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Pakistan seeks relief from China over Belt and Road

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Pakistan seeks relief from China over Belt and Road

Pakistan is trying to renegotiate Belt and Road repayments after it alleged that Chinese companies had inflated power project costs by billions of dollars.

The renegotiation talks began after Islamabad released a report by a committee convened by the prime minister that accused Chinese and local power companies of “malpractices” and exaggerating costs. The financial stress caused by the coronavirus pandemic has lent the negotiations greater urgency.

The report said coal plants Huaneng Shandong Ruyi (Pakistan) Energy and Port Qasim Electric Power Company were overcharging by about $3bn over the 30-year project lifetime through inflated set-up costs and interest payments. Set-up costs alone for the two plants were inflated by more than Rs32bn ($204m) over “misrepresentation” of interest payments.

Under pressure from Beijing, Islamabad has deferred a probe into the alleged corruption while it tries to win more favourable terms through back channel negotiations.

According to people familiar with the talks, the Pakistan government is not asking to renegotiate power tariffs for now, but instead wants to delay repayments for up to 10 years.
Given the economic circumstances we are trying to seek relief wherever possible. That’s why we want to first deal with all independent power producers informally and see how far we progress, before we formalise this process,” a Pakistani cabinet minister, who wished to remain anonymous, told the Financial Times.

Imran Khan inherited a balance of payments crisis when he came into power in 2018. After months of delay, Islamabad finally asked the IMF for a three-year $6bn bailout. The programme has been paused as the country tries to revive its economy and eases lockdown restrictions even as coronavirus infections soar.

A director at Heng cheng xin Group, a Beijing-based engineering consultancy that helped set the price for the Huaneng coal power plant, said the cost was “a reasonable figure”.

“It is possible that the project may carry a new price tag if we re-evaluate it with the latest condition. But that doesn’t mean our previous estimate was wrong,” said the director, who asked to remain anonymous over fear of reprisal. “Pakistan needs to provide concrete evidence to prove the project is overcharged.”

China faces wave of calls for debt relief on ‘Belt and Road’ projects
An official at Agricultural Bank of China Shandong Branch, which lent $350m to the Huaneng project, said “all options”, including debt extension and relief, were “on the table” as Pakistan was under financial pressure. “We need to recoup as much money as possible,” said the official, who also wished to remain anonymous.

Huaneng declined to comment. PowerChina, which holds a 51 per cent stake in Port Qasim Electric Power Company, also declined to comment.

Alice Wells, a former US diplomat, has been a frequent critic of the $62bn China Pakistan Economic Corridor, citing a lack of transparency and “unfair rates of profit that are guaranteed to Chinese parastatal organisations”.

At a briefing last month, Ms Wells called on China to “take steps to alleviate the burden that this predatory and unsustainable and unfair lending is going to cause Pakistan”.

Corruption in the power sector is a perennial allegation in Pakistan because of a government energy policy that essentially guarantees profits, said Kamal Munir, a Cambridge university professor who has advised Islamabad on industrial policy.

https%3A%2F%2Fd1e00ek4ebabms.cloudfront.net%2Fproduction%2F3e1e0760-e2fd-473f-8d46-6e8e421e7bdd.jpg

A model of the Port Qasim power plant © Asim Hafeez/Bloomberg
“We’ve established a rent seeking racket, there is no competition in the sector, the returns are guaranteed and CPEC projects are the same,” said Prof Munir. “Time and time again Pakistan has managed to lock itself into these deals that hollow out the economy.”

Husain Haqqani, former Pakistan ambassador to the US and now a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute, said the report highlighted the problems associated with some BRI projects.

Mr Haqqani said the two CPEC power projects made exorbitant profits and criticised their high set-up costs and questionable interest deductions.

“It does hurt China’s credibility and further exposes BRI’s exploitation of poorer countries,” he said.

The talks to delay payments are separate from negotiations that Mr Khan’s government is holding with China over relief on interest payments on public and commercial debt worth more than $10bn. This month, Beijing announced it had suspended debt repayments to 77 developing countries reeling from the coronavirus impact without giving further details.
 
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US didn't do shit for Pakistan. Gave us drone attacks, terrorists from Afghanistan, 70K dead civilians and now an increasingly belligerent India right on our doorstep.
China is doing infrastructure, national security, military tech, local jobs and training. :pakistan::china:
 
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Pakistan seeks relief from China over Belt and Road

Pakistan is trying to renegotiate Belt and Road repayments after it alleged that Chinese companies had inflated power project costs by billions of dollars.

The renegotiation talks began after Islamabad released a report by a committee convened by the prime minister that accused Chinese and local power companies of “malpractices” and exaggerating costs. The financial stress caused by the coronavirus pandemic has lent the negotiations greater urgency.

The report said coal plants Huaneng Shandong Ruyi (Pakistan) Energy and Port Qasim Electric Power Company were overcharging by about $3bn over the 30-year project lifetime through inflated set-up costs and interest payments. Set-up costs alone for the two plants were inflated by more than Rs32bn ($204m) over “misrepresentation” of interest payments.

Under pressure from Beijing, Islamabad has deferred a probe into the alleged corruption while it tries to win more favourable terms through back channel negotiations.

According to people familiar with the talks, the Pakistan government is not asking to renegotiate power tariffs for now, but instead wants to delay repayments for up to 10 years.
Given the economic circumstances we are trying to seek relief wherever possible. That’s why we want to first deal with all independent power producers informally and see how far we progress, before we formalise this process,” a Pakistani cabinet minister, who wished to remain anonymous, told the Financial Times.

Imran Khan inherited a balance of payments crisis when he came into power in 2018. After months of delay, Islamabad finally asked the IMF for a three-year $6bn bailout. The programme has been paused as the country tries to revive its economy and eases lockdown restrictions even as coronavirus infections soar.

A director at Heng cheng xin Group, a Beijing-based engineering consultancy that helped set the price for the Huaneng coal power plant, said the cost was “a reasonable figure”.

“It is possible that the project may carry a new price tag if we re-evaluate it with the latest condition. But that doesn’t mean our previous estimate was wrong,” said the director, who asked to remain anonymous over fear of reprisal. “Pakistan needs to provide concrete evidence to prove the project is overcharged.”

China faces wave of calls for debt relief on ‘Belt and Road’ projects
An official at Agricultural Bank of China Shandong Branch, which lent $350m to the Huaneng project, said “all options”, including debt extension and relief, were “on the table” as Pakistan was under financial pressure. “We need to recoup as much money as possible,” said the official, who also wished to remain anonymous.

Huaneng declined to comment. PowerChina, which holds a 51 per cent stake in Port Qasim Electric Power Company, also declined to comment.

Alice Wells, a former US diplomat, has been a frequent critic of the $62bn China Pakistan Economic Corridor, citing a lack of transparency and “unfair rates of profit that are guaranteed to Chinese parastatal organisations”.

At a briefing last month, Ms Wells called on China to “take steps to alleviate the burden that this predatory and unsustainable and unfair lending is going to cause Pakistan”.

Corruption in the power sector is a perennial allegation in Pakistan because of a government energy policy that essentially guarantees profits, said Kamal Munir, a Cambridge university professor who has advised Islamabad on industrial policy.

https%3A%2F%2Fd1e00ek4ebabms.cloudfront.net%2Fproduction%2F3e1e0760-e2fd-473f-8d46-6e8e421e7bdd.jpg

A model of the Port Qasim power plant © Asim Hafeez/Bloomberg
“We’ve established a rent seeking racket, there is no competition in the sector, the returns are guaranteed and CPEC projects are the same,” said Prof Munir. “Time and time again Pakistan has managed to lock itself into these deals that hollow out the economy.”

Husain Haqqani, former Pakistan ambassador to the US and now a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute, said the report highlighted the problems associated with some BRI projects.

Mr Haqqani said the two CPEC power projects made exorbitant profits and criticised their high set-up costs and questionable interest deductions.

“It does hurt China’s credibility and further exposes BRI’s exploitation of poorer countries,” he said.

The talks to delay payments are separate from negotiations that Mr Khan’s government is holding with China over relief on interest payments on public and commercial debt worth more than $10bn. This month, Beijing announced it had suspended debt repayments to 77 developing countries reeling from the coronavirus impact without giving further details.




Funny how those who used to malign Pakistan and call for our death and destruction are all of sudden concerned about the economic well-being of Pakistan and CPEC............I wonder why..........:disagree:

indians will keep burning and losing 60km while CPEC works can bee seen everywhere in pakistan now a days .





Apparently it's a bit more than 60 square kms since the last few days.
 
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LMAO They interviewed Hussain Haqqani. That is like bringing your own umpire to the game.

Let me tell you folks. The US deep state is screwed. The Americans are trying hard. Very hard. In fact to the best of their ability, but the Americans know they got rejected. Pakistan took a different route and the US deep state is pissed. It is hurt to the bone. Why? Simply because Pakistan will prove to the US deep state that it is a broken empire and China is the new power.

Now all there is left to do for the US deep state is to beg and plead like their little slave Hindustan. Such articles and opinions are meant to stoke anger among the common Pakistanis against the Pakistani state. The problem for the US deep state is that there are hardly any buyers of this propaganda in Pakistan. The few sold outs like Haqqani are already sitting in the US LOL

Who is going to buy this crap? Hoodbhoy? PTM? BLA? LMAO Anti-state actors.

Funny how those who used to malign Pakistan and call for our death and destruction are all of sudden concerned about the economic well-being of Pakistan and CPEC............I wonder why..........:disagree:







Apparently it's a bit more than 60 square kms since the last few days.

LOL Remember that these are the same Americans and Indians that used to predict the end of Pakistan. Pakistan never had a future. It did not have an economy. It was destined to fail and fall apart. In a matter of weeks.

Look at them now. On their knees. Begging and pleading. Their officials hold daylight therapy sessions.

2019-12-10_blog.jpg
 
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Anything written by Hussain Haqqani needs to be taken with a large dose of salt. This man has become so anti-army/current government to the point of actually being anti-Pakistan. I would like to see the report, if it exists, that he mentioned in the article to get a better view of the whole situation.
 
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It is too bad we had a Taliban US dialogue. This was the right time to reap the benefits. It doesn't matter. The talks will falter and we will be back to winning position.

The US deep state is our enemy. A bigger enemy than India. We will do whatever necessary to grind its face into the dirt. CPEC is just a tiny start.
 
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What abt bullions u got from US? & F16's & not to forget other hardware. When US found PAK useless after AF war and demise of USSR, still u people salvating for star airlifters and globasters and what not?

Your daddy paid its dues. No money no service. Simple equation.

Tell daddy USA to stop begging. It is a sorry sight. What happened to the promise that daddy USA would never hold negotiations with the Taliban? Talk about breaking promises.
 
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Pakistan seeks relief from China over Belt and Road

Pakistan is trying to renegotiate Belt and Road repayments after it alleged that Chinese companies had inflated power project costs by billions of dollars.

The renegotiation talks began after Islamabad released a report by a committee convened by the prime minister that accused Chinese and local power companies of “malpractices” and exaggerating costs. The financial stress caused by the coronavirus pandemic has lent the negotiations greater urgency.

The report said coal plants Huaneng Shandong Ruyi (Pakistan) Energy and Port Qasim Electric Power Company were overcharging by about $3bn over the 30-year project lifetime through inflated set-up costs and interest payments. Set-up costs alone for the two plants were inflated by more than Rs32bn ($204m) over “misrepresentation” of interest payments.

Under pressure from Beijing, Islamabad has deferred a probe into the alleged corruption while it tries to win more favourable terms through back channel negotiations.

According to people familiar with the talks, the Pakistan government is not asking to renegotiate power tariffs for now, but instead wants to delay repayments for up to 10 years.
Given the economic circumstances we are trying to seek relief wherever possible. That’s why we want to first deal with all independent power producers informally and see how far we progress, before we formalise this process,” a Pakistani cabinet minister, who wished to remain anonymous, told the Financial Times.

Imran Khan inherited a balance of payments crisis when he came into power in 2018. After months of delay, Islamabad finally asked the IMF for a three-year $6bn bailout. The programme has been paused as the country tries to revive its economy and eases lockdown restrictions even as coronavirus infections soar.

A director at Heng cheng xin Group, a Beijing-based engineering consultancy that helped set the price for the Huaneng coal power plant, said the cost was “a reasonable figure”.

“It is possible that the project may carry a new price tag if we re-evaluate it with the latest condition. But that doesn’t mean our previous estimate was wrong,” said the director, who asked to remain anonymous over fear of reprisal. “Pakistan needs to provide concrete evidence to prove the project is overcharged.”

China faces wave of calls for debt relief on ‘Belt and Road’ projects
An official at Agricultural Bank of China Shandong Branch, which lent $350m to the Huaneng project, said “all options”, including debt extension and relief, were “on the table” as Pakistan was under financial pressure. “We need to recoup as much money as possible,” said the official, who also wished to remain anonymous.

Huaneng declined to comment. PowerChina, which holds a 51 per cent stake in Port Qasim Electric Power Company, also declined to comment.

Alice Wells, a former US diplomat, has been a frequent critic of the $62bn China Pakistan Economic Corridor, citing a lack of transparency and “unfair rates of profit that are guaranteed to Chinese parastatal organisations”.

At a briefing last month, Ms Wells called on China to “take steps to alleviate the burden that this predatory and unsustainable and unfair lending is going to cause Pakistan”.

Corruption in the power sector is a perennial allegation in Pakistan because of a government energy policy that essentially guarantees profits, said Kamal Munir, a Cambridge university professor who has advised Islamabad on industrial policy.

https%3A%2F%2Fd1e00ek4ebabms.cloudfront.net%2Fproduction%2F3e1e0760-e2fd-473f-8d46-6e8e421e7bdd.jpg

A model of the Port Qasim power plant © Asim Hafeez/Bloomberg
“We’ve established a rent seeking racket, there is no competition in the sector, the returns are guaranteed and CPEC projects are the same,” said Prof Munir. “Time and time again Pakistan has managed to lock itself into these deals that hollow out the economy.”

Husain Haqqani, former Pakistan ambassador to the US and now a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute, said the report highlighted the problems associated with some BRI projects.

Mr Haqqani said the two CPEC power projects made exorbitant profits and criticised their high set-up costs and questionable interest deductions.

“It does hurt China’s credibility and further exposes BRI’s exploitation of poorer countries,” he said.

The talks to delay payments are separate from negotiations that Mr Khan’s government is holding with China over relief on interest payments on public and commercial debt worth more than $10bn. This month, Beijing announced it had suspended debt repayments to 77 developing countries reeling from the coronavirus impact without giving further details.

Forget about relief. China will forgive all the loans in the next few years.
 
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LMAO They interviewed Hussain Haqqani. That is like bringing your own umpire to the game.

Let me tell you folks. The US deep state is screwed. The Americans are trying hard. Very hard. In fact to the best of their ability, but the Americans know they got rejected. Pakistan took a different route and the US deep state is pissed. It is hurt to the bone. Why? Simply because Pakistan will prove to the US deep state that it is a broken empire and China is the new power.

Now all there is left to do for the US deep state is to beg and plead like their little slave Hindustan. Such articles and opinions are meant to stoke anger among the common Pakistanis against the Pakistani state. The problem for the US deep state is that there are hardly any buyers of this propaganda in Pakistan. The few sold outs like Haqqani are already sitting in the US LOL

Who is going to buy this crap? Hoodbhoy? PTM? BLA? LMAO Anti-state actors.



LOL Remember that these are the same Americans and Indians that used to predict the end of Pakistan. Pakistan never had a future. it did not have an economy. It was destined to fail and fall apart. In a matter of weeks.

Look at them now. On their knees. Begging and pleading. Their officials hold daylight therapy sessions.

2019-12-10_blog.jpg




The continued disparaging remarks against CPEC by our enemies is a clear indication of the success of CPEC and the potential it has in helping Pakistan become a powerful, advanced and developed nation in the future. Something which our enemies are clearly wary and scared of.

Taking loans and praying to get written OFF.. Typical free lunch syndrome, Ur country will be mortaged soon to CN.. believe me, Nothing gonna change.. International politics is big game and Pakistans, novices unless u have money ie buying power..




Sure sure. A bit like you indians also claimed that india would become a superpower by 2012 and that the Chinese would NEVER attack indian soldiers.........:lol:
 
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