of the world, and big infrastructure ultimately has not translated into business gains.”

“We haven’t really made a lot of progress on that,” concedes Ismail, referring to making the business environment more competitive and conducive. “And that’s something that we would really like to see done in Pakistan.”

Energy and industry
Without energy, however, there can be no industry. In recent months, Pakistan has achieved on its own what USAID and many other donors have tried to do for many years: dramatically reduce power blackouts that have debilitated the economy. This summer, major cities that once lost power every other hour are losing electricity intermittently for just three to four hours a day. The current government promises to fulfill its campaign promise of completely ending blackouts by the time elections are held in 2018.

new turbines that use technology that has set a Guinness World Record for efficiency. Pakistan financed three such large gas-fired projects, although a Chinese company won the bid to construct the plants — and did it in record time.

“It’s an example of how you could leverage China’s interest in Pakistan smartly to get additional value per dollar,” says Jamil Masud, director at Hagler Bailly Pakistan, an energy and environmental consultancy firm.

The majority — $35 billion — of CPEC investments is for power plants. The agreements for what Pakistan will pay for each plant are surprisingly transparent and are posted on the website for the National Electric Power Regulatory Authority. The CPEC website lists projects, costs and progress.

While there are some wind, solar and hydro projects, they are “nothing to write home about yet,” according to Ismail. Most of the projects are coal.

Not all experts are concerned that Pakistan is moving to coal, as it helps the country shift its energy mix away from expensive furnace oil. Since Pakistan is coming to coal so late — less than 1 percent of the country’s power currently comes from coal, compared to 34 percent in the U.S. and 75 percent in India — the country can leapfrog ahead in terms of cleaner coal technology to control emissions. Today, new plants either use less coal or have pollution controls that many countries, including the United States and China, are going back to install in their existing plants. The problem is that Chinese companies are cutting corners on plants in Pakistan, even though they are charging a lot for them.

“The Chinese rate is 8.50 rupees per kilowatt hour of coal,” says the retired official. “An efficient rate would have been 5 rupees. In India, it’s about 4 rupees. One would expect a good environmental package with their [high] rate. But they are not putting in the required controls.”

report by the Mumbai-based Conservative Action Trust. Besides health problems, emissions can trigger acid rain that destroys agriculture.

The energy projects are treated as investments by Chinese companies, but they are actually loans plus fixed returns to equity. Once constructed, Pakistan will buy what the plants produce at the 8.50 rupee rate. The rate pays back the loan that the Chinese company took from a Chinese bank to build the plant; a commercial 5 percent interest rate; a one-time payment equal to 7 percent of the cost of the project as insurance against default (even though Pakistan has offered sovereign guarantees); and a 15 to 20 percent return on equity. The rate of return is high but standard across similar projects that fall under the country’s policy for independent power producers.

What Pakistan owes for the next 30 years will be calculated in dollars frozen at the 2013 exchange rate of 97.10 rupees to $1. (The current exchange rate is 105 rupees to $1.)

“NEPRA is not competent enough to be able to independently determine tariffs. It is influenced by the rates that are conveyed to them through informal and formal channels. The policy is in a way done independently by NEPRA, but it is in many ways influenced by China. In theory it should be totally independent. But [China] has an influence,” says the retired official.

The assumption is that increasing power production will ultimately add 2 to 2.5 percent to Pakistan’s gross domestic product — which is what the country loses each year due to blackouts. But such returns will not be automatic, if they materialize at all.

“The problem we face now is getting too much power too quickly,” says Masud. “It takes time for the economy to respond and absorb the additional supply. If people don’t have blackouts, will they consume more or will they be constrained by the higher monthly energy bills that result? If they consume more, will they leverage consumption into just buying appliances, or expanding businesses as well? How quickly will growth take off? It will be interesting to see how electricity demand increases and how the economy responds to surplus power.”

Without strong economic growth, Pakistan would not be in a position to pay for a sharp increase in electricity. The country already suffers from persistent circular debt, which means that Pakistan pays plants to produce energy but does not recover the cost through energy bills, due to theft, which is as high as 30 percent in some places. This ages transmission infrastructure and subsidies. Producing more power will mean more debt, although some costs may be balanced as Pakistan moves to a cheaper energy mix.

Finally, one-third of Pakistanis live off the power grid or get very limited electricity. Many of them live in remote areas outside the reach of distribution networks. The nation’s existing power grid also needs to be updated to carry the huge influx of energy that China’s plants will produce.

“There has been little attention to necessary reforms. Planning has so far been largely reactive and short term,” says Masud. “The government's thought-process is only now being jogged by the flurry of new activity, largely thanks to CPEC. Little thought has been given to the transmission and distribution bottlenecks that increased power production will have to overcome,” says Masud. “Our approach must now shift to resolving lingering issues, such as the circular debt, and letting the market guide investments.”

Can Pakistan pay?
“In terms of financing, there’s no issue [with the Chinese]. It’s like Santa Claus has come to town; you can ask for whatever you wish for. But one day it will all need to be paid back,” warns Masud.

has said that Chinese officials privately admit that they expect to lose up to 80 percent of their investment in Pakistan.

Salman argues that Chinese financing is driven by their own need to deploy excess human, financial and technical resources. “China has surplus industrial capacity and surplus capital. They are rich on foreign reserves. And they have engineers who need employment,” he says.

What they offer coincides with the interests of politicians who are looking for short-term gains — much like Pakistan’s current government, which is in a rush to conclude agreements and get projects off the ground during its term, which started in 2013 and will end with elections in 2018.

But beyond infrastructure, China cannot overshadow what Pakistan can do on its own.

“The Chinese contribution to economic growth right now is overstated. A lot of the growth we’ve achieved is because of our own internal things,” says Ismail. “The great control in loadshedding has also been because of other initiatives that the government of Pakistan has taken outside of CPEC. That said, if we are able to parlay CPEC into what the [former] prime minister wants it to be then in the years to come, CPEC will help our growth.”
 
Thanks God we did not relied on US Aid. Otherwise Trump's Speech and hatred towards us would have nullified all our activities. Long Live China and our friendship.

There is no free lunch and there are no friends and enemies all that matters is national interest. I hope people realize that.
 
My favourite part of the article is the following piece:

Early last year, the Pakistani government sent USAID officials in Islamabad a mystifying letter via snail mail: please stop doing feasibility studies for Diamer Basha Dam.

Pakistan had been lobbying the U.S. Agency for International Development and the Asian Development Bank since 2010 to complete the dam. A USAID assessment found that it would have “monumental” development impacts in terms of power generation, agriculture and flood control, making it “more beneficial for the national economy than any other project.” The problem was the equally monumental cost of construction. Even if the U.S. government dedicated its entire $7.5 billion, five-year planned development assistance budget (the second largest in the world after Afghanistan) to the project, it would build only half the dam.

The Rise of Chinese Aid series


As China continues to grow as a global power, so too does its footprint on the development sector. Its rise comes at a moment when the status quo is shifting in the aid industry. Traditional standard bearers such as the U.S. and EU may still drive the majority of funds and set the agenda, but protectionist policies and changing domestic priorities are setting in motion significant changes.

It took three years for USAID to work out a compromise. The agency would put $20 million into feasibility studies so that international lending agencies such as the ADB would feel more confident funding the project.

When USAID got the letter in 2016, they suspected that Pakistan had found funding with the Chinese. They were right. (USAID eventually got permission to continue the studies, but the ADB turned down the project anyway.)

In May 2017 Pakistan and China signed a $50 billion agreement that included full funding for Diamer Basha and four other dams.

Although enormous, the new agreement hardly merited coverage in Pakistan. China already captured headlines and public imagination in 2013 when the two countries

The difference between the useless USAID endless feasibility studies and China rock solid commitment towards pakistan is the real reason the Indians want to break that relationship. It will change the face of pakistan forever.

CPEC is not a destination, rather it is a journey, a journey which is Pakistan's responsibility to steer properly and ensure it doesn't get derailed.
 
Last edited:
Yeah I hope you realize that and get out of Bhutan land

Ya i do our arterial roads will not be in the range of Chinese artillery fire. The Chinese wont have the higher ground to observe and shell the road.
 
Pakistan's $100B deal with China: What does it amount to?
By Nadia Naviwala @NadiaNavi24 August 2017
gTsH0eyTA0At6enbOaRmEDkxX91H06huly6ZTnJ4lOOxIrvL9poIOu2NzkRBMYF8DTFKH3CeP_YZNhKnJ47LtYVFMZJBHdU9S4-XBSKP6fN7UIzPxkNh7ECSrbME1iawIjRRY2pg

The Gwadar port in southern Pakistan is part of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor and will serve as China's trade center. Photo by: umairadeeb / CC BY
ISLAMABAD — Early last year, the Pakistani government sent USAID officials in Islamabad a mystifying letter via snail mail: please stop doing feasibility studies for Diamer Basha Dam.

Pakistan had been lobbying the U.S. Agency for International Development and the Asian Development Bank since 2010 to complete the dam. A USAID assessment found that it would have “monumental” development impacts in terms of power generation, agriculture and flood control, making it “more beneficial for the national economy than any other project.” The problem was the equally monumental cost of construction. Even if the U.S. government dedicated its entire $7.5 billion, five-year planned development assistance budget (the second largest in the world after Afghanistan) to the project, it would build only half the dam.

The Rise of Chinese Aid series


As China continues to grow as a global power, so too does its footprint on the development sector. Its rise comes at a moment when the status quo is shifting in the aid industry. Traditional standard bearers such as the U.S. and EU may still drive the majority of funds and set the agenda, but protectionist policies and changing domestic priorities are setting in motion significant changes.


In this six-week special series, Devex examines China's expanding role in aid and development across the globe. From tensions in Ghana to projects in Pakistan, from climate financing to donor partnerships, from individual philanthropy to state-financed investment, this series traces the past, present and future of Chinese aid and development.


Join the conversation on our Facebook discussion forum.

It took three years for USAID to work out a compromise. The agency would put $20 million into feasibility studies so that international lending agencies such as the ADB would feel more confident funding the project.

When USAID got the letter in 2016, they suspected that Pakistan had found funding with the Chinese. They were right. (USAID eventually got permission to continue the studies, but the ADB turned down the project anyway.)

In May 2017 Pakistan and China signed a $50 billion agreement that included full funding for Diamer Basha and four other dams.

Although enormous, the new agreement hardly merited coverage in Pakistan. China already captured headlines and public imagination in 2013 when the two countries signed memorandums of understanding worth $46 billion to build the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor. CPEC has since quietly grown to a $62 billion investment.

The latest $50 billion in memorandums now brings Chinese loans and investments in Pakistan to well over $100 billion. A senior member of the CPEC team at Pakistan’s Ministry for Planning, Development, and Reform predicts that figure will ultimately grow to $150 billion. If the dams face cost overruns — which are 96 percent on average — then that will be a conservative estimate.

The financing is coming to a country that is starved for cash, fatigued with western donors, and led by a political party that believes infrastructure is key to re-election.

At Mekong Forum, a focus on US disengagement and China's rise

While the United States insists its priorities in the Mekong are unchanged, few remain convinced. This year’s forum was all about the new geoeconomics and how Greater Mekong countries can adapt to the changes in the region.

“It takes many years to have any project approved by international financial institutions,” says a recently retired senior Pakistani official, who did not want to be quoted by name when commenting on donors, especially Chinese financing. “You want to borrow a billion dollars from the World Bank? It would take 20 delegations and 15 consultants coming in and making reports.”

“The Chinese model is very much bricks and mortar, because they think bricks and mortar has a much greater trickle-down effect compared to the Bretton Woods model,” says a CPEC team official, referring to the western model of assistance where loans are given out on the condition that recipient governments make policy changes. The official — who also asked not to be named — reviews Chinese and other donor projects and referred to the Pakistani government as “skittish about upsetting the Chinese.”

“The Bretton Woods model is to give technical assistance, but that technical assistance is $15 million that we have to pay back,” he continues. “And then there are consultants that make $20,000 or $30,000 a month. Frankly speaking, the quality is pretty poor. If you really hold their feet to the fire, by corporate standards, there are very few people [who are worth it].”

one of six land routes envisioned under China’s Belt and Road Initiative. BRI is intended to intensify trade connections across Asia, Europe and the Middle East. Confusingly, “belt” refers to roads and “road” refers to maritime routes.

But roads and rail are actually a small part of Chinese money in Pakistan — less than $11 billion of the original $46 billion agreement. It’s small because, contrary to popular perceptions, much of the CPEC route is actually financed by Pakistan.

“Much of the roads being built are being built by our money,” says Miftah Ismail, who was Pakistan’s minister for investment until late last month, when the cabinet was dissolved because the Supreme Court voted to remove the prime minister on grounds of corruption.

What Ismail estimates Pakistan will take on in Chinese projects this year — $4 billion in loans and investments — equals what the Pakistani federal and provincial governments have allocated for roads and highways in their own annual budgets.

China is also financing the expansion and improvement of Pakistan’s neglected railway system, doubling its speed from 60 to 120 kilometers per hour.

CPEC roads will connect landlocked Xinjiang province in western China through a new port city that it is building on Pakistan’s coast, Gwadar. China needs these roads to transport goods out, but it is hard to think of what will go in the other direction. China’s exports to Pakistan account for two-thirds of Pakistan’s trade deficit.

“There are two dynamics,” explains Ali Salman, founder and executive director of the Policy Research Institute of Market Economy. “One is the trade-related dynamic, which is how Pakistan might use the CPEC corridor once the roads are established. For example, will Pakistani industries be able to export more to China than they are exporting right now? The second question is, will there be more industries in the [special] industrial zones being set up? If the answers are yes, that will be a very good thing for Pakistan. But I suspect the answer will be no.”

Pakistan will, at least, collect tolls on the roads. “If out of 10 Chinese containers that move out of Gwadar, one is from Pakistan, then we should consider ourselves successful. Otherwise, we will be reduced to toll collectors,” says the recently retired official.

See more related stories:

China's new Silk Road: A link to sustainable development?

Q&A: Chinese diplomat Li Hong on the country's 'win-win' approach to development

In Asia, US withdrawal from Paris sends ripples

At Mekong Forum, a focus on US disengagement and China's rise

Current officials, however, argue that Pakistan can be an attractive destination for Chinese companies to relocate to.

“In China, the wage growth is exponential, so the Chinese now want to move some of their light manufacturing to western China and overseas to Vietnam, Myanmar, Cambodia,” says the senior official on the CPEC team. He cites an estimate of 80 million surplus jobs that will be moved overseas. “We’re going to try and grab some of those — 5 or 10 million; whatever we can. That’s part of the puzzle for us.”

Ismail has the same idea, saying that rising wages means that some industries in China are becoming uncompetitive. He suggests that China can produce raw materials, and workers in Pakistan can stitch or assemble them.

Officials also expect investors from other countries to follow China into Pakistan.

“We are already getting interest from all the European countries — the U.K., Italy, Austria, Poland, Belarus. They all want to get on the CPEC bandwagon with us,” says the current official at the Planning Commission. “So for us it’s an opportunity to rebrand the country, make it an attractive [investment] destination.”

Pakistan’s Board of Investment plans to set up nine special economic zones, or SEZs, around the route that will host Chinese factories and be linked to trade flows. But Ismail defers that to “phase 2” of CPEC. Salman points out that “most of our SEZs are very underutilized.”

“A lot more is needed to jack up exports than just infrastructure,” argues Salman. “Real confidence is required to get entrepreneurs and investors to establish these factories. Our taxation policies and business regulations are not that business friendly. Not much is happening on that front. They are just spending heavily on infrastructure. But China has done this in many parts of the world, and big infrastructure ultimately has not translated into business gains.”

“We haven’t really made a lot of progress on that,” concedes Ismail, referring to making the business environment more competitive and conducive. “And that’s something that we would really like to see done in Pakistan.”

Energy and industry
Without energy, however, there can be no industry. In recent months, Pakistan has achieved on its own what USAID and many other donors have tried to do for many years: dramatically reduce power blackouts that have debilitated the economy. This summer, major cities that once lost power every other hour are losing electricity intermittently for just three to four hours a day. The current government promises to fulfill its campaign promise of completely ending blackouts by the time elections are held in 2018.

new turbines that use technology that has set a Guinness World Record for efficiency. Pakistan financed three such large gas-fired projects, although a Chinese company won the bid to construct the plants — and did it in record time.

“It’s an example of how you could leverage China’s interest in Pakistan smartly to get additional value per dollar,” says Jamil Masud, director at Hagler Bailly Pakistan, an energy and environmental consultancy firm.

The majority — $35 billion — of CPEC investments is for power plants. The agreements for what Pakistan will pay for each plant are surprisingly transparent and are posted on the website for the National Electric Power Regulatory Authority. The CPEC website lists projects, costs and progress.

While there are some wind, solar and hydro projects, they are “nothing to write home about yet,” according to Ismail. Most of the projects are coal.

Not all experts are concerned that Pakistan is moving to coal, as it helps the country shift its energy mix away from expensive furnace oil. Since Pakistan is coming to coal so late — less than 1 percent of the country’s power currently comes from coal, compared to 34 percent in the U.S. and 75 percent in India — the country can leapfrog ahead in terms of cleaner coal technology to control emissions. Today, new plants either use less coal or have pollution controls that many countries, including the United States and China, are going back to install in their existing plants. The problem is that Chinese companies are cutting corners on plants in Pakistan, even though they are charging a lot for them.

“The Chinese rate is 8.50 rupees per kilowatt hour of coal,” says the retired official. “An efficient rate would have been 5 rupees. In India, it’s about 4 rupees. One would expect a good environmental package with their [high] rate. But they are not putting in the required controls.”

report by the Mumbai-based Conservative Action Trust. Besides health problems, emissions can trigger acid rain that destroys agriculture.

The energy projects are treated as investments by Chinese companies, but they are actually loans plus fixed returns to equity. Once constructed, Pakistan will buy what the plants produce at the 8.50 rupee rate. The rate pays back the loan that the Chinese company took from a Chinese bank to build the plant; a commercial 5 percent interest rate; a one-time payment equal to 7 percent of the cost of the project as insurance against default (even though Pakistan has offered sovereign guarantees); and a 15 to 20 percent return on equity. The rate of return is high but standard across similar projects that fall under the country’s policy for independent power producers.

What Pakistan owes for the next 30 years will be calculated in dollars frozen at the 2013 exchange rate of 97.10 rupees to $1. (The current exchange rate is 105 rupees to $1.)

“NEPRA is not competent enough to be able to independently determine tariffs. It is influenced by the rates that are conveyed to them through informal and formal channels. The policy is in a way done independently by NEPRA, but it is in many ways influenced by China. In theory it should be totally independent. But [China] has an influence,” says the retired official.

The assumption is that increasing power production will ultimately add 2 to 2.5 percent to Pakistan’s gross domestic product — which is what the country loses each year due to blackouts. But such returns will not be automatic, if they materialize at all.

“The problem we face now is getting too much power too quickly,” says Masud. “It takes time for the economy to respond and absorb the additional supply. If people don’t have blackouts, will they consume more or will they be constrained by the higher monthly energy bills that result? If they consume more, will they leverage consumption into just buying appliances, or expanding businesses as well? How quickly will growth take off? It will be interesting to see how electricity demand increases and how the economy responds to surplus power.”

Without strong economic growth, Pakistan would not be in a position to pay for a sharp increase in electricity. The country already suffers from persistent circular debt, which means that Pakistan pays plants to produce energy but does not recover the cost through energy bills, due to theft, which is as high as 30 percent in some places. This ages transmission infrastructure and subsidies. Producing more power will mean more debt, although some costs may be balanced as Pakistan moves to a cheaper energy mix.

Finally, one-third of Pakistanis live off the power grid or get very limited electricity. Many of them live in remote areas outside the reach of distribution networks. The nation’s existing power grid also needs to be updated to carry the huge influx of energy that China’s plants will produce.

“There has been little attention to necessary reforms. Planning has so far been largely reactive and short term,” says Masud. “The government's thought-process is only now being jogged by the flurry of new activity, largely thanks to CPEC. Little thought has been given to the transmission and distribution bottlenecks that increased power production will have to overcome,” says Masud. “Our approach must now shift to resolving lingering issues, such as the circular debt, and letting the market guide investments.”

Can Pakistan pay?
“In terms of financing, there’s no issue [with the Chinese]. It’s like Santa Claus has come to town; you can ask for whatever you wish for. But one day it will all need to be paid back,” warns Masud.

has said that Chinese officials privately admit that they expect to lose up to 80 percent of their investment in Pakistan.

Salman argues that Chinese financing is driven by their own need to deploy excess human, financial and technical resources. “China has surplus industrial capacity and surplus capital. They are rich on foreign reserves. And they have engineers who need employment,” he says.

What they offer coincides with the interests of politicians who are looking for short-term gains — much like Pakistan’s current government, which is in a rush to conclude agreements and get projects off the ground during its term, which started in 2013 and will end with elections in 2018.

But beyond infrastructure, China cannot overshadow what Pakistan can do on its own.

“The Chinese contribution to economic growth right now is overstated. A lot of the growth we’ve achieved is because of our own internal things,” says Ismail. “The great control in loadshedding has also been because of other initiatives that the government of Pakistan has taken outside of CPEC. That said, if we are able to parlay CPEC into what the [former] prime minister wants it to be then in the years to come, CPEC will help our growth.”

I hope pakistanis are putting due diligence into these projects with China. my confidence in pakistani ruling class leaves me to suspect that someone is holding the bag when some of these projects fail.
 
I hope pakistanis are putting due diligence into these projects with China. my confidence in pakistani ruling class leaves me to suspect that someone is holding the bag when some of these projects fail.


Infrastructure projects including those related to power and energy are highly unlikely to fail.

These are long overdue initiatives that should have been implemented over the past 50 years
 
In May 2017 Pakistan and China signed a $50 billion agreement that included full funding for Diamer Basha and four other dams.


This is in addition to the 57 billion USD CPEC, creating far too many noises in international/local press...looks plausible if Sino-Pak wanted more countries to join the corridor and to make it a regional connecting-countries kind of endeavor...marketing and vibes/optics created is fine here...even the extra noises.

At the same time the 50 billion USD project called Indus Cascade project that includes full funding of Diamer Bhasha dam is a totally local, restricted to Pakistan project and it is actually good that China and Pakistan is keeping it low profile and stealthy...this is a good strategy, too much publicity will raise more questions and problems for it vis-a-vis GB issue, IWT with India and more.

Chinese work quietly and in stealth...
 
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I was hoping the Katzarah Dam that @sohail.ishaque was talking about earlier would be part of the $50 billion Dam agreement.

what about the Skardu/Katzarah Dam.. i have heard so many things about it, like by building it we can add 500years of life to each following dam and that it is the 2nd most suitable spot of the world for building a dam... most of these statements were made by a politician though,.. but yes there is some truth to these statements,..

http://fatehuk.blogspot.com/2010/08/unique-katzarah-dam-on-indus.html

Multiple uniqueness of Katzarah Dam

Katzarah Dam site on the Indus is unique because it has the narrowest dam site in the world. It is about 300 feet at the bed level. Against this, Kalabagh Dam is two miles long and Tarbela is 8000 feet long. Katzarah is unique because it will function as Watershed Management dam by stopping silt erosion from the world’s highly erodible soil in Skardu valley, prolonging the lifespan of Basha Dam from 80 years to 800 years and extend lifespan of Tarbela by 50 years. Katzarah is unique because it is the tallest dam in the world. Katzarah is unique because it has six times the storage capacity of Basha Dam or Kalabagh Dam. Katzarah Dam’s storage capacity is 35 maf the third largest in the world after Aswan Dam and Three Gorges Dam. Katzarah is unique for Pakistan because it has the potential to produce up to 15,000 MW of hydropower, the second largest in the world after Three Gorges Dam. Katzarah has excellent capacity-inflow ratio on the Indus that gives long life span. Katzarah is unique because it will have 1000 years of lifespan. Katzarah is unique because it is the cheapest dam per maf of storage, per MW of hydropower generation, per year of lifespan and per year of service value.

Katzarah is super flood control in mitigating global warming. If built before 2010, it would have avoided human and property losses worth billions of dollars in the current unusual floods. Katzarah would irrigate millions of acres of barren lands in the four provinces including the vast and barren Kachi plain in Baluchistan from the proposed All Pakistan Grand Canal from Chashma barrage as initiated by me in 1962. Katzarah Dam would help implement paras 2, 4, 6, and para 14 (e) of the Water Accord by storing more water and end bitter water dispute as that is due to shortage of water, and due to silting of reservoirs by 6.6 maf. Katzarah Dam is needed to mitigate the adverse effects of reducing rivers flow in Pakistan due to global warming. It is needed for growing artificial forests where ever possible.

Katzarah Dam will serve as Replacement dam for the Indus Waters Treaty as we have lost 6.6 maf of replacement storage in Tarbela and Mangla. Replenishment of lost storage is vital, otherwise Indus Waters Treaty will cease to function. Katzarah Dam will regulate the highly erratic flow of the Indus, that varies between the minimum of 9000 cusecs to the maximum of 1,200,000 cusecs, Katzarah is a carryover dam. It is a development dam. Katzarah is inter-seasonal dam.

Another beauty of Katzarah Dam is that it is supported by Nisar Memon Parliamentary Committee, and WAPDA promised the committee to submit Katzarah feasibility report by September, 2005. Unfortunately, after commitment, WAPDA failed to submit the feasibility report because of Kalabagh issue. Similarly, AGN Qazi Technical Committee recommended Katzarah Dam. The Government of Sindh has requested the Federal Government to build Katzarah Dam exactly repeating my stance. I fully assisted both the Committees in their task. I discovered Katzarah Dam in 1962 and it was confirmed by Dr Pieter Lieftnick in 1968. As Chairman IRSA in 1994, I strongly recommended to the Ministry of Water and Power to build Katzarah dam informing them of Katzarah unique merits. Newspapers also published my articles but nothing has been done as, WAPDA is adamant to this dam. I have no means to meet Prime Minister to brief him on all dams with their merits and demerits. I wait for a miracle.

Katzarah Dam is direly needed, as by the year 2070, Basha Dam, Tarbela Dam, Mangla Dam will almost silt up, losing about another 14 maf of water besides 6.6 maf already lost to silting. This means the canal irrigation system in the Indus basin that is the food basket of Pakistan, will be on run-of-the-river. There will be no Rabi crop and early Kharif will also suffer. The consequences will be that famine like conditions will prevail. There will then be no point of return. Therefore, be wise to build Katzarah Dam or face famine, hunger and bloody revolution for food.

Presently, Tarbela, Mangla and Chashma have been silted up by 6.6 maf. This has created water shortage and inter-provincial water dispute. Water dispute will continue till building of new dams to create 27.35 maf of water to meet Water Accord requirements in para 2 besides paras 4, 6, and 14(e). Storage to be created in paras 4, para 6 and para 14 (e) are in addition to that. This dispute is growing and the proposed restructuring of IRSA as suggested is no solution to end water dispute that is due to shortage of water and no other reason.

It will be alarming to find that Tarbela Reservoir must have silted up by about 0.5 to 0.8 maf during this flood season by the 2010 super flood. This will further aggravate inter-provincial water dispute as silting of storage will reach to 7 maf.

What sort of agricultural country is this when no dam is built by the Government in 36 years after the construction of Tarbela Dam? We have already lost about 7.0 maf of storage though the country’s irrigated agriculture depends on storage water? It is unfortunate that storage capacity on our rivers is only 9% of the total annual runoff of rivers. For such country and for such irrigation system it should be about 60%. This is necessary because there is no dam sites on Kabul River, Jehlum River and Chinab River. The Indus River flow requires to be stored in dams wisely so that each dam has long lifespan. Dams must be built where ever possible.

One ridiculous objection by faultfinders is that Baltic culture would be destroyed as, Skardu valley and the airstrip would submerge in the Lake. The example of Three Gorges Dam in China is before us where 2.2 million population were displaced and resettled first, and then work on the dam started. Everything was done peacefully. We can follow the example of China.

In casr of Katzarah, about 22000 people would be affected. These people can be resettled along the periphery of one of the largest Lake in the world that Katzarah Dam will create and in the adjoining area with in Baltistan. Baltic culture, on the contrary will flourish and their economic condition would improve, as the Lake will be the finest tourists resort. Airstrip and helipad can be built somewhere else. Everything is easy if things are done in a planned manner. Hydroplane can land on the surface of the vast Lake.

The multiple and massive benefits of Katzarah Dam cannot be ignored. Pakistan economic survival depends on Katzarah. This is because, IndusRiver is the only River in Pakistan where dams can be built and Katzarah is unique on many counts.

Downstream of Basha Dam there are hardly three or four mega dam sites on the Indus that can collectively store about 12 maf of water. These dams too will be subjected to rapid silting. Therefore, the only long lifespan dam left on the Indus is of Katzarah Dam. Moreover, its storage capacity is more than the collective storage capacities of all the conceivable dams in Pakistan. Katzarah is a gift of God for Pakistan.

In 1962, when I discovered the dam site, the population of Skardu was hardly about 3000. Please build Katzarah now before the area is over populated and it creates political interference. Pakistan cannot ignore building this unique dam as Katzarah will serve as the spinal chord of Indus basin irrigation system that is the food basket of Pakistan.

Global warming, climate change has made a beginning with Pakistan, destroying not only its economy, but the country as a whole. About 22% of land area of Pakistan is severely affected by rainwater and super floods ruining about 30 million of population, and billions of dollars losses besides the loss of human live, property, crops and infrastructures. Denudation of forests and blockage of waterways of natural surface drains have aggravated flash floods to flow in sheet form over a large area during floods. The other major important reason for flood havoc is the negligence not to build dams for the past 36 years after Tarbela.

Had Katzarah Dam on the Indus, and Guroh Dop Dam on Panjkora Rivers were built as I discovered these in 1962, flood fury would have been tamed, beside storing large volume of flood water that wasted to sea. I estimate, this year flood wastage to sea would be over 80 maf that is equivalent to 13 times the storage of Basha Dam. On August 21, 2000, China offered to build Katzarah/Skardu Dam but WAPDA ignored the offer without reasons. See the Daily Khabarein head lines.

If Katzarah Dam and Guroh Dop Dam were built in time, there would have been no devastation, death and destruction in 2010 floods and the country would not have faced crippling load shedding. These two wonder dams would have avoided water crises, power crises, flood crises and crises due to rapid silting of reservoirs. It is surprising WAPDA is ignorant of these two dams. What an organization!

Gomal Zam multipurpose flood control dam at Khajuri Katch in South Waziristan

A multipurpose dam at Khajuri Katch on Gomal River discovered by me in 1959 is an obvious example of flood control. Gomal Zam is notorious for furious floods since 1850, severely damaging villages, crops, property, infrastructures, besides forming ravines due to soil erosion. On completion of Gomal Zam Dam this year, it has created a vast reservoir of about one maf of floodwater at Khajuri Katch Reservoir. The result of this multipurpose flood control dam is that it has completely saved the Town of Kulachi and the surrounding villages, lands, crops etc in the two districts of DIKhan and Tank although 22% of Pakistan is ruined by rains and floods. This is because, there is no flood control dam on the Indus at Katzarah, and no flood control dam at Guroh Dop on Panjkora River and no flood control dam at Kalam on Swat River. Had these dams been built, Pakistan would have been safe against the historic floods that completely ruined the country and destroy its 30 million population. There would have been no power shortage and water shortage.

I submitted to the Government of Pakistan a Master Plan, titled “Irrigation Planning and Construction for West Pakistan” in 1962. It was sent to all concerned for information and action. The Ministry of Food and Agriculture (M. Ihsanul Haq Deputy Secretary) acknowledged its receipt and demanded more copies of the report as the Aid officers were interested in it. Refer to the receipt of the Ministry’s letter No: is D. 386-DS (PO)/63, dated 7th January, 1963. The Government took no action on the Master Plan’s implementation in 47 years though Aid giving organizations showed interest in it. The Master Plan included Katzarah and Guroh Dop besides All Pakistan Grand Canal to irrigate Kachi plain..

In a separate paper, I have suggested to create Indus Valley Authority (IVA) to build dams and barrages on the Indus River where ever possible. No interest is shown. The head quarter of new organization (IVA) should be at Islamabad. WAPDA Head quarter should be shifted to Islamabad like that of IRSA so that WAPDA works in coordination with other concerned organizations like Planning Commission, IRSA. Ministry of Water and Power and the Ministry of Agriculture.


Engr. Fateh Ullah Khan Gandapur
B.Sc. Engg; (Distinction in Dams & Reservoir Engineering),
M.ASCE (USA), FIE (Pak)
Former Chairman IRSA
Author of 2 books
1. God, Universe & Man; The Holy Quran & The Hereafter2
2. . God Created The Universe With The Purpose To Server Human Kind

https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/paki...ms-for-abundant-water-and-power.496592/page-2
 
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