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Still a Pipedream : A Pakistan-to-China rail corridor is not a substitute for maritim

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Still a Pipedream: A Pakistan-to-China rail corridor is not a substitute for maritime transport
Posted: 22. Dec, 2010 Last update: 28. Dec, 2010

Gabe Collins and Andrew Erickson, “Still a Pipedream: A Pakistan-to-China rail corridor is not a substitute for maritime transport ,” China SignPost™ (洞察中国), No. 13 (22 December 2010).

China SignPost™ 洞察中国–“Clear, high-impact China analysis.”©

The recent flurry of trade deals and MOUs (worth US$35 billion) signed during Premier Wen Jiabao’s recent visit to Pakistan have brought the possibility of a more robust Pakistan-to-China transport corridor back into the spotlight. The trade deals stand to drive increased economic activity by Chinese companies in Pakistan in coming years.

However, our assessment is that while the trade and investment agreements may help cement an “all weather” alliance between Beijing and Islamabad, they do not mean that an all weather transport corridor becomes viable. An expanded road and rail network linking Pakistan to China faces three key challenges. The bottom line is that maritime shipping routes will remain a cheaper, simpler, and more secure option for moving crude oil and other goods into China.

1) Security. The proposed transport corridor would go through areas that are subject to flooding and insurgent activity, as well as avalanches, landslides, and seismic activity in the Karakoram Range. If any of these disruptive events materializes, rail and road traffic cannot re-route around the trouble point the way that ships at sea can.

2) Capacity. A modern one-track rail line in the United States can currently handle around 16 trains per day, according to Cambridge Systematics. A Pakistan-to China rail corridor would likely be built with one track each way, but with reduced throughput of around 12 trains per day. U.S. freight trains carried an average of 2,800 tonnes of cargo in 2004, according to the Bureau of Transportation Statistics. Trains transiting the Khunjerab Pass would likely carry smaller loads, perhaps 2,000 tonnes, due to the large vertical gradient. With these train frequency and load parameters, the corridor would be able to handle 8.75 million tonnes of cargo per year, or approximately 175,000 barrels of oil per day if all the trains carried oil.

To move the volumes that would be necessary to make this route able to handle enough cargo to reduce sea transport reliance measurably, there would need to be a rail setup with 3 or 4 lines. Furthermore, bringing that much cargo into Western China’s rail network and then having to move it into industrial areas in the central and eastern regions would likely necessitate additional capacity expansions of the national rail system. These investments would likely be cost-prohibitive.

3) High construction and transport costs. The tariffs needed to pay off the finance costs of the route and move freight over a 15,000 foot vertical relief would likely make the cost highly uncompetitive with sea routes. The roughly 2,000 km-long Qingzang railway to Lhasa, Tibet cost roughly US$4 billion to build (US$1.85 million per km). The cost per km to build a rail line connecting Islamabad and Kashgar could be several times more expensive to build given the tough geologic and political circumstances along the route.

In terms of transport costs, we estimate that moving a barrel of oil by sea to Shanghai at a ship rate of US$75,000 per day at 23 km per hour with a 2 million barrel cargo costs around US$0.90 per barrel, while moving it by barge upriver to the rapidly-growing inland demand center of Chongqing would cost an additional US$1.23 per barrel, for a total transport cost of US$2.22 per barrel (Exhibit 1). In contrast, moving oil from Ras al-Tanura to Gwadar and then by rail into the heartland of China would likely cost closer to US$8.00 to US$12.40 per barrel, making that route economically uncompetitive, as well as limited in capacity.[1] The disparity would be slightly greater for major cities on China’s east coast.

Exhibit 1: Estimated costs of moving oil to Chongqing, China from the Persian Gulf by sea and via Pakistan



Still a Pipedream: A Pakistan-to-China rail corridor is not a substitute for maritime transport | China SignPost? ????
 
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Agree one hundred percent. Only pipeline is cheaper than maritime route. That is why so many oil tankers in the world.
 
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^^ Pipeline built by Pakistanis and Chinese shall be even more cheaper.
Real, challenge would be the altitude... but not impossible do design.
 
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Hope everything goes well.

:cheers:
 
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I think there will be a pipeline in 'the works' from Gwadar to China in about seven years. (estimate)
 
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Still a Pipedream : A Pakistan-to-China rail corridor is not a substitute for maritime transport

The recent flurry of trade deals and MOUs (worth US$35 billion) signed during Premier Wen Jiabao’s recent visit to Pakistan have brought the possibility of a more robust Pakistan-to-China transport corridor back into the spotlight. The trade deals stand to drive increased economic activity by Chinese companies in Pakistan in coming years.

However, our assessment is that while the trade and investment agreements may help cement an “all weather” alliance between Beijing and Islamabad, they do not mean that an all weather transport corridor becomes viable. An expanded road and rail network linking Pakistan to China faces three key challenges. The bottom line is that maritime shipping routes will remain a cheaper, simpler, and more secure option for moving crude oil and other goods into China.

1) Security. The proposed transport corridor would go through areas that are subject to flooding and insurgent activity, as well as avalanches, landslides, and seismic activity in the Karakoram Range. If any of these disruptive events materializes, rail and road traffic cannot re-route around the trouble point the way that ships at sea can.

2) Capacity. A modern one-track rail line in the United States can currently handle around 16 trains per day, according to Cambridge Systematics. A Pakistan-to China rail corridor would likely be built with one track each way, but with reduced throughput of around 12 trains per day. U.S. freight trains carried an average of 2,800 tonnes of cargo in 2004, according to the Bureau of Transportation Statistics. Trains transiting the Khunjerab Pass would likely carry smaller loads, perhaps 2,000 tonnes, due to the large vertical gradient. With these train frequency and load parameters, the corridor would be able to handle 8.75 million tonnes of cargo per year, or approximately 175,000 barrels of oil per day if all the trains carried oil.

To move the volumes that would be necessary to make this route able to handle enough cargo to reduce sea transport reliance measurably, there would need to be a rail setup with 3 or 4 lines. Furthermore, bringing that much cargo into Western China’s rail network and then having to move it into industrial areas in the central and eastern regions would likely necessitate additional capacity expansions of the national rail system. These investments would likely be cost-prohibitive.

3) High construction and transport costs. The tariffs needed to pay off the finance costs of the route and move freight over a 15,000 foot vertical relief would likely make the cost highly uncompetitive with sea routes. The roughly 2,000 km-long Qingzang railway to Lhasa, Tibet cost roughly US$4 billion to build (US$1.85 million per km). The cost per km to build a rail line connecting Islamabad and Kashgar could be several times more expensive to build given the tough geologic and political circumstances along the route.

In terms of transport costs, we estimate that moving a barrel of oil by sea to Shanghai at a ship rate of US$75,000 per day at 23 km per hour with a 2 million barrel cargo costs around US$0.90 per barrel, while moving it by barge upriver to the rapidly-growing inland demand center of Chongqing would cost an additional US$1.23 per barrel, for a total transport cost of US$2.22 per barrel (Exhibit 1). In contrast, moving oil from Ras al-Tanura to Gwadar and then by rail into the heartland of China would likely cost closer to US$8.00 to US$12.40 per barrel, making that route economically uncompetitive, as well as limited in capacity.[1]The disparity would be slightly greater for major cities on China’s east coast.

Exhibit 1: Estimated costs of moving oil to Chongqing, China from the Persian Gulf by sea and via Pakistan

U.S. Dollars per barrel


China-Pakistan-routes-map_December-2010-300x217.png

Source: BNSF Railway, Bureau of Transportation Statistics, NBS, ND Petroleum Council, China SignPost™

In short, there are compelling reasons why sea transport has been dominant for so long. To even build a Pakistan-to-China rail corridor would require massive upfront investments, would be economically uncompetitive relative to sea routes, and due to the many physical and political risks along the route, commercial shippers would likely be highly reluctant to use it.

Andrew Erickson and Gabriel Collins,“Oversea Trumps Overland: The Strategic Trajectory of China’s Oil Imports,”

China SignPost™, No. 1 (May 26, 2010).

“China’s Oil Security Pipe Dream: The Reality, and Strategic Consequences, of Seaborne Imports,” Naval War College Review, Vol. 63, No. 2 (Spring 2010), pp. 88-111
 
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Interesting. I thought that building a tunnel on the lines of the English-France one would seem more feasible. Any opinions?
 
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The authors are thinking way too short-term in my opinion.

True, the rail line faces security issues and financial issues today. Well, the situation will likely change to the better in the future.

There are several non-economical factors to consider as well. E.g shipping time: if I recall correctly, the shipping time will be shortened from 20 days to 2.

Diversification: If you can afford it, it is always good to have more options. Don't put all your eggs in one basket. Here, I think of gas price, security issues (e.g having to travel between pirate-infested places). One can as well give more options to the buyers - either a high speed shipping by rail, or slow by shipping, catering to the needs of the customers.

Increase overall capacity: Adding a rail line does not mean that everybody will stop using cargo ships. They can supplement and complement each other. I predict that the trade between China, Africa and the Middle-east plus Pakistan and India will "sky-rocket" in the coming decades.

Environment: Relying on too much shipping is not very environmentally-friendly. We all know what the trend is.

Friendly gesture: A rail line would also serve as a symbol of China-Pakistan friendship. It will provide jobs and bring prosperity to a region that has been plagued by war and natural disasters.

Economical: In the long run, the rail line may well be very profitable, if one also takes into account the external benefits+increased usage.

Just my initial thoughts.
 
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i think the rail line is more for cargo and people
 
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China and Pakistan are building rail corridor and Indians are having constipation all over it!. WHY?? the insurgency exist because it their source of economy..terrorist pays in north Pakistan. With trade and rail corridor that is going to change..China will bring down something which USA, ISAF and NATO failed in North-Pakistan and Afghanistan.

The cost per km to build a rail line connecting Islamabad and Kashgar could be several times more expensive to build given the tough geologic and political circumstances along the route.

What does oil shipping has to do with Islamabad??

contrast, moving oil from Ras al-Tanura to Gwadar and then by rail into the heartland of China would likely cost closer to US$8.00 to US$12.40 per barrel,

Why will it move by rail and not pipe line?? oil all over the world is shipped by pipe from offloading port..never heard of oil bring transported by rail being cost-effective?

Seriously is this author on cheap crack??
 
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Speed is also something... At war time, China will require quick and secure supply of oil and Pakistan can deliver in that regard.

I think the values presented here are inflated, cost of transportation can reduce drastically if its done through electric renewable means.
 
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China and Pakistan are building rail corridor and Indians are having constipation all over it!. WHY?? the insurgency exist because it their source of economy..terrorist pays in north Pakistan. With trade and rail corridor that is going to change..China will bring down something which USA, ISAF and NATO failed in North-Pakistan and Afghanistan.

:hitwall: :hitwall: :hitwall:

Go through the entire thread and please point out just WHERE has any Indian said anything against this rail corridor?

Stop seeing everything through an India-Pakistan lens. It'll be healthier for you.
 
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Speed is also something... At war time, China will require quick and secure supply of oil and Pakistan can deliver in that regard.

I think the values presented here are inflated, cost of transportation can reduce drastically if its done through electric renewable means.

Isn't most of the development work happening in East China? I though west China/Tibet was mostly desert. In that case the distance required to travel would increase drastically.
 
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