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China-Pakistan Economic Corridor: Lines of development – not lines of divide

Edevelop

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Islamabd: Pakistan today stands at a crossroad where it can utilise all resources and benefit from the Economic Corridor or squabble on its provincial divide. While the latter would most definitely result in further division of an already torn up country, a resolution to the conflict – where the government resolves differences – would lead to uncountable benefits for the current and future generations.

However, both China and Pakistan do not have the luxury of time.

As part of its long-term planning, China has framed three corridor routes to overcome a greater security challenge in the South China Sea in shape of possible blockade of Sea Lane of Communications at the point of Straits of Malacca during conflict times. Any blockade may stop 80% of Chinese imported energy supplies from the Middle East and West Africa. It also wants to develop western hinterlands by heavily investing in these regions.

The three routes

The southern corridor begins from Guangzhou, which is the third largest city of China in South Central China. This route moves towards western parts of China and connects Kashgar with Pakistan at Kunjarab – a point from where China wants to link to Gwadar port in the Arabian Sea. It is the shortest and the most feasible option for China. But it is not the only option.

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The second Chinese option is the Central Corridor that starts from Shanghai and links the country to Tashkent, Tehran and onwards to Bandar Imam Khomeini Port of Iran on the Persian Gulf. One of its branches goes up towards Europe. This is the longer route but could be an option, if Pakistan does not deliver on the timelines of completing its road network to become a beneficiary of the New Silk Road Economic Belt.

The third Chinese option is the Northern Corridor that starts from Beijing, passes through Russia, and links it to European cities.

After over a decade of planning, China formally launched the idea of Silk Road Economic Belt, known as the One Road, One Belt, in October 2013.

The fear of a maritime blockade imposed by the US in the event of a conflict in East Asia has led Chinese thinkers to look for ways to bypass sea lanes subject to US naval dominance, writes Nadege Rolland, the Senior Project Director for Political and Security Affairs at the National Bureau of Asian Research (NBR) in his February 2015 article.

China Pakistan Economic Corridor

In this backdrop, China and Pakistan signed a Memorandum of Understanding on China-Pakistan Economic Corridor on July 5, 2013. The agreement was signed during Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s visit to China.

The CPEC, which will be constructed from 2014 to 2030, talks about integrated links to Chinese One Road, One Belt and 21st Century Maritime Silk Route. With active consultation of Chinese authorities, Pakistan has prepared a plan to construct three corridors, the western alignment, the central alignment and the eastern alignment. The last one has been picked for development in the first phase.

Article 3 of July 2013 MoU on Long Term Plan of CPEC explains the rationales behind picking the eastern corridor. “Long-Term Plan should be developed under the principle of scientific planning, steadily developing, and take the easiest the first,” it states.

It was on China’s demand for security and early completion of the route that led to the finalisation of the eastern corridor. The western route, where the Pakhtoon and Baloch belts lie, cannot be developed at a faster pace and is riskier in terms of security. However, there is a counter argument that development would address the security concerns.

The eastern alignment will pass through Thakot-Mansehra-Islamabad-Lahore and Multan. From Multan, the route will be linked to Hyderabad through Rohri and Dadu. The Hyderabad-Karachi portion will be linked through M-9. Karachi will then be linked to Gwadar through N-10 East Bay Express Way along the coastal line.

The work on central alignment will be completed later whereas construction on some parts of Gwadar-Dera Ismail Khan via Quetta route – western alignment – has already begun.

The argument that some parts of the country are being deprived off may be true in the short-term but, in longer term all these cities will be connected to the corridor. All provincial capitals are included as nodes, the key corner stones of CPEC on which it will be constructed. These nodes are at Peshawar, Islamabad, Lahore, Sukkar, Karachi, Gwadar and Quetta.

While China will be able to address its strategic concerns, development activities will help propel growth in the country and could become a source for sustainable development. CPEC-related activities involve work worth $50.6 billion, although majority of the agreements will be settled in China.

The Chinese will provide a mix of concessionary and commercial loans to develop Gwadar Port, finance energy projects, build Infrastructure, and particularly industrial parks.

The role of the provinces remains critical as they will provide land for development projects and provision of allied facilities.

However, policymakers face significant challenges of creating synergy in leadership for ownership of CPEC, coordination among all organs of the state to realise projects in time, maintaining political stability and consensus and assuring security.

If, due to any reason, Pakistan remains unable to complete its part of the work in a timely fashion, the Chinese will still have the option to opt for other routes by cutting the country out from its long-term strategic planning.

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DATA COMPILED: SHAHBAZ RANA & FAREEHA MUFTI

Published in The Express Tribune, May 18th, 2015.
 
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they should construct a motorway from quetta to peshawar
 
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they should construct a motorway from quetta to peshawar

Why Need Motarway When the Route From Quetta to Peshawar which meets with Indus Highway on the way to Peshawar already Exist in Pakistan China Economic Corridor ....

This is the Official Map of Pakistan China Economic Corridor in which Roads are passing from Every Province Still ANP JI and PTI is Crying on it that the route has been changed... Who the Hell told them that the Route have been changed at the Time when there was no Official map... Ahsan Iqbal Even showed them this map but no they still have reservations on it.... Another Kalabagh thing in Making....

I hope i hope i Hope army takes action against such type of people making every Project Controversial...


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they should construct a motorway from quetta to peshawar
May be in future but right now, it cannot be build due to various reasons such as:

  • Security situation in both Peshawar & Quetta
  • It will be passing near FATA so extremely risky before the Talibaboons are completely exterminated
  • The population density of that region is relatively lower than rest of the country. So their demands are also less and the national highway would do the job until such a need arises
 
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Hope this route dies a natural death, just like Kalabagh Dam! :D
 
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Enough Paperwork, now start and complete it ASAP.

Atleast now with this map no body can say a word that It is Punjab's Project. Major Development is happening in Sindh, Baluchistan, Baldistan and of-course Punjab. KPK is totally CM KPK's fault. PM did offer Khatakh to go to China, but he rejected and diverted his priority to Multan By Election.here
 
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This is fantastic news. All of Pakistan must unite. If we play our cards right one day in the future even trucks from central Russian Siberia could be using our ports for the simple fact all of Sinkiang Uighur, China, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kirghiztan, Kazakistan and central Siberia, Russia is natural hinterland to our Arabian coast.

The eastern route should get priority for the simple fact that large portion is already complete like M2, M3 and work started on M4 motorways. So if they apply focus on this they should complete within 5-7 years then shift over to the central route and then down the road to the western route. Frankly Gwadar's potential can only be tapped by using the western route.

However as the Chinese say a journey of thousand miles begins with one step ...
 
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Iran, Pakistan, and China Form Energy Partnership

By Tim Maverick, Commodities Correspondent

An energy deal two decades in the making looks like it’s finally coming to fruition.

A natural gas pipeline will be built from Iran to energy-needy Pakistan. Dubbed the “Peace Pipeline,” the project brings Iran and Pakistan – countries that have often been at odds – into a mutually beneficial partnership.

China is a part of this deal, too. In fact, the Chinese are funding 85% of the project. The country is footing the $2-billion bill for the 485-mile Pakistani section of the pipeline. The 560-mile Iranian section is already completed.

The project is being managed by a subsidiary of the China National Petroleum Corporation, and will take about two years to complete.

When and if the project is completed, it’ll truly be a blessing for Pakistan. The pipeline will bring in enough natural gas to power 4,500 megawatts of electricity generation. That’s nearly equivalent to the country’s current electricity shortfall!

Of course, all of this depends on whether the sanctions on Iran are eased.

Bearing Big Gifts

The specifics surrounding the “Peace Pipeline” were agreed to when Chinese President Xi Jinping visited Pakistan to formalize a $46-billion infrastructure package between the two countries called the China Pakistan Economic Corridor.

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That $46 billion is nearly triple the amount of foreign direct investment that Pakistan received since 2008! It also dwarfs prior U.S. aid packages to Pakistan.

The package includes other energy projects, a fiber-optic cable linking the countries, roads, and railways.

A cornerstone of the corridor will be the development of the Gwadar warm-water port, which will include an airport. The port in Pakistan will make it easier to ship goods into Western China, which is far from China’s active east coast ports.

The transport links will also give China valuable access to the Indian Ocean and key export markets in both Central and South Asia.

But all of this is dependent on if Pakistan can control all of the terrorist activity in the country. On April 21, the Pakistan government said it would assign a 12,000-strong security force to protect the Chinese workers that’ll be working in the country.
China’s Big-Picture Thinking

China’s generosity is all part of a plan unveiled in 2013 by President Jinping. Originally called the Silk Road Economic Belt, it was renamed “One Belt, One Road”. The plan is designed to promote regional stability, expand China’s economic footprint, and boost its industrial exports.

The whole idea is to link the 4.4 billion people throughout Asia, and then extend the links even further into places like Russia and Turkey.

The centerpiece of this grand plan involves countries on or near the Indian Ocean. Thus, the $2-billion “Peace Pipeline” and the other infrastructure spending in Pakistan.

China is using part of its massive $3.7-trillion foreign exchange reserve to inject at least $62 billion into state-owned “policy banks” to support this grand scheme. These “banks” include the Export-Import Bank of China, China Development Bank, and the Agricultural Development Bank of China.

Add China’s New Silk Road strategy to the 50 countries supporting the China-led Asia Infrastructure Investment Bank, and you have a lot of major infrastructure projects, many of which involve bringing energy to a part of the world that needs it.

This plan should keep China’s industrial and construction companies strong, as most of the work will be done by Chinese firms. In turn, the construction work will keep the economy rolling and people employed as China’s leaders try to transition the domestic economy to more of a consumer-led economy.

It’s interesting to note that the original Silk Road strategy was an idea brought forward by former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in 2011 to bring together Central Asian countries through economic and other ties.

That idea died on the vine. But China took it, expanded it, and is pushing ahead with it… as it pushed the United States’ former influence aside in that part of the globe.

And the chase continues,

Tim Maverick
 
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and these Noora brothers are taking all the credit . they dont even 250 kms of road already completed in gilglt baltistan.
 
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Hope this route dies a natural death, just like Kalabagh Dam! :D
I don't think so because in KBD it was three vs one situation. Here all the hue and cry is coming from Pushtoon nationalists. The eastern route (the most "controversial" made route) touches Balochistan,Interior Sindh, Parts of Urban Sindh, South Punjab, Central Punjab, Hazara and GB. its no longer 3 vs 1 but 5 Vs 1 against Pukhtoon Nationalists. And their propaganda is for petty political gains.
 
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The three routes

The southern corridor begins from Guangzhou, which is the third largest city of China in South Central China. This route moves towards western parts of China and connects Kashgar with Pakistan at Kunjarab – a point from where China wants to link to Gwadar port in the Arabian Sea. It is the shortest and the most feasible option for China. But it is not the only option.

The second Chinese option is the Central Corridor that starts from Shanghai and links the country to Tashkent, Tehran and onwards to Bandar Imam Khomeini Port of Iran on the Persian Gulf. One of its branches goes up towards Europe. This is the longer route but could be an option, if Pakistan does not deliver on the timelines of completing its road network to become a beneficiary of the New Silk Road Economic Belt.

The third Chinese option is the Northern Corridor that starts from Beijing, passes through Russia, and links it to European cities.

After over a decade of planning, China formally launched the idea of Silk Road Economic Belt, known as the One Road, One Belt, in October 2013.

The fear of a maritime blockade imposed by the US in the event of a conflict in East Asia has led Chinese thinkers to look for ways to bypass sea lanes subject to US naval dominance, writes Nadege Rolland, the Senior Project Director for Political and Security Affairs at the National Bureau of Asian Research (NBR) in his February 2015 article.

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No it wil b constructed at al cost ..i m from kpk..an i support it.. evn if ma blood is required ..v pukhtoons wil sprinkle our blood... dnt talk about ANP they r jst bl**dy shits...
Yes but it must b remembered that no one should get effected.. v hv to tc f da smal provinces...
Bcz v r not in position to loose any other part of pakistan... lets unite nd nt let any body to sabotage us
 
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