What's new

Work underway on $14.5 billion Saudi Arabian power projects in Pakistan - €4.5 billion renewables

Status
Not open for further replies.
Joined
Aug 2, 2016
Messages
2,377
Reaction score
4
Country
Saudi Arabia
Location
Saudi Arabia
Work underway on $14.5 billion Saudi power projects in Pakistan - petro minister
1799136-1837792808.jpg

1 / 3

1798231-2120609675.png

2 / 3

1799141-1933650508.jpg

3 / 3
SAIMA SHABBIR
October 14, 2019
  • Says Saudis are helping install 500 megawatts renewable energy projects worth $4.5 billion and $10 billion oil refinery in Gwadar
  • Saudi investment will help Pakistan achieve the target of shifting 30 percent energy needs to renewable energy by 2030
ISLAMABAD: Work has started on $14.5 billion worth of Saudi energy and petroleum projects in Pakistan, Omar Ayub Khan, federal minister for power and petroleum, told Arab News on Monday.

The initiatives are part of an effort to boost the production and use of oil and renewable power and overcome power shortages in the South Asian nation.

“In the power sector, Saudis are helping us install 500 megawatts renewable energy projects worth $4.5 billion in Baluchistan and a $10 billion mega oil refinery in Gwadar, which are part of the $20 billion investment announced during Saudi Crown Prince Muhammad bin Salman’s visit to Pakistan earlier this year,” the minister said.

Only about 5 to 6 percent of the power to Pakistan’s national electrical grid currently comes from renewable energy, according to the country’s Alternate Energy Development Board (AEDB).

“Studies have been carried out by Saudi company Aqua Power, Pakistani National Transmission & Despatch Company (NTDC) and other leading companies to look into hybrid or solar projects. This will be a total $4.5 billion investment,” he added.

During a visit to Pakistan in February this year by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the two countries signed short-, mid- and long-term investment agreements worth over $20 billion, including for energy and petroleum projects.

Short-term projects signed in February include two Regasified Liquefied Natural Gas plants for $4 billion, a $2 billion investment by Saudi power producing company ACWA Power in Pakistan’s renewable energy sector and a $1 billion Saudi Fund for Pakistan.

Mid-term projects include $1 billion each for petrochemical and food and agricultural projects. The long-term investments are $10 billion for the construction of the multi-billion-dollar Saudi Aramco oil refinery in Gwadar and $2 billion for the minerals sector.

The total investment comes to $21 billion, according to government figures released after the crown prince’s visit.

Last year, Saudi Arabia also agreed to give Pakistan $3 billion in foreign currency support for a year and a further loan worth up to $3 billion in deferred payments for oil imports to help stave off a current account crisis.

Khan said the power projects in the pipeline also included a solar plant of 200-megawatt at the Habibullah coastal power station in Baluchistan and a 100-megawatt plant each in three other districts of the province.

He said the process of hiring technical experts for the Gwadar oil refinery project had started and would be completed in the next three months: “The refinery would have a 250,000 to 300,000 barrels per day capacity that would help Pakistan cut its annual crude oil import bill by nearly $3 billion,” the minister said.

He said this was the first phase of Saudi investment in Pakistan “and as soon as they will start achieving targets, another phase of investment would start.”

The minister said that Saudi investment would help Pakistan achieve its target of shifting 30 percent of its energy needs to the renewable energy sector by 2030.

“Alternative Energy Development Board cleared the draft renewable energy policy last week, in which we are taking renewable energy from the current 1,500 megawatts to approximately ,8000 megawatts by the end of 2025, and then to 20,000 megawatts by 2030,” Khan said.

Saudi Arabia and Pakistan, in collaboration with Baluchistan’s provincial government, were also working to explore minerals in the province in a bid to promote indigenous exploration and production activities in both the oil and gas sectors, Khan said.

“We would be auctioning approximately 40 blocks in the exploration and production sphere in Pakistan. In this process, we welcome Saudi companies to participate in upstream exploration activities,” Khan said. “Aramco is already working in the downstream exploration activities in Pakistan and we would welcome more Saudi companies to come in Pakistan for investment, whether it is upstream, middle stream or downstream.”

He also welcomed Saudi participation in the China Pakistan Economic Corridor of energy and infrastructure projects, the flagship of Beijing’s ambitious Belt and Road Initiative.

“It is a good opportunity for Saudis as well as other Middle Eastern companies to invest in Pakistan as it is next door to a big market like China,” the petroleum minister said.

https://www.arabnews.pk/node/1568851/pakistan

Great news.
 
.
He also welcomed Saudi participation in the China Pakistan Economic Corridor of energy and infrastructure projects, the flagship of Beijing’s ambitious Belt and Road Initiative.

“It is a good opportunity for Saudis as well as other Middle Eastern companies to invest in Pakistan as it is next door to a big market like China,” the petroleum minister said.

https://www.arabnews.pk/node/1568851/pakistan
Very nice development, the more involved , the better chance of success for CPEC. That's a massive investment indeed.
 
.
Very nice development, the more involved , the better chance of success for CPEC. That's a massive investment indeed.

Increased regional economic integration, which automatically enhances political integration and cooperation, will help prevent regional instability and increase regional connectivity on every front. We know this from experience in the GCC (notwithstanding the current Qatari spat that is not long away from being solved) first hand as not long ago GCC states had border disputes.

That is why I am 100% in favor of greater Arab integration and for strong Arab regional blocs to emerge regardless of rulers/political system in place. This can later spread to a non-Arab regional agenda as well.

As for Arab-Chinese relations (which are ancient and several millennia old if you include the pre-Islamic relations), a few weeks ago the annual Arab-Chinese expo in Ningxia was held and as usual several billion big deals (€26 billion to be precise) were signed on numerous fronts;

Economic Exchange Anchors China-Arab Ties
The China-Arab States Expo spotlights the growing economic relationship between China and the Middle East.

thediplomat-ap_18191200032054-386x257.jpg

Kuwait's ruling emir, Sheikh Sabah Al Ahmad Al Sabah, center left, and Chinese President Xi Jinping arrive for the opening session of the 8th Ministerial Meeting of the China-Arab States Cooperation Forum in Beijing, July 10, 2018.
Image Credit: AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein

Chinese representatives are set to meet with Arab delegations for the fourth China-Arab States Expo in Yinchuan city, Ninghai Hui Autonomous Region from September 5 to 8. The gathering, intended to bolster economic and trade exchanges between Beijing and partners in the Middle East and North Africa, will focus on agricultural issues such as rural revitalization, desertification, and the further development of new technologies. China is simultaneously hosting an Online Silk Road conference in Ningxia on internet cooperation and internet related industries including cross-border e-commerce and investment and capacity building.

The expo is one of a handful of multilateral vehicles to deepen relations between Beijing and governments in the Middle East and North Africa, and supplements the Arab-China Political Strategic Dialogue that most recently was held in June in Abu Dhabi. The more comprehensive China-Arab States Cooperation Forum (CASCF) was first established in 2004 to foster better exchanges between Beijing and members of the Arab League. Nearly a decade and a half later, the CASCF was upgraded to a “strategic partnership of comprehensive cooperation and common development” during a gathering of more than 300 representatives from Chinese and Arab delegations. Separately, negotiations for a regional free trade agreement between China and the six member countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council (Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates) started more than 10 years ago and seem to have faded from public discussions, while the notion of a broader FTA among 21 Arab states has been raised.

The economic relationship has steadily solidified as China has sought to import increasing amounts of energy resources from the region’s oil and gas rich states. However, both sides have pushed to diversify relations through financial and banking cooperation, renewable energy, and high technology collaboration, sectors with increased demand in Arab countries and in which China is playing a major development role. China is one of the group’s leading investors and its second largest trading partner with trade volume between China and the Arab League hitting $244.3 billion in 2018, up from $36.7 billion in 2004.

Some Arab states may also be looking to China as a model for their own economic development: pursuing economic liberalization while maintaining tight political control and using various tools of domestic repression. Chinese President Xi Jinping’s extension of the Belt and Road Initiative and the promotion of greater connectivity has been particularly welcomed among Arab states.

While China, under Xi’s leadership, has been more active within multilateral forums amid uncertainty about the U.S. commitment to international leadership, its regional efforts are reinforced by grand state-to-state exchanges. Bilaterally, leaders in China and in Arab states have hosted a series of high-profile visits, full of billion dollar deal announcements including $28 billion in cooperation agreements with Saudi Arabia, projects to invest in and develop an airport area in the United Arab Emirates, and last year’s pledge from Xi of more than $20 billion in loans, humanitarian assistance, and development aid to Arab countries.

Economics and trade continue to be the focal point of Sino-Arab relations, but such ties cannot be completely bifurcated from the complex and dynamic political and security conditions in the region. In fact, there are some indications that China may seek to become more involved in security-related matters in the region. For example, last year Xi said “China would like to join the Arab countries … to become the keeper of peace and stability in the Middle East, the defender of equity and justice, promoter of joint development, and good friends that learn from each other.” However, in such a fraught security environment, it remains to be seen precisely how BRI investments translate into tangible vehicles of peace and stability. For the moment, beyond rhetorical messaging, China still seems a way off from making the step from investor to security mediator or provider.

https://thediplomat.com/2019/08/economic-exchange-anchors-china-arab-ties/

See this thread about Arab-China relations and cooperation.

https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/arab-world-and-china-cooperation-and-news.298140/

Few quick additional comments.

From what I am aware of, China even has a special Arab policy paper. The first of its kind in the world so there is no doubt that China puts great emphasis on the Arab world. To begin with, I would claim that we are natural allies and the current ties speak for themselves as well as the historical ties. The two largest ethnic groups in the world coincidentally as well.


Full text of China’s Arab Policy Paper
Updated: Jan 13,2016 9:18 PM Xinhua
c-3.jpg


China’s Arab Policy Paper

January 2016

Foreword

Friendship between China and Arab states dates back to ancient times. Over two thousand years ago, land and maritime Silk Roads already linked the Chinese and Arab nations. In the long stretches of history, peace and cooperation, openness and inclusiveness, learning from each other, mutual benefit and win-win results have always been the main theme of exchanges between China and Arab countries.

The founding of the People’s Republic of China and the independence of Arab countries created a new era for China-Arab friendly exchanges. From 1956 to 1990, China established diplomatic relations with all 22 Arab countries. China firmly supports Arab national liberation movement, firmly supports Arab countries’ struggle to uphold sovereignty and territorial integrity, pursue and safeguard national interests, and combat external interference and aggression, and firmly supports Arab countries’ cause of developing the national economy and building up the countries. Arab countries have given China strong support in restoring its lawful seat at the United Nations and on issues like the Taiwan question.

After the end of the Cold War, both China and Arab countries have followed the world trend of peace, development and cooperation, respected each other, treated each other as equals, and committed themselves to deepening the traditional friendship and the bilateral relations. Cooperation in political, trade and economic, scientific and technological, cultural and educational, military, health, sports, news,and other fields has achieved fruitful results, thus enabling the establishment of the friendly and cooperative relationship oriented toward the 21st century.

http://english.www.gov.cn/archive/publications/2016/01/13/content_281475271412746.htm
 
. . .
Has work actually started in Pakistan or is it the usual feasibility reports being prepared that go nowhere?

Whatever happened to offshore oil that Pakistan supposedly found and PM was going to announce the "big news" in April 2019? It's October 2019 now.
 
.
ahlaan wasahlan Saudia.

Has work actually started in Pakistan or is it the usual feasibility reports being prepared that go nowhere?

Whatever happened to offshore oil that Pakistan supposedly found and PM was going to announce the "big news" in April 2019? It's October 2019 now.
Yeah that was water, not oil.
 
. . .
Or using us a cheap labor or mercenaries in their geo political adventures
We can't complain about the cheap labour. That is the fault of our desi culture that has kept most of the country in arrested state of pre-modern society with religious dogma, superstition, feudal order. If we had rocket scientists, avionic scientists, mathematicians, etc in the millions the same labour force would be churning out fighter jets, passenger jets, cars, ships, computers and being selling to the world. But tell me what exactly can a hafiz-e-Quran do? drive taxis? Blow himself up? Or go become a miskeen in Saudia?
 
.
Great news. Hopefully it triples.

Pakistan should also ask for more preference of Pakistani labors and the doctors with Pakistani degree.
 
.
We can't complain about the cheap labour. That is the fault of our desi culture that has kept most of the country in arrested state of pre-modern society with religious dogma, superstition, feudal order. If we had rocket scientists, avionic scientists, mathematicians, etc in the millions the same labour force would be churning out fighter jets, passenger jets, cars, ships, computers and being selling to the world. But tell me what exactly can a hafiz-e-Quran do? drive taxis? Blow himself up? Or go become a miskeen in Saudia?

Smart one wonks then go abroad and never come back and become self hated d//chebags
 
. .
I really think Bangla would put the shame both Ganghuland and Pakistan tbh
 
.
Pakistan should also ask for more preference of Pakistani labors and the doctors with Pakistani degree.
I wish I could give you a + for that. The simplest formulation would be to set up a European Union style clone. Call it Ummah Economic Union [UEU]. With GCC and Pakistan as start up members. Within this UEU all countries begin to pool their defence forces and creat a common economic market. That is preferances are given for labour, agri-products from Pakistan. Oil, gas products preferance to KSA etc.

Wow that would bring in about $50 billion annually in Pakistan and there would no unemployment problem in Pakistan. PIA would grow three times bigger. Economy would take off.

And even I would be converted to the idea of Ummah.
 
.
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top Bottom