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China-Pakistan railway ‘worth it’ at estimated US$58 billion: study

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China-Pakistan railway ‘worth it’ at estimated US$58 billion: study

  • Belt and Road Initiative’s most expensive transport infrastructure project ‘has potential’ to reshape trade and geopolitics
  • The rail link is part of a broader plan to revive ancient Silk Road connections and reduce reliance on Western-dominated routes


Stephen Chen in Beijing
Published: 3:01pm, 27 Apr, 2023

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The China-Pakistan railway – China’s largest Belt and Road Initiative transport project – will cost an estimated 400 billion yuan (US$57.7 billion), but should proceed because of its strategic significance, a government-commissioned feasibility study has found.

The proposed railway, connecting Pakistan’s port of Gwadar to Kashgar in China’s Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, was assessed by scientists from the state-owned China Railway First Survey and Design Institute Group Co Ltd.

The team, led by the institute’s deputy director of capital operations Zhang Ling, said the project was the belt and road plan’s most expensive transport infrastructure.

Despite the cost, the project had the potential to reshape trade and geopolitics across the Eurasian continent and should be supported, the team said in a report published by the Chinese-language journal Railway Transport and Economy in April.

“The government and financial institutions [in China] should provide strong support, increase coordination and collaboration among relevant domestic departments, strive for the injection of support funds and provide strong policy support and guarantees for the construction of this project,” they said.

The institute is one of the largest of its kind in China and has been involved in many major railway projects at home and internationally, including Indonesia’s Jakarta-Bandung high-speed rail line.

The 3,000km (1,860-mile) railway will link China’s western regions with the Arabian Sea, bypassing the Strait of Malacca and reducing dependence on the South China Sea.

Connections with other transport networks – including in Iran and Turkey – would also provide a more direct route to Europe for Chinese goods, while Pakistan is forecast to get a much-needed boost from the improved infrastructure and easier trade with China.

The scheme is a key component of Beijing’s broader belt and road plan to promote economic cooperation and connectivity among the countries along the ancient Silk Road trade routes.

Previous studies by Chinese government researchers have suggested the infrastructure initiative could have significant geopolitical implications, helping to shift the balance of power away from traditional Western-dominated trade routes.

As well as encouraging a more multipolar world order, the belt and road plan could also help to promote economic development and stability in countries along the route by creating jobs, boosting infrastructure investment and increasing trade, the studies said.

Most belt and road transport infrastructure construction projects had received a significant proportion of funding from the host countries, and the scale of investment was much smaller, Zhang and his colleagues noted.

For example, total investment in Kenya’s Mombasa-Nairobi standard gauge railway was US$3.8 billion, with China providing 5 per cent of the funding and Kenya paying for the rest.

The project connects the port city to the Kenyan capital and is part of a larger plan to link East African countries by rail. Similarly, China contributed 30 per cent of the US$4 billion funding for the Addis Ababa-Djibouti rail line in Ethiopia.

China covered 75 per cent of the Jakarta-Bandung high-speed railway’s costs of US$5.9 billion, with Indonesian state-owned enterprises providing the remainder.
But Pakistan is unable to make a similar contribution. Its GDP last year was US$370 billion – just six times the estimated cost of the project.

“Due to energy shortages, poor investment environment and fiscal deficits, Pakistan’s economic growth rate has come under pressure,” the team said.

“In terms of railway investment and construction, Pakistan is unable to provide sufficient financial and material support and mainly relies on Chinese enterprises for investment and construction.”

One reason for the hefty cost is the mountainous and geologically complex terrain along the route. There could be technical challenges to overcome in the construction and operation of the railway, the researchers said.

The project also required supporting infrastructure – such as ports and logistics facilities – that might not be immediately available in Pakistan, they said.

The study said Pakistan’s labour policies could be unpredictable, which could potentially affect the railway’s construction and operating costs.

The team also noted that Pakistan had experienced security challenges in recent years, including in its western region where the railway will pass through. Balochistan province, for instance, has been plagued by separatist violence for decades.

This could potentially disrupt construction and operation of the railway and pose a risk to Chinese workers and investments, the researchers said.

The study also pointed out the railway’s potential impact on neighbouring countries, such as India. With each country having its own priorities and interests, there could be disagreements or delays in decision-making related to the project, it said.

Zhang’s team suggested that a build and transfer (BT) model would provide the best investment and financing strategy for the project.

They considered BT against build-operate-transfer, public-private partnerships, and the engineering, procurement, construction mode that are becoming more popular in belt and road projects.

In the BT model, a contractor would be responsible for designing, building and financing the railway, with payment on completion and ownership transferred to the government or other commissioning entity.

The researchers said BT would allow the risks associated with the railway’s construction and operation to be allocated more effectively between China and Pakistan, potentially reducing the financial risks for both parties.

By ensuring that ownership of the railway was transferred to Pakistan, BT could also help to build trust between China and Pakistan by showing China’s commitment to supporting Pakistan’s long-term economic development, they said.

China and Pakistan have been talking for years about the railway, a crucial part of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) that was launched in 2015 and aims to connect Gwadar port to Xinjiang through a network of roads, railways and pipelines.

The researchers said the China-Pakistan relationship was complex, with both countries having different priorities and interests.

Negotiating agreements related to financing, labour policies, and other issues would require careful consideration of each country’s priorities and interests, they said.

In conclusion, Zhang and his team said their recommendation could help to move negotiations forward.

 
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As far as china is concerned, it provides a direct and very short land based route to Middle east's energy markets which also happen to be cash rich, and growing, spending at a blistering rate.

Pakistan should let the chineese build the railway, and charge for land access & freight.

Let the chineese deal with the rest.
 
Pakistan China railways is something which both countries can extract maximum benefit.

Better than power projects that have disastrous cost benefit.

Focus on roads, railways, ports, airports, industrial estates within the CPEC framework.

Other investments should be outside the CPEC framework.
 
As long as we can shove all our elite into the train bogeys with a one-way ticket all the way to the sea, i'm all for building this and more tracks. The more napak generals, politicians, bureaucrats we can throw; the better the ROI.
 
Pak railways like PIA is in bad shape. Our transport of both ppl n goods are more biased towards highway n motorways and it players have a monopoly.
China should push the gov towards incentives for the masses to use railways.
That will help alot of other problems and be financially viable aswell.

Privatisation of Steel Mills and PIA should be done. Those are huge loss giving entities.

Pakistan China railways is something which both countries can extract maximum benefit.

Better than power projects that have disastrous cost benefit.

Focus on roads, railways, ports, airports, industrial estates within the CPEC framework.

Other investments should be outside the CPEC framework.
No our focus should be on production and export. Informal economy should be reigned. Digitalization move to QR and digital transfers.


Long term thinking is needed. Not short term to win elections and than the next govt fuks it all with their new policies.
 
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As far as china is concerned, it provides a direct and very short land based route to Middle east's energy markets which also happen to be cash rich, and growing, spending at a blistering rate.

Pakistan should let the chineese build the railway, and charge for land access & freight.

Let the chineese deal with the rest.
$8 billion probably is Ok, but not $58 billion, it's too big a risk even for China.
 
I am worried that some Pakistanis might think this huge rail project is another big debt trap China is imposing on Pakistan just as some think the other on going CPEC projects are. $58 billion is a big risky spending for even the size of China too. China has to be cautious. China has already over spent or wasted lots of money on many BRI projects like in Africa and Latin America that are not crucial or important to China's security and development.
 
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landslide proofing, otherwise it will be burried most of the year
Will be like this one, but in a larger scale, the future China-Pakistan railway will be linked to this one in China

 
58 billion dollars is too expensive.

$58 billion can manufacture 70 type 055 destroyers or 14 aircraft carriers.
Tie up all pakistani elite to the tracks and run them over with freight trains. The amount of dividends that might pay for China is worth more than 500 billion usd alone.
 
Pakistan was expected to pay pay 11 billion (the cost from the border to gwadar), while shaikh Rashid wanted to negotiate it down to 6/8 billion dollars hence the delay.

he thought that china might be over-charging (double like it did with 19 billion projects which were actually worth 10 billion )
So, Pakistanis think China over charged CPEC projects double to $19 billion instead of worth $10. Do you know what the Westerners like Japanese, Europeans and Americans would charge to build those projects ? Do they have estimate for that ?
 
As far as china is concerned, it provides a direct and very short land based route to Middle east's energy markets which also happen to be cash rich, and growing, spending at a blistering rate.

Pakistan should let the chineese build the railway, and charge for land access & freight.

Let the chineese deal with the rest.
Not just Middle East but Africa too. Tunnels linking UAE Khasab to Iran Bandar Abbas and Yemen to Djibouti. This would be the trans Afro-Asia economic corridor, the silk route extended to be called the diamond route. Should be called the Khansaheeb grand economic corridor , lol.

So, Pakistanis think China over charged CPEC projects double to $19 billion instead of worth $10. Do you know what the Westerners like Japanese, Europeans and Americans would charge to build those projects ? Do they have estimate for that ?
They came up with all sorts of excuses not to build, including incredible delays in feasibility studies, extravagant costs and technological and technical weaknesses, to outright we won't help.
 
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not think but know. that is the reason fat thief nawaz sharif was removed and replaced by another chor.

it was 19 billion loans for the first phase:
total 19 billion
laundered 4.5 billion into western banks for the Pakistani PM
you kept 4.5 billion as laundering fee
10 billion spent on the projects

namaloom afraad reported it to Chinese gormint who pledged to refund the amount stolen by your bankers but the amount laundered for Pakistani crooks was lost because the replacement gormint turned out to be as crooked as the last one
First time heard this kind story. Any link to official report or investigation on the matter ?
 
58 billion dollars is too expensive.

$58 billion can manufacture 70 type 055 destroyers or 14 aircraft carriers.
That's an alternative to Malacca strait. You should pray the project progress without American sabotage. They will try to pressure Pakistanis for sure. Let's ask google

How much Chinese oil goes through the Strait of Malacca?

The imports are critical for China as imported oil from abroad makes up 75 percent of its entire oil consumption, which ultimately means that roughly 60 percent of China's entire supply of oil passes through this one and a half mile wide stretch.

 
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