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The CPEC Nov. 2016 Ceremony Was More for Show

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Has CPEC now kicked off?

NOW that a couple of hundred containers have been loaded onto two vessels at Gwadar port and dispatched to various destinations around the world, can we say that CPEC is up and running? The short answer is no. The long answer is not yet.

The convoy that brought the containers to Gwadar, and the ceremonial send-off at the port with the usual unveiling of plaques, was not a commercial endeavour. It was a forced push, mostly led by the FWO whose DG said he did it to help dampen some of the “despondency” that was beginning to surround the project. Fair enough, the despondency was indeed addressed and a point was indeed made that the roads and the port infrastructure exists to handle this volume of cargo.

But to get an idea of what it took to make it possible, consider a few details. First, the Chinese were apprehensive, feeling that it is not yet commercially viable, and the government too felt it was a little premature to undertake such a task. The Chinese actually aired their apprehensions briefly when Yuan Jianmen, the executive from Sinotrans, the company that arranged the convoy of goods from the Chinese side, said that “there is still much work to do, especially in certain regions” where people still need to be persuaded of the benefits that CPEC will bring for them.

The convoy of trucks to Gwadar had a security escort involving more than a hundred personnel, and as many vehicles as there were trucks.

Next the Chinese raised the point that there are not enough containers available on their side of the border for export shipment from Pakistan, since most of them are booked already, so a special consignment had to be arranged to go to China carrying Pakistani goods just so containers for the return journey would be available over there. The services of a businessman from Gilgit were utilised for the purpose of arranging this consignment of goods.

The convoy of trucks itself had a security escort involving more than a hundred personnel, and as many vehicles as there were trucks. In addition, there was helicopter protection throughout the journey, as well as drone surveillance from above. The convoy took more than two weeks to reach Gwadar, so stops had to be arranged for such a large number of trucks, which required sleeping arrangements, food and parking space. In some locations, even R&R (if you get my drift) had to be arranged for the drivers to incentivise them to take the less trodden path west of the Indus river.

From Quetta to Gwadar alone, the journey took four nights, with the fifth being in Gwadar. The route is barren and empty except for two small towns along the way (Panjgur and Turbat), with no maintenance facilities for vehicular traffic, no place to get food for the drivers, and no place to spend the night. The FWO actually arranged for proper ‘harbours’ for the trucks in four locations along the N85 highway using Alaska tents for sleeping and food brought from outside. It was quite a logistical feat if you can imagine the amount of space that number of trucks takes up, and that the size of the personnel travelling was in the hundreds (including security detail).

Clearly the roads are there for trucks to travel on, but it is not yet viable for commercial traffic to ply these roads to access Gwadar port. Add to this the distance. According to one person (a commercial party) that was involved in the arrangements, the western route taken by the trucks will never be viable for cargoes originating in Lahore or south of Lahore. That means it’s only viable for cargoes originating in KP, upper Punjab, Gilgit-Baltistan or China. Considering most of Pakistan’s export base is located around Lahore and south of Lahore, this means the route will only be commercially viable for a small number of Pakistani producers, or for the Chinese, who continue to harbour strong apprehensions on security as well as the costs of utilising the western route.

Of course none of this means that the road network should never have been built. It should be built. In time, it has to be expanded from the current two lane alignment to six lanes. The Karakoram Highway took almost three decades before it began to grow into a large commercial artery, and that process still has a long way to go before it reaches full bloom.

That is the point here. The roads being built under the CPEC connectivity projects are a long-term proposition. It will be a couple of decades before they become arteries for major commercial traffic, but when that begins to happen, it will definitely be a ‘game changer’ for Pakistan. Some unscrupulous real estate agents are already beginning to cash in on the headlines and trying to sell Gwadar property under the pretext that “trade has now begun, prices there are about to skyrocket”. Don’t fall for this line! Trade has not started at Gwadar yet.

At this point, it is important to start thinking of ways to literally push cargoes towards Gwadar, provided its cargo handling is reliable enough. So here is a suggestion. A large number of containers leave Pakistan every year completely empty because we have a trade deficit with the outside world, and since more is imported than exported, containers naturally tend to accumulate within the country. Empty containers are routinely shipped out of the country, and their transport and insurance costs are lower. In fact, almost half of the containers that went out of Gwadar port as part of this exercise were empty. Is it possible to make a rule that all empty containers must be shipped out of Gwadar from now on? This will help de-clog Karachi’s two ports, and push traffic towards Gwadar.

In any case, the exercise was a successful demonstration of the infrastructure built so far, but it will be many years before real commercial traffic begins to flow along it.

The writer is a member of staff.
 
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Very interesting article...

it seems like we are still quite a few years off before CPEC really takes off. It seems like they have put the cart before the horse.

Or maybe they were hoping to give Modi a heart attack... might have worked.

Maybe we will have another ceremony in a few years.... Have they been fooling us all along????
 
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Every things takes time. Dun jump the gun before you load the rounds, so to speak. The route is long & arduous, even if it is in China, it will take some years, what more for Pakistan where many people has not aligned their disparate interest. Have patience my friends, good things comes to those who wait.
 
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Very interesting article...

it seems like we are still quite a few years off before CPEC really takes off. It seems like they have put the cart before the horse.

Or maybe they were hoping to give Modi a heart attack... might have worked.

Maybe we will have another ceremony in a few years.... Have they been fooling us all along????

ERGO the two western and eastern routes.

What dodos like Imran khan and saleem sapi don't understand is articulated nicely.
Even if the roads are made today on the western route, the lack of population and support infrastructure
along with climatic hazards will make them useless.

It makes more sense to have an eastern route which is safer, easier and economically more feasible
to start business with, while the western route takes shape.
 
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You will need alternative routes either way..A single route cant handle the traffic anticipated and will get choked.

China's total international trade in 2014 was $4.301 trillion (exports $2,342 trillion + imports $1.959 trillion). Due to savings in time and money, it is estimated that major portion of this trade may be routed through CPEC. However, for calculation purposes, if only 20% of this trade is routed thru CPEC/Gwadar, it means about 1,560,000 TEUs containers shall be passing Pakistan in a year; 4,273 containers a day shall be existing/entering Sust which means 3 container every minute have to be custom-checked and cleared.
With around 8 days travel time and 1 or 2 days for loading /unloading, a chain of about 42,730 containers shall always be on the roads of Pakistan at any time, with about 128,000 Chinese trailer drivers/assistants.SUPRA

I think we are not prepared for the influx . We are in habit of counting the chicks before they hatch.

Imagine hundreds of Chinese trucks awaiting for a clearance from Sust to cross border in a long haul.

1)We need more Sust like ports in GB otherwise this will go nowhere.
We also need to be prepared for accidents and weather conditions that will add to delays and build detours and response teams to make sure the traffic keeps moving ...


2)Another thing we need are dams around Makran..You dont build new dams..No one will move to Gwadar..

3)Thirdly Pakistan has to pay back return of investment form its earnings on the power projects.Though the country is power short and direly needs electricity . there is no adequate transport medium to bring energy to consumers doorstep and i fear the costs on storing electricity will make electricity expensive for consumption. .A couple of billions being spent on Mattial- to Faisalabad and Mattial to Lahore (660kvA each) are not enough. So regardless how many power plants Nawaz inaugurated there will be load shedding as it would just sit there at the plant and stare at us until we lay down new transmission lines on emergency basis.
 
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ERGO the two western and eastern routes.

What dodos like Imran khan and saleem sapi don't understand is articulated nicely.
Even if the roads are made today on the western route, the lack of population and support infrastructure
along with climatic hazards will make them useless.

It makes more sense to have an eastern route which is safer, easier and economically more feasible
to start business with, while the western route takes shape.

You will need alternative routes either way..A single route cant handle the traffic anticipated and will get choked.

China's total international trade in 2014 was $4.301 trillion (exports $2,342 trillion + imports $1.959 trillion). Due to savings in time and money, it is estimated that major portion of this trade may be routed through CPEC. However, for calculation purposes, if only 20% of this trade is routed thru CPEC/Gwadar, it means about 1,560,000 TEUs containers shall be passing Pakistan in a year; 4,273 containers a day shall be existing/entering Sust which means 3 container every minute have to be custom-checked and cleared.
With around 8 days travel time and 1 or 2 days for loading /unloading, a chain of about 42,730 containers shall always be on the roads of Pakistan at any time, with about 128,000 Chinese trailer drivers/assistants.SUPRA

I think we are not prepared for the influx . We are in habit of counting the chicks before they hatch.
Imagine hundreds of Chinese trucks awaiting for a clearance from Sust to cross border in a long haul.

1)We need more Sust like ports in GB otherwise this will go nowhere.
We also need to be prepared for accidents and weather conditions that will add to delays and build detours and response teams to make sure the traffic keeps moving ...


2)Another thing we need are dams around Makran..You dont build new dams..there is no drinkable water.. and no one will move to Gwadar..The ruling govt. PMLN has shown no interest so far in making the required infrastructure and aqueducts.

3)Thirdly Pakistan has to pay back return of investment from its earnings on the power projects.Though the country is power short and direly needs electricity . there is no adequate transport medium to bring energy to consumers doorstep and i fear the costs on storing electricity will make electricity expensive for consumption. .A couple of billions being spent on Mattial- to Faisalabad and Mattial to Lahore (660kvA each) are not enough. So regardless how many power plants Nawaz inaugurates there will be never ending load shedding as power would just sit there at the plant and stare at us until we lay down new transmission lines on emergency basis.
 
Last edited:
.
You will need alternative routes either way..A single route cant handle the traffic anticipated and will get choked.

China's total international trade in 2014 was $4.301 trillion (exports $2,342 trillion + imports $1.959 trillion). Due to savings in time and money, it is estimated that major portion of this trade may be routed through CPEC. However, for calculation purposes, if only 20% of this trade is routed thru CPEC/Gwadar, it means about 1,560,000 TEUs containers shall be passing Pakistan in a year; 4,273 containers a day shall be existing/entering Sust which means 3 container every minute have to be custom-checked and cleared.
With around 8 days travel time and 1 or 2 days for loading /unloading, a chain of about 42,730 containers shall always be on the roads of Pakistan at any time, with about 128,000 Chinese trailer drivers/assistants.SUPRA

I think we are not prepared for the influx . We are in habit of counting the chicks before they hatch.
Imagine hundreds of Chinese trucks awaiting for a clearance from Sust to cross border in a long haul.

1)We need more Sust like ports in GB otherwise this will go nowhere.
We also need to be prepared for accidents and weather conditions that will add to delays and build detours and response teams to make sure the traffic keeps moving ...


2)Another thing we need are dams around Makran..You dont build new dams..there is no drinkable water.. and no one will move to Gwadar..The ruling govt. PMLN has shown no interest so far in making the required infrastructure and aqueducts.

3)Thirdly Pakistan has to pay back return of investment from its earnings on the power projects.Though the country is power short and direly needs electricity . there is no adequate transport medium to bring energy to consumers doorstep and i fear the costs on storing electricity will make electricity expensive for consumption. .A couple of billions being spent on Mattial- to Faisalabad and Mattial to Lahore (660kvA each) are not enough. So regardless how many power plants Nawaz inaugurates there will be never ending load shedding as power would just sit there at the plant and stare at us until we lay down new transmission lines on emergency basis.


Ever studied the map ?
 
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Very interesting article...

it seems like we are still quite a few years off before CPEC really takes off. It seems like they have put the cart before the horse.

Or maybe they were hoping to give Modi a heart attack... might have worked.

Maybe we will have another ceremony in a few years.... Have they been fooling us all along????
I haven't studied so I amy be wrong. As CPEC is majorly all about Chinese exports and imports, another KKH needs to built and it isn't going to be easy?
 
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Of course none of this means that the road network should never have been built. It should be built. In time, it has to be expanded from the current two lane alignment to six lanes. The Karakoram Highway took almost three decades before it began to grow into a large commercial artery, and that process still has a long way to go before it reaches full bloom.

That is the point here. The roads being built under the CPEC connectivity projects are a long-term proposition. It will be a couple of decades before they become arteries for major commercial traffic, but when that begins to happen, it will definitely be a ‘game changer’ for Pakistan.


if u really READ the FULL Article ... You will get an idea .... What is already Done so far, Why this Activity was performed and what potential it have ..... we will just need some time & continuous effort !!!

Some time PR & creating positive perception is indeed need of an hour !
Build and they will come ;)
 
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In my opinion there is still alot to do before the CPEC becomes 100 % active. The recent inaiguration was more of a ceremonial event to kick off the CPEC activities. It will take some time to start proper and regular business activities on CPEC
 
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In my opinion there is still alot to do before the CPEC becomes 100 % active. The recent inaiguration was more of a ceremonial event to kick off the CPEC activities. It will take some time to start proper and regular business activities on CPEC

No doubt about it. CPEC is not a one day project. It will require years of patience and hard work. That doesn't hinder us or China from kicking off trade activities.
 
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We in Pakistan have developed this habit of showing off more and working less. There have already been many inaugurations of CPEC and there is a lot of fuss about it. Why can't the government simply shut up and let this thing move on quickly without creating a lot of fuss.
 
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It was just a kick start to the CPEC. The real business activity will take time, as there is a lot of infrastructure development is required.
 
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