So, you have very aptly discovered my leaning towards India and AL. But, think of a Mudir Dokan business. You are the owner of that shop but you have rented it out to someone else with a condition that he can open the shop only for three days. Tell me, how he can earn a profit by paying a rent for one full month, but can do business for only thirteen days? Do you really think, since China is not in, therefore, without at least Indian NE and east coast to serve, can BD operate the new port? Can you refute my claim with logic, instead of exposing my deception?
I believe, the govt should prepare a new Economic Feasibility Report based on the real time geo-politics of the region. The previous one was prepared by Pacific Consutants of Japan with infusion of imaginary information forwarded by none other than the GoB. It says about China and Indian NE and east coast. But, under the changed circumstances the GoB should prepare a revised Economic Feasibility Report 2013 and feed the current information in it that reflect the real situation of today. No EFR is a Bible, it can be and should be revised to reflect the real time situation.
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kalu_miah, note one thing. No mother vessel will anchor at Sonadia without a large quantity of goods to load or unload. However, BD traders like you can charter such a large ship for exporting goods. Am I wrong to say large ships are expensive to run and they need large quantity of goods to carry? So, unless this port serves Indian NE and east coast, I believe, there is no way it will become a profitable port. If it is for losing money every year, then why to build it in the first place?
So, I ask you guys not to expose me further as a RAW agent, but, request you to come with logic that reflects the reality of today's geo-politics.
I personally do not want to get into name calling and I would ask idune Bhai also to maintain the spirit of a good rational debate.
Now about Chinese traffic in Sonadia Deep Sea port, there is no confirmation of it that they considered this traffic, as we do not know what is there in the feasibility report. Do you have a copy, does anyone have a copy and can they post in online as a pdf file? May be Bangladesh shipping ministry will do it, I would hope.
Chinese traffic may or may not come to Sonadia, or it may go to the planned Kyukphyu deep sea port. Myanmar is still in civil war and still there is no end in sight, so no plans should depend on this "possible future" Chinese traffic.
About NE states traffic, Indians have invested in Sittwe port and they will use this shallow port for traffic between Indian ports (like Kolkata) and NE. For inter-India traffic they do not need Sonadia.
In fact this presence of Sittwe would be a good justification for Bangladesh to forever close the issue of Transit/corridor (which is a veiled attack on our sovereignty) to NE as India would no longer need this and by sea would be a much cheaper and direct route. As for NE exports bound for third country, I see no problem for them to use Sonadia or Kyukphyu, whichever becomes available sooner and whichever is cheaper option for them. Eventually both options will be available to them and they will use the cheaper and faster option.
Now lets look at some stats:
List of world's busiest container ports - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Twenty-foot equivalent unit - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The busiest container port is Shanghai with about 32 million TEU, where as number 50 is Nagoya with 2.6 million TEU. Chittagong already crossed 1.5 million TEU in 2011:
Port of Chittagong - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chittagong does not have a very small volume of traffic by world standards and it is rapidly growing, considering increasing transfer of labor intensive industries, after China became expensive and there is no cheaper labor country in Asia. Busan, a city I stayed in for about 2 years in many different trips, has a traffic of 16 million TEU. This evening I just drove over two US ports close by with 14 million TEU capacity with millions of containers stacked.
If Koreans with a population of 40 million, can have this amount of traffic, I think eventually in a few decades, our traffic will be much higher. This is why we need a deep sea port and we need it now, to open up potentials for more FDI, more export industries and more development of Bangladesh.
It is not just Deep Sea port in Sonadia, we also need some critical pieces of infrastructure:
- at least a 4 lane highway between major cities, like Dhaka and Chittagong and to this Sonadia port
- a metro rail to relieve traffic congestion in Dhaka
- nuclear power to meet the demand of energy
Once we have these, the sky is the limit. Chinese, Japanese and Koreans will compete to see who can get in here first and take the opportunity.
Now, AL has a history of sabotaging national interest. If I remember correctly AL did the same thing with submarine cable. Because of AL we missed the first one that went near our coast, even Burma got a landing from it and our first fiber landing was delayed for a decade because of AL stupidity (I am guessing this was due to Indian instruction). May be we can open a thread about this.
I am guessing that India does not like this Sonadia port, and AL seems like it is stalling this project. They refused Chinese funds, now they will refuse funds from UAE.