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China–Pakistan Economic Corridor

China–Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) (Chinese: 中巴经济走廊; pinyin: Zhōng bā jīngjì zǒuláng; Urdu: چین پاکستان اقتصادی راہداری) is a 3000 km Chinese infrastructure network project undertaken in Pakistan.[8] This sea-and-land based corridor is aimed to secure and reduce the passage for China's energy imports[8] from the Middle East by avoiding existing route from the Straits of Malacca between Malaysia and Indonesia, which in case of a war could be blocked and thus hampering the Chinese energy dependent economic avenues.[1][9][10] Developing a deep water port at Gwadar in Arabian Sea and a well built road and rail line from this port to Xinjiang Province in western China would be a shortcut for boosting the trade between Europe and China.[1][9] In Pakistan, its aim is to overcome an electricity shortfall, infrastructural development and modernize transportation networks. Along with shifting it from an agricultural based economic structure to industrial based.[11]

China–Pakistan Economic Corridor
Mission statementSecuring Energy Import and Trade Boost for China,[1]
Infrastructure Development for Pakistan[1]
Type of projectEconomic corridor
LocationPakistan: Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Gilgit-Baltistan, Punjab, Balochistan, Sindh & Azad Kashmir
China: Xinjiang
CountryChina
Pakistan
Established20 April 2015 (8 years ago) (2015-04-20)[2]
BudgetChina Development Bank
Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank
Silk Road Fund
Exim Bank of China
Industrial and Commercial Bank of China
StatusA few projects operational
Special Economic Zones Under construction (2020).[4][5]
Many projects running behind the schedule (2022)[6]
Few projects cancelled.[7]
Websitecpec.gov.pk

CPEC's potential impact on Pakistan has been compared to that of the Marshall Plan undertaken by the United States in post-war Europe.[12][13][14][15] Pakistani officials predict that CPEC will result in the creation of upwards of 2.3 million jobs between 2015 and 2030, and add 2 to 2.5 percentage points to the country's annual economic growth.[16] As of 2022, it has enhanced Pakistan’s exports and development capacity and is providing 1/4th of total electricity.[17]

It is also seen as addressing a national security issue for China by economic development of the Xinjiang region thus reducing militant influence on Muslim separatists of native Uyghurs.[1][9][10][18] After the proposal from Chinese President Li Keqiang in 2013,[8] the preliminary study on this project was done in 2014 which acknowledged the hostile environment and complicated geographic conditions but prioritized the importance of having a China-run port near the Gulf of Oman which serves as an important route for oil tankers.[19] Post this corridor is functional, existing 12,000 km journey of oil transportation to China will be reduced to just 2,395 km.[20] This is estimated to save China $2 billion per year.[21] China had already acquired control of Gwadar Port on 16 May 2013.[19] Originally valued at $46 billion, the value of CPEC projects was worth $62 billion as of 2020.[22] In 2022, the Chinese investment in Pakistan rose to $65 billion.[23] China refers to this project as revival of the Silk Road.[24] CPEC envisages to rapidly upgrade Pakistan's required infrastructure and thereby strengthening its economy to an extent by constructing modern transportation networks, numerous energy projects, and special economic zones.[25][26][27][28]

The potential industries being set up in the CPEC special economic zones include food processing, cooking oil, ceramics, gems and jewelry, marble, minerals, agriculture machinery, iron and steel, motorbike assembling, electrical appliances and automobile[29]

Even though China and Pakistan signed the official MoUs in 2015, the first details of long term plan under CPEC were publicly disclosed in 2017 when a Pakistani media outlet revealed its access to the Original Documents.[30]

According to the World Bank researchers,"Chinese lenders require strict confidentiality from their debtors and do not release a granular breakdown of their lending."[31][32] In 2015, the Governor of Central Bank in Pakistan, Ashraf Mahmood Wathra said, "I don't know out of $46 billion, how much is debt, how much is equity and how much is in kind"[33] and did not know what the debt implications of CPEC actually were.[34]

From early 1990s, IMF has provided more than a dozen bailouts on requests by Pakistan to save its dwindling economy, which has struggled 22 of the 30 years in meeting the austerity measures demanded by IMF. Nadeem-ul-Haque, a former IMF official and former deputy chairman of the Pakistani government’s Planning Commission wrote, "The pattern is always the same, with the Fund’s blessing, the government goes on a shopping spree, taking out costly loans for expensive projects, thus building up even more debt and adding new inefficiencies. After a few years, another crisis ensues, and it is met by another IMF program."[35] The Pakistani establishment sees Chinese loans as an alternative to IMF loans.[31] Should the initial $46 billion worth of projects be implemented, the value of those projects would be roughly equivalent to all foreign direct investment in Pakistan since 1970,[36] and would be equal to 17% of Pakistan's 2015 gross domestic product.[37] CPEC is seen as the main plank of China's Belt and Road Initiative.[38]

Chinese monetary offer for Pakistan under CPEC being a combination of Debt & Equity, it is evaluated that the Debt component will be serviced at 7%-8% interest per annum while Equity component is expected to deliver an estimated ROE of 17% per annum. The Pakistan government, however, claims that the Chinese loans will be repaid over a period of 20–25 years at rate of 2% interest.[39] Pakistan has already started negotiating the debt-relief from China owing to difficulties to repay the loan and is seeking ease in the payment obligations towards debt and its interest for the projects under CPEC.[40] As of 2022, Pakistan owes China about $30 billion which accounts for nearly 30% of its foreign debt.[41]

Since 2021, due to the growing pressure on China for being the world's biggest polluter, it has shifted its focus from coal based energy investments in Pakistan to renewables. This is done to promote a more "greener" image of CPEC.[42] In June 2022, the Karot Hydropower started commercial operations to provide cheap and clean electricity, and aims to reduce 3.5 million metric tons of carbon emissions annually.[43]

History

Background

Plans for a corridor stretching from the Chinese border to Pakistan's deepwater ports on the Arabian Sea date back to the 1950s, and motivated construction of the Karakoram Highway beginning in 1959.[44] Chinese interest in Pakistan's deep-water harbor at Gwadar had been rekindled by in 2002 China began construction at Gwadar port which was completed in 2006. Expansion of Gwadar Port then ceased thereafter owing to political instability in Pakistan following the fall of General Pervez Musharraf and subsequent conflict between the Pakistani state and Taliban militants.[45]

In 2013, the then Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari and Chinese Premier Li Keqiang decided to further enhance mutual connectivity.[46] A memorandum of understanding on cooperation for long-term plan on China–Pakistan Economic Corridor between the two governments was inked by Xu Shao Shi and Shahid Amjad Chaudhry.[47]

In February 2014, Pakistani President Mamnoon Hussain visited China to discuss the plans for an economic corridor in Pakistan.[48] Two months later, Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif met with Premier Li Kequiang in China to discuss further plans,[49] resulting in the full scope of the project to be devised under Sharif's tenure.[50] In November 2014, Chinese government announced its intention to finance Chinese companies as part of its $45.6 billion energy and infrastructure projects in Pakistan as part of CPEC.

Announcement of CPEC

Chinese President Xi Jinping on his “fate-changing visit” to Pakistan for signing the CPEC agreement stated “I feel as if I am going to visit the home of my own brother,”[51] and claimed that friendship between the two nations was “higher than mountains, deeper than oceans and sweeter than honey”.[1] China repeatedly uses terms like "iron brothers" and "all weather friends" while describing its relation with Pakistan.[52] On 20 April 2015, Pakistan and China signed an agreement to commence work on the $46 billion agreement, which is roughly 20% of Pakistan's annual GDP,[53] with approximately $28 billion worth of fast-tracked "Early Harvest" projects to be developed by the end of 2018.[54][55]

A vast network of highways and railways are to be built under the aegis of CPEC that will span the length and breadth of Pakistan. Inefficiencies stemming from Pakistan's mostly dilapidated transportation network are estimated by the government to cause a loss of 3.55% of the country's annual GDP.[56] Modern transportation networks built under CPEC will link seaports in Gwadar and Karachi with northern Pakistan, as well as points further north in western China and Central Asia.[57] A 1,100-kilometre-long motorway will be built between the cities of Karachi and Lahore as part of CPEC,[58] while the Karakoram Highway from Hasan Abdal to the Chinese border will be completely reconstructed and overhauled.[36] The currently stalled Karachi–Peshawar main railway line will also be upgraded to allow for train travel at up to 160 km per hour by December 2019.[59][60] Pakistan's railway network will also be extended to eventually connect to China's Southern Xinjiang Railway in Kashgar.[61] The estimated $11 billion required to modernise transportation networks will be financed by subsidized concessionary loans.[62]

Over $33 billion worth of energy infrastructure are to be constructed by private consortia to help alleviate Pakistan's chronic energy shortages,[63] which regularly amount to over 4,500MW,[64] and have shed an estimated 2–2.5% off Pakistan's annual gross domestic product.[65] Over 10,400 MW of generating capacity is to be brought online by the end of 2018, with the majority developed as part of CPEC's fast-tracked "Early Harvest" projects.[66] A network of pipelines to transport liquefied natural gas and oil will also be laid as part of the project, including a $2.5 billion pipeline between Gwadar and Nawabshah to eventually transport gas from Iran.[67] Electricity from these projects will primarily be generated from fossil fuels, though hydroelectric and wind-power projects are also included, as is the construction of one of the world's largest solar farms.[68]

Should the initial $46 billion worth of projects be implemented, the value of those projects would be roughly equivalent to all foreign direct investment in Pakistan since 1970,[36] and would be equal to 17% of Pakistan's 2015 gross domestic product.[37] CPEC is seen as the main plank of China's Belt and Road Initiative.[38] At the beginning of this project, Pakistan has assigned about 10,000 troops to protect the Chinese investments.[10] However, this number increased to 15,000 actively deployed troops by 2016.

Subsequent developments

On 12 August 2015 in the city of Karamay, China and Pakistan signed 20 more agreements worth $1.6 billion to further augment the scale and scope of CPEC.[69] Details of the plan are opaque,[70] but are said to mainly focus on increasing energy generation capacity.[71][better source needed] As part of the agreement, Pakistan and China have agreed to co-operate in the field of space research.[72]

In September and October 2015, the government of the United Kingdom announced two separate grants to the Government of Pakistan for construction of roadways that are complementary to CPEC.[73][74] In November 2015, China included the CPEC into its 13th five-year development plan,[75] while in December 2015, China and Pakistan agreed on a further $1.5 billion investment to set up an information and technology park as part of the CPEC project.[76] On 8 April 2016, during the visit of Xinjiang's Communist Party chief Zhang Chunxian companies from Xinjiang with their Pakistan counterparts signed $2 billion of additional agreements covering infrastructure, solar power and logistics.[77]

The first convoy from China arrived in Gwadar on 13 November 2016, thereby formalizing operation of CPEC.[78] On 2 December 2016, the first cargo train, launching the direct rail route and sea freight service between China and Pakistan, departed from Yunnan. A cargo train loaded with 500 tonnes of commodities left Kunming for the port city of Guangzhou from where the cargo will be loaded on ships and transported to Karachi, marking the opening of the new route.[79] The new rail, sea freight will cut logistics cost, including that of transport, by 50 per cent.[80]

In November 2016, China announced an additional $8.5 billion investment in Pakistan with $4.5 billion allocated to upgrade Pakistan's main railway line from Karachi to Peshawar including tracks, speed, and signaling, and $4 billion toward an LNG terminal and transmission lines to help alleviate energy shortages.[81] In February 2017, the Egyptian Ambassador to Pakistan expressed interest in CPEC cooperation.[82] In January 2017, Chief Minister Pervez Khattak of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa stated that he had received assurances from Chinese investment companies that they would invest up to $20 billion for projects.[83] In March 2017, an agreement was signed for the projects, which include: a $1.5 billion oil refinery, irrigation projects worth $2 billion, a $2 billion motorway between Chitral and DI Khan, and $7 billion worth of hydro-electric projects.[84]

As of September 2017, more than $14 billion worth of projects were under construction.[38] In March 2018, Pakistan announced that following the completion of under-construction energy projects, future CPEC energy projects would be geared towards hydropower projects.[85]

In 2022, Federal Minister for Planning, Development and Special Initiatives Prof. Ahsan Iqbal criticized CPEC authority for its inability to attract investments and called for its dissolution.[86] On 17 August 2022, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif approved, in principle, to abolish the China–Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) Authority subject to consent by China.[87]

Projects in Gwadar Port and City

 
A view of the Gwadar Promontory and isthmus

Gwadar came in the focus of attention post the Kargil War when Pakistan felt the need of having a military naval port and the Karachi-Gwadar Road (Coastal Highway) was built for defence purpose.[88]Gwadar forms the crux of the CPEC project, as it is envisaged to be the link between China's ambitious One Belt, One Road project, and its 21st Century Maritime Silk Road project.[89] In total, more than $1 billion worth of projects are to be developed around the port of Gwadar by December 2017.

As of 2022, only three China–Pakistan Economic Corridor projects - $4 million Gwadar Smart Port City Master Plan, $300 million Physical Infrastructure of Gwadar Port and the Free Zone Phase-1, and a $10 million Pak-China Technical and Vocational Institute - in Gwadar were declared successfully completed whereas one-dozen projects worth nearly $2 billion remain undeveloped including water supply, electricity provision, expressway, international airport, fishing harbour and hospital among others.[90]

China has provided a total of 7,000 sets of solar panels for households in Gwadar over the past two years. Another 10,000 sets of solar panels are under active preparation and will be allocated to poor people in Balochistan. The Chinese Embassy in Pakistan is also to donate household solar units and other assistance to the people of Balochistan.[17]

Gwadar Port Complex

Initial infrastructure works at Gwadar Port commenced in 2002 and were completed in 2007,[45] however plans to upgrade and expand Gwadar's port stalled. Under CPEC agreement, Gwadar Port will initially be expanded and upgraded to allow for docking of larger ships with deadweight tonnage of up to 70,000.[91] Improvement plans also include construction of a $130 million breakwater around the port,[92] as well as the construction of a floating liquefied natural gas facility that will have a capacity of 500 million cubic feet of liquefied natural gas per day and will be connected to the Gwadar-Nawabshah segment of the Iran–Pakistan gas pipeline.[93]

The expanded port is located near a 2,282-acre free trade area in Gwadar which is being modeled on the lines of the Special Economic Zones of China.[94] The swathe of land was handed to the China Overseas Port Holding Company in November 2015 as part of a 43-year lease.[95] The site will include manufacturing zones, logistics hubs, warehouses, and display centres.[96] Businesses located in the zone would be exempt from customs authorities as well as many provincial and federal taxes.[91] Business established in the special economic zone will be exempt from Pakistani income, sales, and federal excise taxes for 23 years.[97] Contractors and subcontractors associated with China Overseas Port Holding Company will be exempted from such taxes for 20 years,[98] while a 40-year tax holiday will be granted for imports of equipment, materials, plant/machinery, appliances, and accessories that are to be for construction of Gwadar Port and special economic zone.[99]

The special economic zone will be completed in three phases. By 2025, it is envisaged that manufacturing and processing industries will be developed, while further expansion of the zone is intended to be complete by 2030.[45] On 10 April 2016, Zhang Baozhong, chairman of China Overseas Port Holding Company said in a conversation with The Washington Post that his company planned to spend $4.5  billion on roads, power, hotels and other infrastructure for the industrial zone as well as other projects in Gwadar city.[16]

Projects in Gwadar city

China will grant Pakistan $230 million to construct a new international airport in Gwadar.[100] The provincial government of Balochistan has set aside 4000 acres for the construction of the new $230 million Gwadar International Airport which will require an estimated 30 months for construction,[101] the costs of which are to be fully funded by grants from the Chinese government which Pakistan will not be obliged to repay.[102]

The city of Gwadar is further being developed by the construction of a 300 MW coal power plant, a desalinization plant, and a new 300-bed hospital to be completed in 2023.[103] Plans for Gwadar city also include construction of the Gwadar East Bay Expressway – a 19 kilometre controlled-access road that will connect Gwadar Port to the Makran Coastal Highway.[104] These additional projects are estimated to cost $800 million, and are to be financed by 0% interest loans extended by the Exim Bank of China to Pakistan.[103]

In addition to the aforementioned infrastructure works, the Pakistani government announced in September 2015 its intention to establish a training institute named Pak-China Technical and Vocational Institute at Gwadar,[45] which is to be developed by the Gwadar Port Authority at the cost of 943 million rupees,[45] and is designed to impart to residents the skills required to operate and work at the expanded Gwadar Port.[45]

As of 2017, in total there are 9 projects funded by China in and around Gwadar.[105]

Development of Gwadar includes the building of a hospital under a Chinese government grant. Under the proposed project medical blocks, nursing and paramedical institutes, medical college, central laboratory, and other allied facilities are to be constructed with the supply of medical equipment and machinery.[106]

In 2020, Government[which?] released funds of Rs 320 million for a seawater desalination plant at Gwadar, with a capacity of five million gallons a day. The funds were also to be used in the expansion of the optical fiber network in Gwadar.[107] and construction of a fish landing jetty.[108]

Roadway projects

 
The CPEC roadway network
 

The CPEC project envisages major upgrades and overhauls to Pakistan's transportation infrastructure. Under the CPEC project, China has announced financing for $10.63  billion worth of transportation infrastructure so far; $6.1  billion have been allocated for constructing "Early Harvest" roadway projects at an interest rate of 1.6 percent.[109] The remainder of funds will be allocated when the Pakistani government awards contracts for the construction of road segments which are still in the planning phase.

Three corridors have been identified for cargo transport: the Eastern Alignment through the heavily populated provinces of Sindh and Punjab where most industries are located, the Western Alignment through the less developed and more sparsely populated provinces of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan, and the future Central Alignment which will pass through Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Punjab, and Balochistan.[110]

Karakoram Highway

 
Highlighted in red is the route of National Highway 35, which is to be completely rebuilt and upgraded under the CPEC agreement. Highlighted in blue is the 175-kilometer road between Gilgit and Skardu which is to be upgraded to a 4-lane highway.
 
China and Pakistan already conduct trade via the Karakoram Highway.

The CPEC projects call for reconstruction and upgrade works on National Highway 35 (N-35), which forms the Pakistani portion of the Karakoram Highway (KKH). The KKH spans the 887-kilometer long distance between the China-Pakistan border and the town of Burhan, near Hasan Abdal. At Burhan, the existing M1 motorway will intersect the N-35 at the Shah Maqsood Interchange. From there, access onwards to Islamabad and Lahore continues as part of the existing M1 and M2 motorways. Burhan will also be at the intersection of the Eastern Alignment, and Western Alignment.

Upgrades to the 487-kilometer long section between Burhan and Raikot of the Karakoram Highway are officially referred to in Pakistan as the Karakoram Highway Phase 2 project. At the southern end of the N-35, works are already underway to construct a 59-kilometer-long, 4-lane controlled-access highway between Burhan and Havelian which upon completion will be officially referred to as the E-35 expressway.[111] North of Havelian, the next 66 kilometres of road will be upgraded to a 4-lane dual carriageway between Havelian and Shinkiari.[112] Groundbreaking on this portion commenced in April 2016.[113]

The entire 354 kilometres of roadway north of Shinkiari and ending in Raikot, near Chilas will be constructed as a 2-lane highway.[113] Construction on the first section between Shinkiari and Thakot commenced in April 2016 jointly with construction of the Havelian to Shinkiari 4-lane dual carriageway further south.[114] Construction on both these sections is expected to be completed with 42 months at a cost of approximately $1.26 billion with 90% of funding to come from China's EXIM bank in the form of low interest rate concessional loans.[114][115][116]

Between Thakot and Raikot spans an area in which the government of Pakistan is currently either planning or actively constructing several hydropower projects, most notably the Diamer-Bhasha Dam and Dasu Dam. Sections of the N-35 around these projects will be completely rebuilt in tandem with dam construction.[117] In the interim, this section of the N-35 is currently being upgraded from its current state until dam construction commences in full force at a later date. Improvement projects on this section are expected to be completed by January 2017 at a cost of approximately $72 million.[118][119] The next 335 kilometres of roadway connect Raikot to the China-Pakistan border. Reconstruction works on this section of roadway preceded the CPEC, and were initiated after severe damage to roadways in the area following the 2010 Pakistan floods. Most of this section of roadway was completed in September 2012 at a cost of $510 million.[120]

A large earthquake rocked the region nearest to the China-Pakistan border in 2010, triggering massive landslides that dammed the Indus River, resulting in the formation of the Attabad Lake. Portions of the Karakoram Highway were submerged in the lake, forcing all vehicular traffic onto barges to traverse the new reservoir. Construction on a 24 kilometer series of bridges and tunnels to Attabad Lake began in 2012 and required 36 months for completion. The bypass consists of 2 large bridges and 5 kilometres worth of tunnels that were inaugurated for public use on 14 September 2015 at a cost of $275 million.[121][122] The 175 kilometre road between Gilgit and Skardu will be upgraded to a 4-lane road at a cost of $475 million to provide direct access to Skardu from the N-35.[123][124]

Eastern Alignment

The term Eastern Alignment of CPEC refers to roadway projects located in Sindh and Punjab provinces – some of which were first envisioned in 1991.[125] As part of the Eastern Alignment, a 1,152 km long motorway will connect Pakistan's two largest cities, Karachi and Lahore with 6-lane controlled access highway designed for travel speeds up to 120 kilometres per hour.[126] The entire project will cost approximately $6.6 billion, with the bulk of financing to be distributed by various Chinese state-owned banks.[127]

The entire Eastern Alignment motorway project is divided into four sections: a 136-kilometer long section between Karachi and Hyderabad also known as the M9 motorway, a 345-kilometer long section between Hyderabad and Sukkur, a 392-kilometer long section between Sukkur, and Multan,[128] and a 333-kilometer section between Multan and Lahore via the town of Abdul Hakeem.[129]

The first section of the project is providing high-speed road access from the Port of Karachi to the city of Hyderabad and interior Sindh. Upgrade and construction works on this section currently known as Super Highway between Karachi and Hyderabad began in March 2015, and will convert the road into the 4-lane controlled access M9 Motorway which was completed in an estimated 30 months.[130] In February 2017, a completed 75 kilometer stretch of the motorway was opened for public use by Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.[131]

At the terminus of the M9 motorway in Hyderabad, the Karachi-Lahore Motorway will continue onwards to Sukkur as a six-lane controlled-access motorway known also as M6 motorway that will be 345 kilometers long,[128] The planned cost for this project is $1.7 billion,[132] and will provide high-speed road access to interior Sindh – especially near the towns of Matiari, Nawabshah, and Khairpur. The project will require the construction of seven interchanges, and 25 bridges on the Indus river and irrigation canals.[133] The planned route of the motorway runs roughly parallel to the existing National Highway and Indus Highway at various portions. In July 2016, the Pakistani government announced that the project would be open to international bidders on a build-operate-transfer basis, with Chinese and South Korean companies expressing interest in the project.[132]

The 392 kilometers Sukkur to Multan section of the motorway is estimated to cost $2.89  billion,[126] with construction works inaugurated on this section of roadway on 6 May 2016 and completed in September 2019. .[134] The road will be a six lane wide controlled access highway,[135] with 11 planned interchanges, 10 rest facilities, 492 underpasses, and 54 bridges along its route.[134] The Pakistani government in January 2016 awarded the contract to build this section to China State Construction Engineering,[126] but final approvals required for disbursement of funds were not granted by the Government of the People's Republic of China until May 2016.[116][126] 90% of the project's cost is to be financed by concessionary loans from China, with the remaining 10% to be financed by the government of Pakistan.[136] Construction on this segment is expected to last 36 months.[126]

Construction of the portion between Multan and Lahore costing approximately $1.5 billion[137] was launched in November 2015[138] as a joint venture between the China Railway Construction Corporation Limited and Pakistan's Zahir Khan and Brothers Engineers[139] The total length of this motorway section is 333 kilometres; however, the first 102 kilometres of the road between Khanewal and Abdul Hakeem is designed as part of the M4 Motorway, and is being funded by the Asian Development Bank.[140][141] The portion of motorway between Abdul Hakeem and Lahore that is under construction as part of CPEC will consist of the remaining 231 kilometers.[142]

Western Alignment

 
The Western Alignment of CPEC is depicted by the red line. The 1,153-kilometer route will link the Brahma Bahtar Interchange of the M1 Motorway with the city of Gwadar in Balochistan province. The portion depicted by the orange line between Basima and Shahdadkot is sometimes regarded as part of the Western Alignment.
 

The CPEC project envisages an expanded and upgraded road network in the Pakistani provinces of Balochistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, and western Punjab Province as part of the Western Alignment. The Western Alignment project will result in the upgrading of several hundred kilometers worth of road into 2 and 4-lane divided highways by mid-2018, with land acquisition sufficient for upgrading parts of the road to a 6-lane motorway in the future.[143] In total, the CPEC project envisages reconstruction of 870 kilometers of road in Balochistan province alone as part of the Western Alignment. Of those 870 kilometers of road, 620 kilometers have already been rebuilt as of January 2016.[144]

The Western Alignment roadway network will begin at the Barahma Bahtar Interchange on the M1 Motorway near the towns of Burhan and Hasan Abdal in northern Punjab province.[145] The newly reconstructed Karakoram Highway will connect to the Western Alignment at Burhan, near where the new 285-kilometre-long controlled-access Brahma Bahtar-Yarik Motorway will commence.[146] The motorway will terminate near the town of Yarik, just north of Dera Ismail Khan.[147] Groundbreaking for the project took place on 17 May 2016.[148] The motorway will traverse the Sindh Sagar Doab region, and cross the Indus River at Mianwali before entering into Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. It will consist of 11 interchanges, 74 culverts, and 3 major bridges spanning the Indus, Soan, and Kurram Rivers.[149] Total costs for the project are expected to be $1.05 billion.[150]

At the southern terminus of the new Brahma Bahtar-Yarik motorway, the N50 National Highway will also be upgraded between Dera Ismail Khan in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Zhob in neighbouring Balochistan province, with eventual reconstruction between Zhob and Quetta.[151] The upgraded roadway will consist of a 4 lane dual-carriageway spanning the 205 kilometre distance between the two cities.[152] The first portion of the N50 to be upgraded will be the 81 kilometre portion of the N50 between Zhob and Mughal Kot, with construction works having begun in January 2016.[153] Construction on this portion is expected to be completed by 2018 at a cost of $86 million.[151] While the project is considered a vital link in the CPEC's Western Alignment,[153] the project's cost will not be financed by Chinese state-owned banks, but instead by Asian Development Bank under a 2014 agreement which preceded CPEC,[154][155] as well as by a grant provided by the United Kingdom's Department for International Development.[156]

Heading south from Quetta, the Western Alignment of the CPEC will continue to the town of Surab in central Balochistan as the N25 National Highway. From Surab, a 470 kilometre long route known as the N85 National Highway will connect central Balochistan with the town of Hoshab in southwestern Balochistan province near the city of Turbat. The stretch of road between these cities was completed in December 2016,[157] as per schedule.[158]

Along the Western Alignment route, the towns of Hoshab and Gwadar are connected by a newly built 193-kilometer-long portion of the M8 Motorway – the Hoshab to Gwadar portion of the motorway was completed and inaugurated in February 2016 by Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.[159] The Western Alignment will be flanked by special economic zones along its route,[160] with at least seven special economic zones planned to be established in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.[143]

Central Alignment

Long-term plans for a "Central Alignment" of the CPEC consist of a network of roads which is shortest route of CPEC and will commence in Gwadar and travel upcountry via the cities of Basima, Khuzdar, Sukkur, Rajanpur, Layyah, Muzaffargarh, and terminating in Dera Ismail Khan, with onward connections to Karakoram Highway via the Brahma Bahtar–Yarik Motorway.[161]

Associated roadway projects

ADB funded projects

The 184 kilometers long M-4 Motorway between Faisalabad and Multan does not fall under the scope of CPEC projects but is nevertheless considered vital to the CPEC transportation project. It will instead be financed by the Asian Development Bank and the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank,[140] and will be the first project jointly financed by those banks.[162] Further funding comes from an additional $90.7  million grant announced in October 2015 by the government of the United Kingdom towards the construction of a portion of the M4 Motorway project.[163]

The Karakoram Highway south of the city of Mansehra will also be upgraded into a controlled-access highway to officially be known as the E-35 expressway. While it is considered to be a crucial part of the route between Gwadar and China, the E35 will not be financed by CPEC funds. The project will instead be financed by the Asian Development Bank[164] with a $121.6 million grant from the United Kingdom towards the project.[165] Once completed, the E35 Expressway, the M4 Motorway, and Karachi-Lahore Motorway will provide continuous high-speed road travel on controlled-access motorways from Mansehra to Karachi – 1,550 kilometers away.

Approximately halfway between Zhob and Quetta, the town of Qilla Saifullah in Balochistan lies at the intersection of the N50 National Highway and the N70 National Highway. The two roads form the 447-kilometer route between Quetta and Multan in southern Punjab. While the N70 project is not officially a part of CPEC, it will connect the CPEC's Western Alignment to the Karachi-Lahore Motorway at Multan. Reconstruction works on the 126 kilometre portion of the N70 between Qilla Saifullah and Wagum are slated for completion by 2018,[166] and are financed as part of a $195 million package by the Asian Development Bank,[155] and by a $72.4 million grant from the United Kingdom's Department for International Development.[156]

Railway projects

 
Phase 1 of the ML-1 overhaul and reconstruction is highlighted black between Peshawar and Lahore. Overhauling and reconstruction of the line will allow trains to travel at up to 160 kilometres per hour.
 
Phase 2 of the ML-1 overhaul between Multan and Hyderabad is marked in orange. Phase 3 of the project is indicated by the green line between Hyderabad and Karachi.

The CPEC project emphasises major upgrades to Pakistan's aging railway system, including rebuilding of the entire Main Line 1 railway between Karachi and Peshawar by 2020;[167] this single railway currently handles 70% of Pakistan Railways traffic.[168] As of 25.05.2022 this project is in doldrums due to reluctance of China to provide funds.[169] In addition to the stalled Main Line 1 railway, upgrades and expansions are slated for the Main Line 2 railway, Main Line 3 railway. The CPEC plan also calls for completion of a rail link over the 4,693-meter high Khunjerab Pass. The railway will provide direct access for Chinese and East Asian goods to Pakistani seaports at Karachi and Gwadar by 2030.[168]

Procurement of an initial 250 new passenger coaches, and reconstruction of 21 train stations are also planned as part of the first phase of the project – bringing the total investment in Pakistan's railway system to approximately $5  billion by the end of 2019.[170] 180 of the coaches are to be built at the Pakistan Railways Carriage Factory near Islamabad,[171] while the Government of Pakistan intends to procure an additional 800 coaches at a later date, with the intention of building 595 of those coaches in Pakistan.[171]

In September 2018, the new government led by Prime Minister Imran Khan reduced the Chinese investment in railways by $2 billion to $6.2 billion because of financing burdens.[172]

Main Line 1

The CPEC "Early Harvest" plan includes[citation needed] a complete overhaul of the 1,687 kilometre long Main Line 1 railway (ML-1) between Karachi and Peshawar. The plan was initial floated in 2015,[173] however as of January 2023 construction has not started on the project, with funding only secured in November 2022.[174] The total costs of the project are estimated to be US$8.2 billion.[175]

The upgrade plan involves doubling the track from Karachi to Peshawar, providing grade separation, as well as communications-based train control;[176] this will allow increased capacity and faster trains on the line.[177]

Main Line 2

 
ML-2 of Pakistan Railways is marked in purple, while ML-3 is marked in orange. Other lines are in blue.

In addition to upgrading the ML-1, the CPEC project also calls for similar major upgrade on the 1,254 kilometre long Main Line 2 (ML-2) railway between Kotri in Sindh province, and Attock in northern Punjab province via the cities of Larkana and Dera Ghazi Khan.[178] The route towards northern Pakistan roughly parallels the Indus River, as opposed to the ML-1 which takes a more eastward course towards Lahore. The project also includes a plan to connect Gwadar, to the town of Jacobabad, Sindh[179] which lies at the intersection of the ML-2 and ML-3 railways.

Main Line 3

Medium term plans for the Main Line 3 (ML-3) railway line will also include construction of a 560 kilometer long railway line between Bostan near Quetta, to Kotla Jam in Bhakkar District near the city of Dera Ismail Khan,[180] which will provide access to southern Afghanistan. The railway route will pass through the city of Quetta and Zhob before terminating in Kotla Jam, and is expected to be constructed by 2025.[168]

Khunjerab Railway

 
The proposed route of the Khunjerab Railway is indicated by the brown line.

Longer term projects under CPEC also call for construction of the 682 kilometre long Khunjerab Railway line between the city of Havelian, to the Khunjerab Pass on the Chinese border,[180] with extension to China's Lanxin Railway in Kashgar, Xinjiang. The railway will roughly parallel the Karakoram Highway, and is expected to be complete in 2030.[168]

The cost of the entire project is estimated to be approximately $12 billion, and will require 5 years for completion. A 300 million rupee study to establish final feasibility of constructing the rail line between Havelian and the Chinese border is already underway.[181] A preliminary feasibility study was completed in 2008 by the Austrian engineering firm TBAC.[182]

Lahore Metro

The $1.6 billion Orange Line of the Lahore Metro is regarded as a commercial project under CPEC.[183] Construction on the line has already begun, with initial planned completion by Winter 2017 however this has been delayed several times, first to end of 2018,[184][185] later to 2019 and 2020. It finally launched on 25 October 2020.[186] The line will be 27.1-kilometre (16.8 mi) long, of which 25.4 kilometres (15.8 mi) will be elevated, with the remaining portion to be underground between Jain Mandir and Lakshmi Chowk.[187] When complete, the project will have the capacity to transport 250,000 commuters per day, with plans to increase capacity to 500,000 commuters per day by 2025.[188]

Energy sector projects

Pakistan's current energy generating capacity is 24,830 MW,.[189] Energy generation will be a major focus of the CPEC project, with approximately $33 billion expected to be invested in this sector.[63] An estimated 10,400 MW of electricity are slated for generation by March 2018 as part of CPEC's "Early Harvest" projects.[66]

The energy projects under CPEC will be constructed by private Independent Power Producers, rather than by the governments of either China or Pakistan.[190] The Exim Bank of China will finance these private investments at 5–6% interest rates, while the government of Pakistan will be contractually obliged to purchase electricity from those firms at pre-negotiated rates.[191] In April 2020, hit by the COVID-19 pandemic, Pakistan asked China to ease repayment terms on $30bn worth of power projects.[192][193]

Renewable-energy

In March 2018, Pakistan announced that hydropower projects would be prioritized following the completion of under-construction power plants.[85] Pakistan aims to produce 25% of its electricity requirements by renewable energy resources by 2030.[194] China's Zonergy company will complete construction on the world's largest solar power plant – the 6,500 acre Quaid-e-Azam Solar Park near the city of Bahawalpur with an estimated capacity of 1000 MW is expected to be completed in December 2016.[195][196] The first phase of the project has been completed by Xinjiang SunOasis, and has a generating capacity of 100 MW.[197] The remaining 900 MW capacity will be installed by Zonergy under CPEC.[197]

The Jhimpir Wind Power Plant, built by the Turkish company Zorlu Enerji has already begun to sell 56.4 MW of electricity to the government of Pakistan,[198] though under CPEC, another 250 MW of electricity are to be produced by the Chinese-Pakistan consortium United Energy Pakistan and others at a cost of $659 million.[199][200] Another wind farm, the Dawood wind power project is under development by at a cost of $115 million, and will generate 50 MW of electricity by August 2016.[201]

SK Hydro Consortium is constructing the 870 MW Suki Kinari Hydropower Project in the Kaghan Valley of Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province at a cost of $1.8 billion,[202] SK Hydro will construct the project with financing by China's EXIM bank.[203]

The $1.6 billion 720 MW Karot Dam which is under construction is part of the CPEC plan, but is to be financed separately by China's Silk Road Fund.[204]

Pakistan and China have also discussed the inclusion of the 4,500 MW $14 billion Diamer-Bhasha Dam as part of the CPEC project,[205] though as of December 2015, no firm decision has been made – though Pakistani officials remain optimistic at its eventual inclusion.[206] On 14 November 2017, Pakistan dropped its bid to have Diamer-Bhasha Dam financed under the CPEC framework.[207]

The $2.4 billion, 1,100 MW Kohala Hydropower Project being constructed by China's Three Gorges Corporation predates the announcement of CPEC, though funding for the project will now come from CPEC fund.[208] The project was approved by the government of Pakistani-administered Kashmir, the Chinese government and the Three Gorges corporation in 2020,[209] the move was protested by India, which claims Kashmir as its territory.[210] Renewable energy projects also include a 640 MW Mahl hydro power project.[211]

Coal

Despite several renewable energy projects, the bulk of new energy generation capacity under CPEC will be coal-based plants, with $5.8 billion worth of coal power projects expected to be completed by early 2019 as part of the CPEC's "Early Harvest" projects.

On 26 May, it was unveiled that transmission line of 660 KV would be laid between matiari and Lahore. The electricity would be produced from coal-based power plants at Thar, Port Qasim and Hub. It would have the capacity to supply 2000MW with 10 percent overloaded capability for 2 hours.[212]

Balochistan

In Balochistan province, a $970 million coal power plant at Hub, near Karachi, with a capacity of 660 MW to be built by a joint consortium of China's China Power Investment Corporation and the Pakistani firm Hub Power Company as part of a larger $2 billion project to produce 1,320 MW from coal.[213]

A 300 MW coal power plant is also being developed in the city of Gwadar, and is being financed by a 0% interest loan.[103] Development of Gwadar also include a 132 KV(AIS) Grid Station along with associated D/C Transmission line at Down Town, Gwadar along with other 132 KV Sub Stations at Deep Sea Port Gwadar.[214]

Punjab

The $1.8 billion Sahiwal Coal Power Project, in full operation since 3 July 2017,[215] is a project in central Punjab that has a capacity of 1,320 MW. It was built by a joint venture of two Chinese firms: the Huaneng Shandong company and Shandong Ruyi, who will jointly own and operate the plant.[216] Pakistan will purchase electricity from the consortium at a tariff of 8.36 US cents/kWh.[217]

The $589 million project to establish a coal mine and a relatively small 300 MW coal power plant to be built in the town of Pind Dadan Khan by China Machinery Engineering Corporation in Punjab's Salt Range.[218] Pakistan's NEPRA has been criticized for considering a relatively high tariff of 11.57 US cents/kWH proposed by the Chinese firm,[219] which had been initially agreed at 8.25 US cents/kWH in 2014.[220] The Chinese firm argued that coal transportation costs had greatly increased due to the nonavailability of coal from nearby mines which had initially been regarded as the primary coal source for the project. The company argued that coal would instead have to be transported from distant Sindh province, which along with inefficiencies in mining procedures, increased the cost of fuel by 30.5%.[221]

Sindh

The Shanghai Electric company of China will construct two 660 MW power plants as part of the "Thar-I" project in the Thar coalfield of Sindh province, while "Thar-ll" will be developed by a separate consortium.[222][223] The facility will be powered by locally sourced coal,[224] and is expected to be put into commercial use in 2018.[225] Pakistan's National Electric Power Regulatory Authority (NEPRA) has agreed to purchase electricity from both Thar-l and Thar-ll at a tariff of 8.50 US cents/kWh for the first 330 MW of electricity, 8.33 US cents/kWh for the next 660 MW, and 7.99 US cents/kWh for the next 1,099 MW as further phases are developed.[226][227]

Near the Thar-I Project, the China Machinery Engineering Corporation in conjunction with Pakistan's Engro Corporation will construct two 330 MW power plants as part of the "Thar-ll Project" (having initially proposed the simultaneous construction of two 660 MW power plants) as well as developing a coal mine capable of producing up to 3.8 million tons of coal per year as part of the first phase of the project."[228][better source needed] The first phase is expected to be complete by early 2019,[229] at a cost of $1.95 billion.[230] Subsequent phases will eventually generate an additional 3,960 MW of electricity over the course of ten years.[223] As part of infrastructure required for electricity distribution from the Thar l and ll Projects, the $2.1 billion Matiari to Lahore Transmission Line, and $1.5 billion in Matiari to Faisalabad transmission line are also to be built as part of the CPEC project.[66]

The 1,320 MW $2.08 billion Pakistan Port Qasim Power Project near Port Qasim will be a joint venture of Al-Mirqab Capital from Qatar, and China's Power Construction Corporation – a subsidiary of Sinohydro Resources Limited.[231][232] Pakistan's NEPRA and SinoHydro agreed to set the levelized tariff for electricity purchased from the consortium at 8.12 US cents/kWh.[233] The first 660 MW reactor was commissioned in November 2017.[234]

Liquified natural gas

Liquefied natural gas power LNG projects are also considered vital to CPEC. The Chinese government has announced its intention to build a $2.5 billion 711 kilometre gas pipeline from Gwadar to Nawabshah in province as part of CPEC.[235] The pipeline is designed to be a part of the 2,775 kilometre long Iran–Pakistan gas pipeline, with the 80 kilometre portion between Gwadar and the Iranian border to be connected when sanctions against Tehran are eased; Iran has already completed a 900 kilometre long portion of the pipeline on its side of the border.[67]

The Pakistani portion of the pipeline is to be constructed by the state-owned China Petroleum Pipeline Bureau.[236] It will be 42 inches (1.1 metres) in diameter, and have the capacity to transport 1×109 cubic feet (2.8×107 m3) of liquified natural gas every day, with an additional 500×106 cubic feet (1.4×107 m3) of additional capacity when the planned off-shore LNG terminal is also completed[237] The project will not only provide gas exporters with access to the Pakistani market, but will also allow China to secure a route for its own imports.[238]

The project should not be confused with the $2 billion 1,100 kilometre North-South Pipeline liquified natural gas pipeline which is to be constructed with Russian assistance between Karachi and Lahore with anticipated completion by 2018.[239] Nor should it be confused with the planned $7.5 billion TAPI Pipeline which is a planned project involving Turkmenistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India.

Other LNG projects are currently under construction with Chinese assistance and financing that will augment the scope of CPEC, but are neither funded by nor officially considered a part of CPEC. The 1,223 MW Balloki Power Plant is currently under construction near Kasur, and is being constructed by China's Harbin Electric Company with financing from the China's EXIM bank, is one such example. In October 2015, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif also inaugurated construction of the 1,180 MW Bhikhi Power Plant near Sheikhupura,[240] which is to be jointly constructed by China's Harbin Electric Company and General Electric from the United States.[241] It is expected to be Pakistan's most efficient power plant, and will provide enough power for an estimated 6 million homes.[241] The facility became operational in May 2018.[242]

"Early Harvest" projects

As part of the "Early Harvest" scheme of the CPEC, over 10,000 megawatts of electricity-generating capacity is to be developed between 2018 and 2020.[66] While some "Early Harvest" projects will not be completed until 2020, the government of Pakistan plans to add approximately 10,000 MW of energy-generating capacity to Pakistan's electric grid by 2018 through the completion of projects which complement CPEC.

Although not officially under the scope of CPEC, the 1,223 MW Balloki Power Plant, and the 1,180 MW Bhakki powerplants have both been completed in mid-2018,[242][243][240][244] which along with the 969 MW Neelum–Jhelum Hydropower Plant completed in summer 2018 and 1,410 MW Tarbela IV Extension Project, competed in February 2018,[245] will result in an additional 10,000 MW being added to Pakistan's electricity grid by the end of 2018 with a combination of CPEC and non-CPEC projects.[246] A further 1,000 MW of electricity will be imported to Pakistan from Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan as part of the CASA-1000 project, which is expected to be launched in 2018.[247]

Table of projects

"Early Harvest" Energy Project[248] Capacity Location
Pakistan Port Qasim Power Project. 1,320 MW (2 x 660 MW plants) Sindh
Thar-l Project 1,320 MW (4 x 330 MW plants) Sindh
Thar-ll Project and coal mine 1,320 MW (2 x 660 MW plants) Sindh
Sahiwal Coal Power Project 1,320 MW (2 x 660 MW plants) Punjab
Rahimyar Khan coal power project 1,320 MW (2 x 660 MW plants) Punjab
Quaid-e-Azam Solar Park 1,000 MW Punjab
Suki Kinari Hydropower Project 870 MW (expected completion in 2020)[249] Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
Karot Hydropower Project 720 MW (expected completion in 2021[250])[251] Punjab
China Power Hub Generation Company 2X660 MW Balochistan
Thar Engro Coal Power Project 660 MW (2 x 330 MW plants) Sindh
Gwadar coal power project 300 MW Balochistan
UEP Windfarm 100 MW Sindh
Dawood wind power project 50 MW Sindh
Sachal Windfarm 50 MW Sindh
Sunnec Windfarm 50 MW Sindh
Matiari to Lahore Transmission Line 660 kilovolt Sindh and Punjab

Other areas of cooperation

The CPEC announcement encompassed not only infrastructure works, but also addressed areas of co-operation between China and Pakistan.

Agriculture and aquaculture

CPEC includes provisions for cooperation in management of water resources, livestock, and other fields of agriculture. Under the plan, agricultural information project, storage and distribution of agricultural equipment and construction project, agricultural mechanisation, demonstration and machinery leasing project and fertiliser production project for producing 800,000 tons of fertiliser and 100,000 tons of bio-organic fertiliser will be implemented.[252][253] The framework includes cooperation in Remote Sensing (RS) and Geographical Information System (GIS), food processing, pre-and-post-harvest handling and storage of agricultural produce, selection and breeding of new breeds of animals and new varieties of plants, specifically fisheries and aquaculture.[254]

Science and technology

As part of CPEC, the two countries signed an Economic and Technical Cooperation Agreement,[255] as well as pledged to "China-Pakistan Joint Cotton Bio-Tech Laboratory"[255] The two countries also pledged to establish the "China-Pakistan Joint Marine Research Center" with State Oceanic Administration and Pakistan's Ministry of Science and Technology[255] Also as part of the CPEC agreement, Pakistan and China have agreed to co-operate in the field of space research.[72]

In February 2016, the two countries agreed to establish the "Pak-China Science, Technology, Commerce and Logistic Park" near Islamabad at an estimated cost of $1.5 billion.[256] The park will be situated on 500 hectares, which will be provided by Pakistan to China's Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps, with all investments expected to come from the Chinese side over the course of ten years.[256]

In May 2016, construction began on the $44 million 820 kilometer long Pakistan-China Fiber Optic Project, a Cross Border Optical Fiber Cable that will enhance telecommunication and ICT Industry in the Gilgit Baltistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Punjab region, while offering Pakistan a fifth route by which to transmit telecommunication traffic.[257][258] which will be extended to Gwadar.[259][260][107]

in May 2019, Vice President of China and Pakistan has decided to launch Huawei Technical Support Center in Pakistan.[212]

CPEC include establishment of pilot project of Digital Terrestrial Multimedia Broadcast for Pakistan Television Corporation through Chinese grant at Rebroadcast Station (RBS) at Murree.[261] ZTE Corporation will provide Pakistan Television Corporation collaboration across R&D of digital terrestrial television technologies, staff training and content creation including partnerships with Chinese multinational companies in multiple areas including television sets and set top boxes as international Cooperation.[262]

Other fields

The two nations also pledged co-operation in field ranging from anti-narcotic efforts,[255] to co-operation in an effort to reduce climate change.[255] The two nations also agreed to increase co-operating between the banking sectors of the two countries, as well as to establish closer ties between China Central Television and the Pakistan Television Corporation.[255]

Confucius Institute at University of Punjab is planned to be soon launched in 2019.[212] Moreover, Rashakai Special Economic Zone on M1 Highway a motorway junction near Nowshehra is planned as well.[212]

Finance

Concessionary loans

Approximately $11 billion worth of infrastructure projects being developed by the Pakistani government will be financed at an interest rate of 1.6%,[92] after Pakistan successfully lobbied the Chinese government to reduce interest rates from an initial 3%.[263] Loans will be dispersed by the Exim Bank of China, China Development Bank, and the ICBC.[264] For comparison, loans for previous Pakistani infrastructure projects financed by the World Bank carried an interest rate between 5% and 8.5%,[265] while interest rates on market loans approach 12%.[266]

The loan money would be used to finance projects which are planned and executed by the Pakistani government. Portions of the approximately $6.6 billion[127] Karachi–Lahore Motorway are already under construction.[267] The $2.9 billion phase which will connect the city of Multan to the city of Sukkur over a distance of 392 kilometres has also been approved,[268] with 90% of costs to be financed by the Chinese government at concessionary interest rates, while the remaining 10% is to be financed by the Public Sector Development Programme of the Pakistani government.[269] In May 2016, the $2.9 billion loan were given final approvals required prior to disbursement of the funds were given by the Government of the People's Republic of China on 4 May 2016, and will be concessionary loans with an interest rate of 2.0%.[116] The National Highway Authority of Pakistan reported that contractors arrived on site soon after the loan received final approval.[116]

The China Development Bank will finance the $920 million towards the cost of reconstruction of the 487 kilometer portion of the Karakoram Highway between Burhan and Raikot.[270][271] An addition $1.26 billion will be lent by the China Exim Bank for the construction of the Havelian to Thakot portion of this 487 kilometer stretch of roadway,[114][115] to be dispersed as low-interest rate concessionary loans.[116]

$7 billion of the planned $8.2 billion overhaul of the Main Line 1 railway is to be financed by concessionary loans, which extended by China's state owned banks.[272]

The long-planned 27.1 km long $1.6 billion Orange Line of the Lahore Metro is regarded as a commercial project,[255] and does not qualify for the Exim Bank's 1.6% interest rate. It will instead by financed at a 2.4% interest rate[184] after China agreed to reduce interest rates from an originally planned rate of 3.4%.[273]

The $44 million Pakistan-China Fiber Optic Project, an 820 km long fibre optic wire connecting Pakistan and China, will be constructed using concessionary loans at an interest rate of 2%, rather than the 1.6% rate applied to other projects.[274]

Interest-free loans

The government of China in August 2015 announced that concessionary loans for several projects in Gwadar totaling $757 million would be converted 0% interest loans.[92] The projects which are now to financed by the 0% interest loans include: the construction of the $140 million East Bay Expressway project, installation of breakwaters in Gwadar which will cost $130 million, a $360 million coal power plant in Gwadar, a $27 million project to dredge berths in Gwadar harbor, and a $100 million 300-bed hospital in Gwadar.[92] Thus, Pakistan only has to repay the principal on these loans.

In September 2015, the government of China also announced that the $230 million Gwadar International Airport project would no longer be financed by loans, but would instead be constructed by grants which the government of Pakistan will not be required to repay.[263]

Private consortia

$15.5 billion worth of energy projects are to be constructed by joint Chinese-Pakistani firms, rather than by the governments of either China or Pakistan. The Exim Bank of China will finance those investments at 5–6% interest rates, while the government of Pakistan will be contractually obliged to purchase electricity from those firms at pre-negotiated rates.[191]

As an example, the 1,223 MW Balloki Power Plant does not fall under the concessionary loan rate of 1.6%, as the project is not being developed by the Pakistani government. Instead, it is considered to be a private sector investment as its construction will be undertaken by a consortium of Harbin Electric and Habib Rafiq Limited after they successfully bid against international competitors.[275] Chinese state-owned banks will provide loans to the consortium that are subsidised by the Chinese government. In the case of the Balloki Power Plant, state-owned banks will finance the project at an interest rate of 5%,[276] while the Pakistani government will purchase electricity at the lowest bid rate of 7.973 cents per unit.[275]

ADB assistance

While the Hazara Motorway is considered to be a crucial part of the route between Gwadar and China. M-15 will not be financed by CPEC funds. The project will instead be financed by the Asian Development Bank.[164]

The N70 project is not officially a part of CPEC but will connect the CPEC's Western Alignment to the Karachi-Lahore Motorway at Multan. The project will be financed as part of a $195 million package by the Asian Development Bank announced in May 2015 to upgrade the N70 National Highway and N50 National Highway.[155] In January 2016, The United Kingdom's Department for International Development announced a $72.4 million grant to Pakistan for roadway improvements in the province of Balochistan, thereby reducing the total Asian Development Bank loan from $195 million to $122.6 million.[156]

The M-4 Motorway between Faisalabad and Multan is not to be financed by the Chinese government as part of CPEC, but will instead be the first infrastructure project partially financed by the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, and will be co-financed along with the Asian Development Bank for a total of approximately $275 million.[140] Portions of the project will also be funded by a $90.7 million grant announced in October 2015 by the government of the United Kingdom towards the construction of the Gojra-Shorkot section of the M4 Motorway project.[163]

Impact

The importance of CPEC to China is reflected by its inclusion as part of China's 13th five-year development plan.[277][278] CPEC projects will provide China with an alternate route for energy supplies, as well as a new route by which Western China can conduct trade. Pakistan stands to gain due to upgrade of infrastructure and introduction of a reliable energy supply.[279][280]

On 8 January 2017, Forbes claimed that CPEC is part of China's vision to write the rules of the next era of globalization and help its export and investment engines run for years to come.[281] Writing in January 2017, Arun Mohan Sukumar of India's Observer Research Foundation claimed that "CPEC is an important enough project whose economic and strategic consequences require methodical assessment", adding that "CPEC may be a bilateral endeavour, but New Delhi cannot ignore its spillover effects on regional governance" and concluding that "India would be ill-advised to rely on the false comfort that profits alone will drive China's business with Pakistan".[282]

According to China's prime minister, Li Keqiang, Pakistan's development through the project might "wean the populace from fundamentalism".[38]

Environment

Pakistan is already distressed by climate change and global warming issues as about 5,000 its glaciers are melting at an alarming rate. It is affected by extreme weather patterns and seasonal shifts occurring in recent past.[283] The CPEC coal based power plants are not in line with Pakistan's own green policy. It is estimated that by the year 2030, around 371 metric tonne of Carbon dioxide will be the Greenhouse gas emission from CPEC projects. 56% of this will be contributed by energy sector. CPEC expects a daily commute of 7000 trucks which can potentially emit 36.5 million tons of CO2.[284]

Since 2021, due to growing pressure on China for being the world's biggest polluter, it has since shifted its focus from coal based energy investments in Pakistan to renewables. This is being done in a bid to promote a more "greener" image of CPEC.[285]

Pakistani economy

The CPEC is a landmark project[286] in the annals of history of Pakistan. It is the largest investment Pakistan has attracted since independence and largest by China in any foreign country.[287] CPEC is considered economically vital to Pakistan in helping it drive economic growth.[288] The Pakistani media and government have called CPEC investments a "game and fate changer" for the region,[289][290] while both China and Pakistan intend that the massive investment plan will transform Pakistan into a regional economic hub and further boost the deepening ties between the two countries.[291] Approximately 1 year after the announcement of CPEC, Zhang Baozhong, chairman of China Overseas Port Holding Company told The Washington Post that his company planned to spend an additional $4.5 billion on roads, power, hotels and other infrastructure for Gwadar's industrial zone,[16] which would be one of the largest ever sums of foreign direct investment into Pakistan.

Pakistan as late as early 2017 faced energy shortfalls of over 4,500 MW on a regular basis[64] with routine power cuts of up to 12 hours per day,[65] which has shed an estimated 2–2.5% off its annual GDP.[65] The Financial Times noted that Pakistan's electricity shortages are a major hindrance to foreign investment, and that Chinese investments in Pakistani infrastructure and power projects will lead to a "virtuous cycle" that will make the country more attractive for foreign investment in a variety of sectors.[292] Poor availability of electricity is considered by the World Bank to be a main constraint to both economic growth and investment in Pakistan.

The impact of Chinese investments in Energy sector was soon visible as in December 2017, Pakistan succeeded in producing surplus electricity. Pakistani Federal Minister for Power Division, Awais Leghari announced a complete end to power cuts in 5,297 feeders out of total 8,600 and claimed that the country's current electricity production had gone up to 16,477 Megawatts which was 2700 megawatts more than the demand.[293]

Pakistan's large textile industry has also been negatively affected by several-hour long power cuts, with almost 20% of textile factories in the city of Faisalabad shutting down on account of power shortages.[294] The CPEC's "Early Harvest" projects are expected to resolve shortages in power generation by 2018 by increasing Pakistan's power generation capacity by over 10,000 megawatts.[66] As a result of improved infrastructure and energy supplies, the Pakistani government expects that economic growth rates will reach 7% by 2018.[295]

Former Pakistan Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz also stated in May 2016 that predicted economic growth from CPEC projects would result in stabilization of Pakistan's security situation,[296] which has also been cited by the World Bank as hindrance to sustained economic growth in Pakistan.[297]

According to Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Hua Chunying, the corridor will "serve as a driver for connectivity between South Asia and East Asia." Mushahid Hussain, chairman of the Pakistan-China Institute, told China Daily that the economic corridor "will play a crucial role in regional integration of the 'Greater South Asia', which includes China, Iran, Afghanistan, and stretches all the way to Myanmar."[48] When fully built, the corridor is expected to generate significant revenue from transit fees levied on Chinese goods – to the tune of several billion dollars per annum.[298] According to The Guardian, "The Chinese are not just offering to build much-needed infrastructure but also make Pakistan a key partner in its grand economic and strategic ambitions."[299]

Moody's Investors Service has described the project as a "credit positive" for Pakistan. In 2015, the agency acknowledged that much of the project's key benefits would not materialize until 2017, but stated that it believes at least some of the benefits from the economic corridor would likely begin accruing even before then.[300] The Asian Development Bank stated "CPEC will connect economic agents along a defined geography. It will provide connection between economic nodes or hubs, centered on urban landscapes, in which large amount of economic resources and actors are concentrated. They link the supply and demand sides of markets."[301] On 14 November 2016, Hyatt Hotels Corporation announced plan's to open four properties in Pakistan, in partnership with Bahria Town Group, citing the investment of CPEC as the reason behind the $600 million investment.[302]

On 12 March 2017, a consortium of Pakistani broker houses reported that Pakistan will end up paying $90 billion to China over a span of 30 years with annual average repayments of $3–4 billion per year post fiscal year 2020. The report further said that CPEC-related transportation would earn $400–500 million per annum to Pakistan, and would grow Pakistani exports by 4.5% a year till fiscal year 2025.[303]

CPEC and the "Malacca Dilemma"

 
Map showing territorial claims in South China Sea. A high percentage of Chinese energy imports pass through this disputed region, rendering much of China's energy imports vulnerable to conflict.

The Straits of Malacca provide China with its shortest maritime access to Europe, Africa, and the Middle East.[304] Approximately 80% of its Middle Eastern energy imports also pass through the Straits of Malacca.[305] As the world's biggest oil importer,[53] energy security is a key concern for China while current sea routes used to import Middle Eastern oil are frequently patrolled by the United States' Navy.[306]

In the event that China were to face hostile actions from a United States[who?], energy imports through the Straits of Malacca could be impeded, which in turn may jeopardise the Chinese economy in a scenario that is frequently referred to as the "Malacca Dilemma".[305] In addition to vulnerabilities faced in the Straits of Malacca region, China is heavily dependent upon sea-routes that pass through the South China Sea, near the disputed Spratly Islands and Paracel Islands, which are currently a source of tension between China, Taiwan, Vietnam, the Philippines, and the United States.[307] The CPEC project will allow Chinese energy imports to circumvent these contentious areas and find a new artery in the west, and thereby decrease the possibility of confrontation between the United States and China.[308] However, there is evidence to suggest that any pipelines from Gwadar up to China would be very expensive, would encounter numerous logistical difficulties including difficult terrain and potential terrorism, and would barely make any impact on China's overall energy security.[309]

China's stake in Gwadar will also allow it to expand its influence in the Indian Ocean, a vital route for oil transportation between the Atlantic and the Pacific. Another advantage to China is that it will be able to bypass the Strait of Malacca. As of now, 60 percent of China's imported oil comes from the Middle East, and 80 percent of that is transported to China through this strait, the dangerous, piracy-rife maritime route through the South China, East China, and Yellow Seas.

Council on Foreign Relations[310]

Access to western China

The CPEC Alignments will improve connectivity to restive Xinjiang, thereby increasing the region's potential to attract public and private investment.[304] CPEC is considered central to China–Pakistan relations; its central importance is reflected by China's inclusion of the project as part of its 13th five-year development plan.[277][278] The CPEC projects will also complement China's Western Development plan, which includes not only Xinjiang, but also the neighbouring regions of Tibet and Qinghai.[311]

In addition to its significance to reduce Chinese dependence on the Sea of Malacca and South China Sea routes, CPEC will provide China an alternative and shorter route for energy imports from the Middle East, thereby reducing shipping costs and transit times. The currently available sea-route to China is roughly 12,000 kilometre long, while the distance from Gwadar Port to Xinjiang province is approximately 3,000 kilometre, with another 3,500 kilometre from Xinjiang to China's eastern coast.[305] As a result of CPEC, Chinese imports and exports to the Middle East, Africa, and Europe would require much shorter shipment times and distances.

Route to circumvent Afghanistan

Negotiations to provide an alternate route to the Central Asian republics by way of China predate the announcement of CPEC. The Afghanistan–Pakistan Transit Trade Agreement of 2010 provided Pakistan access to Central Asia via Afghanistan; however, the full agreement has yet to be fully implemented. The "Quadrilateral Agreement on Traffic in Transit" (QATT) was first devised in 1995, and signed in 2004 by the governments of China, Pakistan, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan to facilitate transit trade between the various countries, with no inclusion of Afghanistan.[312] Despite signing of the QATT, the agreement's full potential was never realized, largely on account of poor infrastructure links between the four countries prior to the announcement of CPEC.

During the visit of Afghan President Ashraf Ghani to India in April 2015, he stated "We will not provide equal transit access to Central Asia for Pakistani trucks" unless the Pakistani government included India as part of the 2010 Afghanistan–Pakistan Transit Trade Agreement.[313] The current Transit Trade Agreement provides Afghanistan access to the Port of Karachi to conduct export trade with India, and allows Afghan goods to be transited up to any border of Pakistan, but does not guarantee Afghan trucks the right to traverse the Wagah Border, nor does the agreement permit Indian goods to be exported to Afghanistan via Pakistan.[314] Owing to continued tensions between India and Pakistan, the Pakistani government expressed reluctance to include India in any trade negotiations with Afghanistan, and as a result, little progress was made between the Afghan and Pakistani sides.

In February 2016, the Pakistani government signalled its intention to completely bypass Afghanistan in its quest to access Central Asia by announcing its intent to revive the QATT so that Central Asian states could access Pakistani ports via Kashgar instead of Afghanistan,[315] thereby allowing the Central Asian republics to access Pakistan's deep water ports without having to rely on a politically unstable Afghanistan as a transit corridor. In early March 2016, the Afghan government reportedly acquiesced to Pakistani requests to use Afghanistan as a corridor to Tajikistan, after having dropped demands from reciprocal access to India via Pakistan.[316]

Alternate route to Central Asia

The heads of various Central Asian republics have expressed their desire to connect their infrastructure networks to the CPEC project via China. During the August 2015 visit of Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to Kazakhstan, the Kazakh Prime Minister Karim Massimov, conveyed Kazakhstan's desire to link its road network to the CPEC project.[317] During the November 2015 visit of Tajikistan President Emomali Rahmon to Pakistan, the Tajik premier also expressed his government's desire to join the Quadrilateral Agreement on Traffic in Transit to use CPEC as a conduit for imports and exports to Tajikistan by circumventing Afghanistan;[318] the request received political backing by the Pakistani Prime Minister.[318]

The Chinese government has already upgraded the road linking Kashgar to Osh in Kyrgyzstan via the Kyrgyz town of Erkeshtam while a railway between Urumqi, China and Almaty, Kazakhstan has also been completed as part of China's One Belt One Road initiative.[319] Numerous land crossings already exist between Kazakhstan and China as well. Additionally, the Chinese government has announced plans to lay railway track from Tashkent, Uzbekistan, towards Kyrgyzstan with onwards connections to China and Pakistan.[320] Further, the Pamir Highway already provides Tajikistan access to Kashgar via the Kulma Pass. These crossings complement the CPEC project to provide Central Asian states access to Pakistan's deepwater ports by completely bypassing Afghanistan – a country which has been ravaged by civil war and political instability since the late 1970s.

Comparison to Chabahar Port

In May 2016, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his counterpart, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, signed a series of twelve agreements in Tehran, in which India offered to refurbish one of Chabahar's ten existing berths, and reconstruct another berth at the Port of Chabahar,[321] in order to allow Indian goods to be exported to Iran, with the possibility of onward connections to Afghanistan and Central Asia.[322] As of February 2017, the project remains delayed while the governments of Iran and India blame one another for delays.[323]

A section of the Indian media described it as "a counter to the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor",[324] although the total monetary value of projects has been noted to be significantly less than that of CPEC.[325]

As part of the twelve memorandums of understanding signed by Indian and Iranian delegations as per text released by India's Ministry of External Affairs, India will offer a $150 million line of credit extended by the Exim Bank of India,[326] while India Ports Global also signed a contract with Iran's to develop berths at the port,[327] at a cost of $85 million[328] over the course of 18 months.[329]

Under the agreement, India Ports Global will refurbish a 640 meter long container handling facility, and reconstruct a 600 meter long berth at the port.[321] India further agreed to extend a $400 million line of credit to be used for the import of steel for the construction of a rail link between Chabahar and Zahedan,[330] while India's IRCON and Iran's Construction, Development of Transport and Infrastructure Company signed a memorandum of understanding regarding the construction and finance of the Chabahar to Zahedan rail line at a cost of $1.6 billion.[331]

India's Highways and Shipping Minister, Nitin Gadkari suggested that the free trade zone in Chabahar had the potential to attract upwards of $15 billion worth of investment in the future,[332] although he stated that such investments are predicated upon Iran offering India natural gas at a rate of $1.50 per million British Thermal Units,[333] which is substantially lower than the rate of $2.95 per million British Thermal Units offered by Iran.[334] The two countries also signed a memorandum of understanding to explore the possibility of setting up an aluminum smelter at a cost of $2 billion,[citation needed] as well as establishing a urea processing facility in Chahbahar,[335] although these investments are also contingent upon Iran supplying low-cost natural gas for operation of those facilities.[336]

India, Iran, and Afghanistan also signed an agreement with the intention of simplifying transit procedures between the three countries.[328] Despite the expressed desire to circumvent Pakistan in order to augment Iranian and Indian economic ties, Indian goods destined for Iran currently do not require transit through Pakistan, as those goods can be exported to Iran via Bandar Abbas, where India also currently maintains a diplomatic mission.[337] Bandar Abbas is also consider a key node on the North–South Transport Corridor, backed by India and Russia since 2002.[338][339] Indian goods also can be imported and transited across Iran upon arrival at Bandar-e Emam Khomeyni near the Iraqi border.

As per the Afghanistan–Pakistan Transit Trade Agreement, Afghan goods can be transited across Pakistan for export to India as well, though Indian goods cannot be exported to Afghanistan via Pakistan.[340] Upon completion of Chabahar, Indian exporters will benefit from the potential ability to export goods to Afghanistan, a country with an annual gross domestic product estimated at $60.6 billion.[341]

After signing the agreement, Iran's ambassador to Pakistan, Mehdi Honerdoost, stated that the agreement was "not finished", and that Iran would welcome the inclusion of both Pakistan and China in the project.[342] While clarifying that Chabahar Port would not be a rival or enemy to Pakistan's Gwadar Port,[343] he further stated that Pakistan and China had both been invited to contribute to the project before India, but according to Pakistani media neither China nor Pakistan had expressed interest in joining.[344][345]

However, eventually, Iranian ambassador made it clear that Iran doesn't consider Chahbahar to be a project which could feasibly rival CPEC as he said "Iran is eager to join CPEC with its full capabilities, possibilities and abilities".[346]

In July 2020, Pakistani media The News International reported that the Iranian government has dropped India from a long stalled rail project and has instead signed a comprehensive deal with China.[347] This report was later refuted by the government of Iran, who stated that the investments from India didn't have anything to do with the railway project in the first place.[348][349]

Security Issues

While agreements have specifically cited improvements for Afghan connectivity to the world as a benefit of Indian investment in the region,[350] Afghanistan's politically instability could limit the potential usefulness of transit corridors to population centers near Kabul or Kandahar,[351] as those routes traverse southern and eastern Afghanistan, where the Taliban is most active.[352] The Chabahar plan relies upon connections to the Afghan Ring Road.[353] By August 2016, the Taliban was noted to have captured large swathes of land in Helmand Province, and threatened to capture the provincial capital of Lashkar Gah,[354] which lies on the portion of the Afghan Ring Road connecting Chabahar to Kandahar and Kabul. As a result, portions of the Afghan Ring Road were closed due to Taliban insurgent activity.[355] Also in August 2016, the Taliban claimed responsibility for an attack which left twelve foreign tourists dead as they were traveling on an alternative route to the Afghan Ring Road, between Kabul and Herat.[356] In September 2016, Iran's president Hassan Rouhani expressed his country's interest in joining CPEC during a meeting with Nawaz Sharif.[357] The Pakistan Army has taken the security responsibility of CPEC employees and investors which become more effective and healthy relationship between China and Pakistan.

Security

Security Forces

Pakistan Navy and Chinese Navy ships are to jointly guard the safety and security of the trade corridor, as Pakistan seeks to expand the role of its maritime forces.[358] From December 2016, Pakistan's Navy established a special taskforce "TF-88" to ensure there is maritime security for trade.[359][360] Chairman Parliamentary Committee on CPEC confirmed that Sindh province will dispatch 2000 police officers, while Punjab will dispatch 5000 police officers for the project, while the Pakistani Army will deploy 12,000 troops to safeguard the route.[361] China plans to transfer 4 ships to the Pakistan Maritime Security Agency with two ships called PMSS Hingol and PMSS Basol.[362] For territorial security, Pakistan has formed the Special Security Division.[363] Pakistan plans to train 12,000 security personnel to protect Chinese workers on the corridor.[364][365][366] As of August 2015, 8,000 Pakistani security officials were deployed for the protection of over 8,100 Chinese workers in Pakistan.[367] Maqbool Ahmed, an investigative journalist from the now closed Herald reported large scale land acquisition involving tens of thousands of acres near a lagoon in Gwadar by the Pakistani Navy for building a massive garrison in order to secure maritime security.[368]

As part of CPEC, Pakistan has boosted its international engagement in terms of foreign policy with China, Iran, USA, Turkey and Malaysia are to be engaged for the maritime economy related to CPEC.[369] Iranian President Rouhani revealed his intentions to Pakistan to join CPEC in a meeting at the UN[370] Russia has also expressed support for CPEC.[371][372]

The Special Security Division, headed by a Major General, would consist of nine army battalions and six wings of civil armed forces. Similarly, Gwadar Security Task Force is another formation to be raised, commanded by a Brigadier. These security measures for Chinese projects would cost an estimated total of Rupees 10 Billion as of 2015. The Chief of Army Staff visited CPEC Security headquarters in February 2016 and vowed that “the security forces are ready to pay any price” for successful completion of CPEC projects. The NEPRA in Pakistan has raised concerns on the alarming rate of growth in security expenditure of Power Projects under CPEC, which it considers to be "dark".[373]

Baloch militants

The Balochistan National Party (Mengal) (BNP-M), the Baloch National Front (BNF), the Baloch Republican Party, and militant organizations like the Balochistan Liberation Front, the Balochistan Liberation Army, and the Baloch Republican Army are among those that have raised objections with regards to CPEC.[374] There have been instances of attacking and killing Chinese nationals associated with CPEC.[375] Many Baloch prefer autonomy and control over their own local resources for their development instead of foreign mega projects.[374]

The Baluchistan province saw multiple attempted nationalist and separatist insurgencies before CPEC, but investments in Balochistan have led to a significant drop in separatist groups, and this effect has even seen the integration of the locals in Balochistan in the workforce at Gwadar. Despite this, Pakistan still alleges that India is supporting anti-CPEC agenda, and the Pakistani government often points to such evidence as the alleged Indian spy Kulbhushan Jadhav, who was caught in the Baluchistan province on 3 March 2016. Information regarding Jadhav was then presented to the United Nations.[376] Exiled Baloch nationalist Hyrbyair Marri in 2016 warned the safety of Chinese nationals working on the project could not be guaranteed,[377] though violence in the region peaked in 2013 before sharply declining.[378][note 1]

The Pakistani government reported that over 800 Baloch militants surrendered to security forces in 2016 after the launch of a reconciliation programme,[380] including over 200 at a single ceremony in November 2016.[381] Balakh Sher Badini, a senior militant commander of the Balochistan Liberation Army, surrendered to Pakistani forces in January 2017.[382] Another 21 militants from another militant group, the Balochistan Republican Army, surrendered shortly thereafter along with 3 militant commanders.[383] A few days later, high-ranking militant commander Lal Din Bugti surrendered to Pakistani security forces, along with 6 other commanders.[384] Separatist violence had decreased in the province so much by 2017, that such groups had become much less of a threat compared to Islamist militants.[385]

Pakistan faced Taliban insurgent violence that largely began in 2008 during the rule of General Pervez Musharraf. China reportedly also expressed concern that militant groups in Xinjiang could collaborate with Tehrik-i-Taliban militants in Pakistan.[53][386] In 2014, Pakistan launched Operation Zarb-e-Azb to eradicate Tehrik-i-Taliban militants from Pakistani territory, following an attack on Karachi's airport, and the 2014 Peshawar school massacre in which terrorists from Tehrik-i-Taliban killed 148 school children.

Following the launch of Operation Zarb-e-Azb, violence in Pakistan has drastically declined.[387] 2016 saw the lowest number of deaths from acts of violence since the current wave of violence began in 2007,[388] with total fatalities dropping nearly 66% compared to 2014.[388] Acts of terrorist violence fell 75% between 2014 and 2016.[389] According to the South Asia Terrorism Portal, civilian fatalities from terrorist attacks in 2013 stood at 3,001, while the number had declined to 612 by 2016[390] – the lowest number since 2005.

Uyghur militants

In the 1980s, Uyghurs from China crossed into Pakistan to get enrolled in Madrassas and with the training and arms provided by Chinese government, they have fought the Soviets in Afghanistan. Upon returning back to China, many joined the violent Uyghur nationalist groups.[391] Pakistani intelligence agencies had undertaken crackdown on Uyghurs militants of Islamic State returning from Syria and East Turkistan Islamic Movement (ETIM) along with Baloch rebel groups involved in targeting CPEC projects. They claim hostile Indian intelligence agencies are involved in training thousands of militants formerly belonging to Taliban factions. Nearly 30,000 Chinese workers are employed in about 280 Chinese funded projects where almost 35,000 security personnel have been deployed.[392]

Alleged Indian subversion

CPEC passes through the disputed region of Kashmir where Indian and Pakistani border guards have occasionally exchanged fire across the Line of Control,[393][394] though no CPEC project is located near the line. Chinese intelligence agencies have also reportedly shared information with Pakistani authorities regarding alleged efforts by the India's Research and Analysis Wing to subvert CPEC.[395] In March 2016, Pakistan reported that it had arrested Kulbhushan Yadav, whom Pakistan claims to be a spy from India's Research and Analysis Wing, and who entered Pakistan from Iran specifically to destabilize regions in Pakistan's Baluchistan province along with terrorist organization Tehrik-i-Taliban and Baloch liberation army (B.L.A) in order to hinder implementation of CPEC projects.[396][original research?] India though has denied the claim saying that Yadav had been "kidnapped last year from Iran and his subsequent presence in Pakistan has never been explained credibly".[397] Former Chief of Army Staff General Raheel Sharif in April 2016 accused India's Research and Analysis Wing of destabilizing Pakistan in an attempt to disrupt and stymie implementation of various CPEC projects.[398] Pakistan's Secretary of Defense Lieutenant General Alam Khattak stated in April 2016 that the arrest of Kulbhushan Yadav indicated Indian interference in CPEC, and further alleged that India's Research and Analysis Wing, in collusion with Afghanistan's National Directorate of Security, had set up a dedicated espionage unit with express intent to sabotage CPEC.[399] India moved to the International Court of Justice (ICJ), which after deliberation stayed execution of sentence passed by Pakistani military court, the ICJ also found violation of Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations by Pakistan and directed Pakistan to provide consular access to Kulbhushan Yadav in its July 2019 verdict.[400][401]

List of major projects

Gwadar Projects Estimated Cost Status Notes
Gwadar Port 300 US $ million Partially Completed Phase 1 complete. Phase 2 under construction.[402] Tax exemptions for port and Free Zone notified in Finance Act 2020. 46 enterprises have been registered for investment in Free Zone. 03 companies started production. First imports cum exports cargo by M/s HKSUN received in Gwadar free zone on 7 April 2021.
East Bay Expressway 179 US $ million Completed Project completed and inaugurated on 3 June 2022.[255]
Pak China Friendship Hospital 100 US $ million Under Construction Groundbreaking held on 16 December 2019. Expected completion in December 2022.[255]
Pak China Technical And Vocational Institute 10 US $ million Completed This project will aim at creating state-of-the-art vocational and technical training institute in Gwadar. Completed in October 2021.[403]
New Gwadar International Airport 230 US $ million Under Construction Construction work started on 31 October 2019. It will be operational in March 2023[255][404]
Road/Railway Projects Length (Km) Estimated Cost Status Notes
Gwadar-Turbat-Hoshab (M-8) 193 Rs. 13 billion Completed Completed in 2016, it will connect the western, central and eastern routes of CPEC with the Gwadar Port.[405][406]
Surab-Hoshab (N-85) 449 Rs. 17.97 Billion Completed N85 highway connects Hoshab to Sorab and is an essential link in the western route of CPEC.[405]
Zhob - Quetta (Kuchlak) (N-50) 305 Rs. 66.8 Billion Under Construction Tendering for construction work of two sections is completed and contractor mobilized whereas the remaining three sections tendering will process soon.[407]
Reconstruction of the Karakoram Highway Phase II 118 1,315 US $ million Completed It's Thakot -Havelian Section of 118 km has been completed by March 2020.[408]
Multan-Sukkur Motorway (M-5) 392 2,889 US $ million Completed Inaugurated on 5 November 2019, this 392 km Sukkur to Multan Motorway is a critical element of the Peshawar to Karachi Motorway Route.[409]
Abdul Hakeem-Lahore Motorway (M-3) 230 Completed Project has been completed and inaugurated on 30 March 2019
Hakla D.I Khan Motorway 285 Rs. 122.2 billion Completed It is part of the western alignment of CPEC. Project completed and inaugurated on 5 January 2022.[410]
Khuzdar-Basima Road N-30 110 19.19 Billion Rupee Under Construction 67% Completed. It is expected to be completed by December2021[411][412]
Orange Line (Lahore Metro) 27 1,626 US $ million Completed Project is completed and inaugurated on 25 Oct 2020.[413]
Upgradation of Karachi–Peshawar Line ML-1 1,872 6,808 US $ million In Planning The entire track from Karachi to Peshawar to be doubled. Speed of passenger trains to be raise from 65/110 km/h to 160 km/h. ECNEC approved the project on 5 August 2020.[414]
Energy Projects Capacity (MW) Estimated Cost Status Notes
Kohala Hydropower Project 1,100 2,400 US $ million In Planning expected completion in 2026[415]
Azad Pattan Hydropower Project 701 1,600 US $ million In Planning Expected commercial operation date (COD) 2026.[416]
Dawood wind power project 50 112.65 US $ million Completed Commercial operation date (COD) 5 April 2017. Fully operational.[417]
Karot Hydropower Project 720 1,720 US $ million Completed Completed and put into full commercial operations on 29 June 2022.[418]
Port Qasim Power Project 1,320 1,912 US $ million Completed Project has been completed on 25 April 2018[419]
Quaid-e-Azam Solar Park 1,000 1,301 US $ million Partially Completed First phase complete, generating 400 MW of electricity.[197] 600 MW Under implementation[195]
Sahiwal Coal Power Project 1,320 1,912 US $ million Completed Completed in July 2017. In operation.[215]
UEP Wind Farm 99 250 US $ million Completed Commercial operation date (COD) 16 June 2017, Operational[420]
Sachal Wind Farm 50 134 US $ million Completed Commercial operation date (COD) attained 11 April 2017, Operational[421]
Three Gorges Second and Third Wind Power Projects 100 150 US $ million Completed Commercial operation date (COD) attained 9 Jul 2018, Operational[422]
Western Energy (Pvt.) Ltd. Wind Power Project 50 63.12 US $ million In Planning Generation Licence Acquired. Tariff in Review[423]
Hubco Coal Power Project 1,320 1,912 US $ million Completed COD is 14 Aug 2019, fully operational.[424]
Suki Kinari Hydropower Project 870 2,000 US $ million Under Construction 70% Completed. Commercial operation date (COD) December 2022.[425]
Coal Power Project of Engro Powergen Limited at Thar Block-II 660 995 US $ million Completed COD is 10 July 2019. in operation.[426]
Coal Power Project of Shanghai Electric at Thar Block-I 1,320 1,440 US $ million completed Project Completed on 5 February 2023.[427]
Coal Power Project of Thar Energy Limited at Thar Block-II 330 498 US $ million Completed The Project has successfully achieved its commercial operations date on 1 October 2022.[428]
Coal Power Project of Thal Nova Power Limited at Thar Block-II 330 498 US $ million completed Operational. Synchronized with national grid on December 30, 2022.[428]
Other Energy Projects Capacity Cost Status Notes
Matiari to Lahore HVDC Transmission Line (878 Km) 4,000 MW 1,658 US $ million Completed Project has been completed in September 2021.[429] This state-of-the-art transmission line is built to evacuate 4,000 MW of power from the coal power plants being developed in thar coal field to national grid stations located in central part of the country.
Open Pit Mine of SSRL in Block-I of Thar Coal Field 7.6 Million tons / year 1,080 US $ million Completed On 31 January 2022, the first shovel of lignite coal was extracted at the mine.[430] It will enable mine-mouth coal power project of Shanghai Electric to generate 1,320 MW electricity.
Open Pit Mine of SECMC in Block-II of Thar Coal Field 7.6 Million tons / year 630 US $ million Completed Thar block-II unearthed coal on 10 June 2018.[431] Coal is being provided to 660 MW coal power project of Engro Powergen Limited, 330 MW TEL coal power plant and 330 MW Thal Nova coal power plant located at the site. It has achieved a major milestone of completing phase II of mine expansion on October 10, 2022, announcing the Commercial Operations Date (COD) for the 7.6 million tons per annum (MTPA) mine expansion from the previously 3.8 million tons per annum under phase I of its plan. Mine capacity is being increased to 12.2 million tons /year by June 2023.[432][433]
Special Economic Zones Area Status Notes
Rashakai Economic Zone , M-1, Nowshera 702 Acres Launched Rashakai Special Economic Zone (SEZ) in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa was rolled out in Jun 2021, kicking off phase II of CPEC.
Dhabeji Special Economic Zone 1530 Acres Under Bidding Process The land has been allocated.
Allama Iqbal Industrial City, Faisalabad 3217 Acres Launched Numerous national and international enterprises have been allotted plots in the SEZ. Few companies have already started construction work.
Bostan Industrial Zone 1000 Acres Launched Phase-1 has been launched for allotment of industrial plots.

Cancelled projects

Projects Capacity Location Notes
Gadani Power Project 6,600 MW (10 x 660 MW plants) Balochistan
Rahimyar Khan coal power project 1,320 MW (2 x 660 MW plants) Punjab [434]
Muzaffargarh coal power project 1,320 MW (2 x 660 MW plants) Punjab [434]
Matiari to Faisalabad transmission line 660 kilovolt Sindh and Punjab
Imported Coal Based Power Project at Gwadar 330 MW Gwadar [435]

Challenges

Political, Legal and Social Risks

Political regimes in Pakistan are not stable and the civil government establishments have often seen military interference. Such scenarios result in frequent change in leadership thereby jeopardizing the agreements signed by previous leaders. This increases the uncertainty in the commercial environment, unreliable outcomes of investments and endangers the ease of doing business. This risk gets magnified when foreign investments and workers are involved. A flawed legal system in the country encourages sub-standard construction procedures, illegitimate bid activities, corrupt and unprofessional interference, breached contracts, unethical discrimination and irregularity in laws. Instances of crime, extortion, kidnapping, arms conflict, terrorist attacks, extremism & civil wars, nationwide strikes, protests, riots, and mass expropriations are hindrances to timely and successful completion of projects.[436]

In 2021, local residents of Gwadar protested against the perceived threat to their livelihoods due to illegal fishing in local waters allegedly by Chinese trawlers.[437] In 2023, the provincial government undertook a crackdown on the illegal trawlers after months of protests, resulting in reappearance of marine life.[438]

Known for its dominance over civil institutions and democratic rule,[439] China had sought to enlist Pakistan's military for the lead role as it guarantees the successful completion of projects at a time when the politicians were infighting for the ownership of the corridor projects.[440] During the tenure of Nawaz Sharif, many projects were launched in Punjab Province which has a significant vote bank for the PML-N leader. Upon assuming power, Imran Khan pressurised the Chinese for development of Rashakai SEZ in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province which is stronghold for the PTI leader.[441] 2017 official statistics shared with the parliament of Pakistan, showed out of 330 CPEC related projects in Pakistan, 176 are in Punjab province while Balochistan had an allocation of 8 CPEC projects.[442] During 2018 national election campaign, Imran Khan rallied against the alleged corruption of previous government and highlighted unfair contracts in CPEC.[443] Sceptics also question on the efficient usage of foreign money to develop the infrastructure given the level of corruption.[444] China even temporarily halted the release of funds for 3 projects in 2017 due to reports of corruption.[445]

In February 2023, the Gwadar Port was predicted to cost five times more which the officials blamed on the Gwadar Port Authority (GPA) and the Ministry of Maritime Affairs for having developed the dredging project in last year at Rs 1bn on guesstimates in emergency circumstances for the delivery and diverting of a couple 50,000DWT cargo ships due to navigational challenges. However, the costs were then increased based on a proper study conducted by Pakistan Navy followed by competitive bidding.[446]

The delay of the maintenance dredging for a few years were already to possibly have serious repercussions in terms of penalties and damages that might have been imposed on GPA by the Concession Holder due to loss in business.[446]

Pakistani economic crisis

The worst economic crisis in Pakistan's history since 2022 calls into question whether CPEC can achieve its development goals.[447]

Criticism

Kaiser Bengali, a senior economist who was associated with Benazir Income Support Programme (BISP), Government of Pakistan and has headed research institutions including Social Policy and Development Centre (SPDC), Karachi, and Sustainable Development Policy Institute (SDPI), Islamabad, has highlighted that no feasibility study was conducted for the CPEC and the negative economic implications from the drawbacks of tax exemption given to Chinese products. Environmental Impact Assessment was also not done to offset the environmental cost of CPEC.[88]

Chinese Intent

Although announced as developed for commercial purposes, chances of port infrastructure projects transforming into a well-equipped military naval base in the future cannot be ruled out.[448][449] The earliest hints of military (PLA) involvement in this ambitious global project started appearing in 2015.[450] In 2018, The New York Times speculated military interests of China in Pakistan "instead of an economic project with peaceful intent". Beijing-based military analysts and high ranking officials have highlighted geostrategic importance of Gwadar Port and indicated the need to develop a naval base in near vicinity similar to the one China built in Djibouti.[451][449][452] However, when asked about Pakistan's offer to turn Gwadar into a PLA naval base,[453] the spokeswoman for the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs denied its existence, stating: “I have not heard of it. It’s my understanding that this issue was not touched upon.”

Observers have also pointed out that by involving nations in its megaprojects, China has silenced it's allies, including Pakistan, on the Uyghur situation. This is notable as all those who are vocal (like Imran Khan) on the religious aspects of conflicts in Palestine, Kashmir or that of Rohingya people does not highlight or raise the issue of human right violations against the Uyghurs.[454] In 2022, many countries including Pakistan voted against and rejected another motion by Western countries seeking debate on China's treatment of Uyghur Muslims and Human Rights violations.[455]

The fibreoptic project would aid in terrestrial distribution of broadcast Television in Pakistan which will cooperate with Chinese media in the “dissemination of Chinese culture”. The CPEC plan anticipates an intense and wide-ranging penetration in most sectors of Pakistan’s economy as well as its society by Chinese enterprises and culture. Access to the full supply chain of the agrarian economy is a top priority for the Chinese.[30]

In 2022, Twitter suspended fake accounts being operated from Pakistan, identified in a report by the Indian non-profit organization Digital Forensics, Research and Analytics Centre (D-FRAC) that were involved in disinformation campaigns regarding CPEC. The report claimed they was spreading "false Chinese narratives regarding CPEC".[456]

Debt Trap

CPEC is seen as the main plank of China's Belt and Road Initiative.[457] Should the initial $46 billion worth of projects be implemented, the value of those projects would be roughly equivalent to all foreign direct investment in Pakistan since 1970,[458] and would be equal to 17% of Pakistan's 2015 gross domestic product.[459] The external debt of Pakistan has surged significantly after accepting this Chinese offer.[35]

Chinese monetary offer for Pakistan under CPEC being a combination of Debt & Equity, it is evaluated that the Debt component will be serviced at 7%-8% interest per annum while Equity component is expected to deliver an estimated ROE of 17% per annum. The Pakistan government, however, claims that the Chinese loans will be repaid over a period of 20–25 years at rate of 2% interest.[460] Christine Fair, a South Asia expert at Georgetown University has termed CPEC as "Colonizing Pakistan to Enrich China".

From early 1990s, IMF has provided more than a dozen bailouts on requests by Pakistan to save its dwindling economy, which has struggled 22 of the 30 years in meeting the austerity measures demanded by IMF. Nadeem-ul-Haque, a former IMF official and former deputy chairman of the Pakistani government’s Planning Commission wrote, "The pattern is always the same, with the Fund’s blessing, the government goes on a shopping spree, taking out costly loans for expensive projects, thus building up even more debt and adding new inefficiencies. After a few years, another crisis ensues, and it is met by another IMF program."[461] The Pakistani establishment sees Chinese loans as an alternative to IMF loans.[462]

Many of the nations with which China has partnered have a history of political instability, military intervention in governance, problems of law and order, rampant corruption, lack of transparency and no entrepreneurial culture. Hence the critics call these projects “a neo-colonial scheme” and “a debt trap” for many nations.[454][38]

Parallels with Sri Lanka

Observers have drawn comparisons with 2022 economic turmoil of Sri Lanka as a consequence of inability to repay[463] $6 billion in loans used to construct an expensive Chinese-led port and airport project in Hambantota. Sri Lankan authorities settled the debt by giving up control of the port and some 15,000 acres of land around it to China on a 99-year lease. Citing examples of several countries from Malaysia to Colombia involved in Belt and Road Initiative, the opacity[462] involved in the Chinese ventures have evoked accusations that such projects lead to corruption and mismanagement that ultimately risk losing the natural resources and sovereignty of the participating nations.[464][461] It is in resemblance with Gwadar Port given to Chinese control for a lease period of 40 years.[437] Pakistan has already started negotiating the debt-relief from China owing to difficulties to repay the loan and is seeking ease in the payment obligations towards debt and its interest for the projects under CPEC.[40] As of 2022, Pakistan owes China about $30 billion which accounts for nearly 30% of its foreign debt.[465]

Financial Implications

According to official statistics, 20% of CPEC is debt-based finance,[466] while 80% of CPEC are investments in Joint Ventures (JV) enterprise between Pakistan and China,[467] with the initial estimate of project contributing to 40,000 jobs for local Pakistanis and 80,000 jobs for Chinese. However, at a later stage of project execution, it was reported that in some cases, China has apparently brought in its prisoners as workforce thereby depriving the opportunities for local Pakistani population.[468] Official statistics suggested a return of US$6 billion to 8 billion from taxes per annum such as road and bridge tolls. The total CPEC loan is 6% of Pakistan's GDP, however many commentators and a few Governments claimed the project a debt-trap.[469] Nevertheless, officials countered that 3.5% of Pakistani GDP per annum is lost due to poor transportation networks, which the CPEC investment aims to remedy leading to added benefits for any lag in Pakistan's growth statistic. Economic analysts have stated tangible benefits of this initiative including an end to the major energy shortages in Pakistan which had previously crippled economic growth.[470] On 14 January 2020, Pakistan operationalized Gwadar Port for Afghan transit trade.[471] On 31 May 2021, Gwadar Port become fully operational, along with the availability of online booking for the delivery of goods.[472]

In addition to the aforementioned issues, some sources have suggested that the interest rate for CPEC related loans would be high, with India's Daily News and Analysis paper suggesting that Pakistan had unwittingly accepted loans that would "be offered at very high rates of interest",[473] although the actual interest rates were negotiated prior to acceptance, and for most projects will be 1.6%;[92] conversely previous Pakistani infrastructure projects financed by the World Bank carried an interest rate between 5% and 8.5% in comparison, and have strings attached.[474][265]

Several articles in Pakistan have criticised the project's finances as being shrouded in mystery, while one article suggested that "there is far too much secrecy and far too little transparency".[475] The Private Power and Infrastructure Board has also been accused of irregularities in the approval process for coal power plants and the tariffs at which Pakistan is contractually obliged to purchase electricity from those plants,[476] with special concern regarding potential irregularities in the tariff approved for the 300 MW coal power plant to be built in Pind Dadan Khan by China Machinery Engineering Corporation.[477]

In December 2017, it was reported that as per the Gwadar Port agreement, the Chinese companies would get 91 per cent but the Gwadar Port Authority would get only 9 per cent of revenue. In the same month a seven-member delegation of Senators visited China. On returning from China, all the Senators issued press statements and unequivocally claimed that Balochistan would not get anything from the CPEC. One of the senators, Senator Kabir Muhammad Shahi also claimed that while 60% of the funds are being used for power generation, other than 300 MW for Gwadar Port, not even 1 MW of that would be given to Balochistan.[478][479]

Trade Imbalance

Local traders in Pakistan have expressed their reservations over CPEC.[480] Chinese exports through the Karakoram Highway have entered the domestic Pakistani market, and are cheaper due to the relatively higher cost of production in Pakistan.[481] It has also been speculated that the CPEC will replace Pakistani exports by Chinese ones in external markets.[481] Increasing import of automobiles, weapons, home appliances and agricultural products from China to Pakistan is major concern for the disproportion trade deficit.[24]

Baloch Nationalists

Resistance of impoverished locals in the Balochistan region's Gwadar is a major hurdle in this project.[374] The region is a wealth of minerals but this does not reflect in the impoverished lives of residents[482] who struggle for basic minimum necessities, such as clean drinking water, reliable power supply, education and health facilities. Government neglect on poverty and unemployment has given rise to religious extremism. Non-consultation before taking up the plan and the denial of employment to local population by bringing people from other provinces to work for the project has increased the hostility.[482]

Some Baloch nationalists have opposed the large-scale development projects envisioned by CPEC, fearing that such developments in the province would eventually result in local residents "losing control" over natural resources.[483] Others have alleged that CPEC is a "conspiracy" meant to stimulate the settlement of migrants from other regions of Pakistan in order to render ethnic Baloch a minority in the province.[484]

In accordance to the Pakistani Government's announcement of its intent to issue resident cards to the city's inhabitants as a security measure to prevent the movement of firearms into the city,[485] former Chief Minister of Balochistan province, Akhtar Mengal, suggested at a political rally in November 2015, that execution of CPEC projects and the resident card policy would eventually result in ethnic Baloch being denied entry into the city.[486] The resident cards measure would require any non-resident visitor to the city to register at designated security checkpoints prior to entering the city by road,[485] without any reference to ethnicity. The former Chief Minister did, however, clarify that he would not oppose development projects in the province that he believed would uplift the plight of local residents.[486] Shortly thereafter, the Pakistani government announced its intention to establish a training institute named Pak-China Technical and Vocational Institute at Gwadar which is to be completed at the cost of 943 million rupees to impart skills to local residents to train them to operate machinery at the port.[45]

Indian analyst Athar Hussain, the director of the Asia Research Centre at London School of Economics, has expressed concerns that the CPEC is "likely to bring more development to regions that are already developed, instead of poor areas such as Balochistan."[487] Burzine Waghmar, a member of the Centre for the Study of Pakistan, SOAS, University of London, suggested that CPEC projects are not targeted towards benefiting the indigenous Baloch population, and will accelerate human rights violations in the province.[487]

In December 2016, the Federation of Pakistan Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FPCCI) released a report that given the rate at which Chinese nationals were migrating to Balochistan for the CPEC project, the Chinese would outnumber the Baloch people by 2048, raising concerns of marginalisation of the Baloch citizens.[488][489]

Gwadar residents' concerns

Access to traditional fishing zones and subsistence fishing practices, involvement and hiring of local people in the developmental projects, curbing interference of security forces in daily city affairs and easing the navigation from checkpoints and surveillance installations, right healthcare and quality education are among the demands of Gwadar residents.[490]

While nationalists openly oppose CPEC, some local leaders and residents of Gwadar city have also expressed concern in regards to the project – the head of Gwadar's local fisherman association stated in an interview with NBC News that "Development is good, China is our great friend, this CPEC thing sounds amazing, but don't forget that this is our land, first."[491] Other residents doubt they will see any of the benefits promised by CPEC, while others fear they will be evicted from their homes in order to make way for infrastructure works.[492]

In response to concerns of local residents, Lt. General Amer Riaz who currently heads security operations in the province, stated that locals would not be deprived of benefits, and that local Gwadar residents would have "the first right to everything."[493] Pakistan's Minister of Planning, National Reforms, and Development, Ahsan Iqbal, further stated in May 2016 that Gwadar residents would be regarded as "main stakeholders" in the city's master plan, and that fishermen specifically would also be accommodated by the plan.[494] The developer of Gwadar Port, COPHC, has also announced that it will assist Gwadar's fishermen to help boost the region's seafood industry by developing programmes to improve the quality of local seafoods.[495]

KP Provincial Assembly

Some planning aspects and technicalities associated with the route have been criticised in political forums and by the media.[496] The Provincial Assembly of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province adopted a resolution against the alleged decision of the central government to change the multibillion route of the proposed project by diverting it away from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.[497]

The federal Minister of Planning Development and Reform Ahsan Iqbal formally denied any change in the alignment.[50][498][499] According to Dr Ahmad Rashid Malik, senior research fellow at the Institute of Strategic Studies Islamabad (ISSI), the route controversy is "baseless and an unfounded reality...".[500] As a result of objections to CPEC, the Chinese government in 2015 issued a statement urging Pakistani political parties to resolve their differences over the project.[501]

Indian objections

India's objections to Chinese activity in Pakistan-administred Kashmir dates back to the 1970s, when the People's Liberation Army built the Karakoram Highway that linked China's far-western province of Xinjiang with northern Pakistan.[502]

The Government of India, which shares tense relations with Pakistan, objects to the CPEC project as upgrade works to the Karakoram Highway are taking place in Gilgit-Baltistan; territory that India claims as its own. During the visit of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to China in 2015, the Indian Foreign Minister, Sushma Swaraj reportedly told Chinese Communist Party general secretary Xi Jinping that projects passing through Gilgit-Baltistan are "unacceptable" as they require construction in the claimed territory.[503][504] India's Foreign Secretary Subrahmanyam Jaishankar also confirmed that the issue had been raised with the Chinese government on the trip.[505] Swaraj reiterated this stance during a meeting in August 2016 with Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi, stating India would "resolutely oppose" the corridor in Kashmir.[506]

India further did not initially object to major Chinese-sponsored upgrade works to the Karakoram Highway after a 2010 earthquake, though it did object the presence of Chinese troops in the region that were sent to guard Chinese workers.[507]

India further did not object to construction of the Mangla Dam, undertaken with World Bank funding and British technical assistance in southern Kashmir − a region which India claims as its own territory. India even maintained that the Wullar Barrage project in Indian-administered Kashmir, which Pakistan regards as a violation of the Indus Water Treaty, would ultimately be beneficial for the Mangla Dam.[508] India further did not object to construction works at the Kashmir's Neelum–Jhelum Hydropower Plant, under construction with Chinese assistance since 2008. India in 1991 did not raise objections to its construction.[509]

Following the 2005 Kashmir earthquake, large-scale reconstruction work of infrastructure took place across northern Kashmir with the assistance of South Korean, Turkish, and Saudi firms.[510] Chinese companies took part in 14 post-earthquake reconstruction projects in the disputed region, worth $6 billion.[511] India did not object to these works, despite the fact that infrastructure near the militarily sensitive Line of Control were upgraded.

Indian objection to Chinese construction works in the Gilgit-Baltistan arose in 2011 in response to a Chinese complaint regarding a joint Indian-Vietnamese oil exploration project in the disputed South China Sea.[512] The influential Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses, a think tank funded by the Indian Ministry of Defence,[513] in 2011 called for India to begin raising objection to Chinese projects in the region at the "international level."[514]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Which Pakistan alleges are supported by Indian intelligence services.[376] Between 2014 and 2015, acts of terrorism decreased by 50% in the province, while sharp decreases were also noted in deaths, kidnappings, and sectarian killings.[379]

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  241. ^ a b
china, pakistan, economic, corridor, cpec, chinese, 中巴经济走廊, pinyin, zhōng, jīngjì, zǒuláng, urdu, چین, پاکستان, اقتصادی, راہداری, 3000, chinese, infrastructure, network, project, undertaken, pakistan, this, land, based, corridor, aimed, secure, reduce, passage. China Pakistan Economic Corridor CPEC Chinese 中巴经济走廊 pinyin Zhōng ba jingji zǒulang Urdu چین پاکستان اقتصادی راہداری is a 3000 km Chinese infrastructure network project undertaken in Pakistan 8 This sea and land based corridor is aimed to secure and reduce the passage for China s energy imports 8 from the Middle East by avoiding existing route from the Straits of Malacca between Malaysia and Indonesia which in case of a war could be blocked and thus hampering the Chinese energy dependent economic avenues 1 9 10 Developing a deep water port at Gwadar in Arabian Sea and a well built road and rail line from this port to Xinjiang Province in western China would be a shortcut for boosting the trade between Europe and China 1 9 In Pakistan its aim is to overcome an electricity shortfall infrastructural development and modernize transportation networks Along with shifting it from an agricultural based economic structure to industrial based 11 China Pakistan Economic CorridorMission statementSecuring Energy Import and Trade Boost for China 1 Infrastructure Development for Pakistan 1 Type of projectEconomic corridorLocationPakistan Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Gilgit Baltistan Punjab Balochistan Sindh amp Azad Kashmir China XinjiangCountryChinaPakistanEstablished20 April 2015 8 years ago 2015 04 20 2 BudgetChina Development BankAsian Infrastructure Investment BankSilk Road FundExim Bank of ChinaIndustrial and Commercial Bank of ChinaStatusA few projects operational Special Economic Zones Under construction 2020 4 5 Many projects running behind the schedule 2022 6 Few projects cancelled 7 Websitecpec wbr gov wbr pkCPEC s potential impact on Pakistan has been compared to that of the Marshall Plan undertaken by the United States in post war Europe 12 13 14 15 Pakistani officials predict that CPEC will result in the creation of upwards of 2 3 million jobs between 2015 and 2030 and add 2 to 2 5 percentage points to the country s annual economic growth 16 As of 2022 it has enhanced Pakistan s exports and development capacity and is providing 1 4th of total electricity 17 It is also seen as addressing a national security issue for China by economic development of the Xinjiang region thus reducing militant influence on Muslim separatists of native Uyghurs 1 9 10 18 After the proposal from Chinese President Li Keqiang in 2013 8 the preliminary study on this project was done in 2014 which acknowledged the hostile environment and complicated geographic conditions but prioritized the importance of having a China run port near the Gulf of Oman which serves as an important route for oil tankers 19 Post this corridor is functional existing 12 000 km journey of oil transportation to China will be reduced to just 2 395 km 20 This is estimated to save China 2 billion per year 21 China had already acquired control of Gwadar Port on 16 May 2013 19 Originally valued at 46 billion the value of CPEC projects was worth 62 billion as of 2020 22 In 2022 the Chinese investment in Pakistan rose to 65 billion 23 China refers to this project as revival of the Silk Road 24 CPEC envisages to rapidly upgrade Pakistan s required infrastructure and thereby strengthening its economy to an extent by constructing modern transportation networks numerous energy projects and special economic zones 25 26 27 28 The potential industries being set up in the CPEC special economic zones include food processing cooking oil ceramics gems and jewelry marble minerals agriculture machinery iron and steel motorbike assembling electrical appliances and automobile 29 Even though China and Pakistan signed the official MoUs in 2015 the first details of long term plan under CPEC were publicly disclosed in 2017 when a Pakistani media outlet revealed its access to the Original Documents 30 According to the World Bank researchers Chinese lenders require strict confidentiality from their debtors and do not release a granular breakdown of their lending 31 32 In 2015 the Governor of Central Bank in Pakistan Ashraf Mahmood Wathra said I don t know out of 46 billion how much is debt how much is equity and how much is in kind 33 and did not know what the debt implications of CPEC actually were 34 From early 1990s IMF has provided more than a dozen bailouts on requests by Pakistan to save its dwindling economy which has struggled 22 of the 30 years in meeting the austerity measures demanded by IMF Nadeem ul Haque a former IMF official and former deputy chairman of the Pakistani government s Planning Commission wrote The pattern is always the same with the Fund s blessing the government goes on a shopping spree taking out costly loans for expensive projects thus building up even more debt and adding new inefficiencies After a few years another crisis ensues and it is met by another IMF program 35 The Pakistani establishment sees Chinese loans as an alternative to IMF loans 31 Should the initial 46 billion worth of projects be implemented the value of those projects would be roughly equivalent to all foreign direct investment in Pakistan since 1970 36 and would be equal to 17 of Pakistan s 2015 gross domestic product 37 CPEC is seen as the main plank of China s Belt and Road Initiative 38 Chinese monetary offer for Pakistan under CPEC being a combination of Debt amp Equity it is evaluated that the Debt component will be serviced at 7 8 interest per annum while Equity component is expected to deliver an estimated ROE of 17 per annum The Pakistan government however claims that the Chinese loans will be repaid over a period of 20 25 years at rate of 2 interest 39 Pakistan has already started negotiating the debt relief from China owing to difficulties to repay the loan and is seeking ease in the payment obligations towards debt and its interest for the projects under CPEC 40 As of 2022 Pakistan owes China about 30 billion which accounts for nearly 30 of its foreign debt 41 Since 2021 due to the growing pressure on China for being the world s biggest polluter it has shifted its focus from coal based energy investments in Pakistan to renewables This is done to promote a more greener image of CPEC 42 In June 2022 the Karot Hydropower started commercial operations to provide cheap and clean electricity and aims to reduce 3 5 million metric tons of carbon emissions annually 43 Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1 2 Announcement of CPEC 1 3 Subsequent developments 2 Projects in Gwadar Port and City 2 1 Gwadar Port Complex 2 2 Projects in Gwadar city 3 Roadway projects 3 1 Karakoram Highway 3 2 Eastern Alignment 3 3 Western Alignment 3 3 1 Central Alignment 3 4 Associated roadway projects 4 Railway projects 4 1 Main Line 1 4 2 Main Line 2 4 3 Main Line 3 4 4 Khunjerab Railway 4 5 Lahore Metro 5 Energy sector projects 5 1 Renewable energy 5 2 Coal 5 3 Liquified natural gas 5 4 Early Harvest projects 5 4 1 Table of projects 6 Other areas of cooperation 6 1 Agriculture and aquaculture 6 2 Science and technology 6 3 Other fields 7 Finance 7 1 Concessionary loans 7 2 Interest free loans 7 3 Private consortia 7 4 ADB assistance 8 Impact 8 1 Environment 8 2 Pakistani economy 8 3 CPEC and the Malacca Dilemma 8 4 Access to western China 8 5 Route to circumvent Afghanistan 8 6 Alternate route to Central Asia 8 7 Comparison to Chabahar Port 8 7 1 Security Issues 9 Security 9 1 Security Forces 9 2 Baloch militants 9 3 Uyghur militants 9 4 Alleged Indian subversion 10 List of major projects 11 Cancelled projects 12 Challenges 12 1 Political Legal and Social Risks 12 2 Pakistani economic crisis 13 Criticism 13 1 Chinese Intent 13 2 Debt Trap 13 2 1 Parallels with Sri Lanka 13 3 Financial Implications 13 4 Trade Imbalance 13 5 Baloch Nationalists 13 6 Gwadar residents concerns 13 7 KP Provincial Assembly 13 8 Indian objections 14 See also 15 Notes 16 References 17 External linksHistory EditBackground Edit Plans for a corridor stretching from the Chinese border to Pakistan s deepwater ports on the Arabian Sea date back to the 1950s and motivated construction of the Karakoram Highway beginning in 1959 44 Chinese interest in Pakistan s deep water harbor at Gwadar had been rekindled by in 2002 China began construction at Gwadar port which was completed in 2006 Expansion of Gwadar Port then ceased thereafter owing to political instability in Pakistan following the fall of General Pervez Musharraf and subsequent conflict between the Pakistani state and Taliban militants 45 In 2013 the then Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari and Chinese Premier Li Keqiang decided to further enhance mutual connectivity 46 A memorandum of understanding on cooperation for long term plan on China Pakistan Economic Corridor between the two governments was inked by Xu Shao Shi and Shahid Amjad Chaudhry 47 In February 2014 Pakistani President Mamnoon Hussain visited China to discuss the plans for an economic corridor in Pakistan 48 Two months later Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif met with Premier Li Kequiang in China to discuss further plans 49 resulting in the full scope of the project to be devised under Sharif s tenure 50 In November 2014 Chinese government announced its intention to finance Chinese companies as part of its 45 6 billion energy and infrastructure projects in Pakistan as part of CPEC Announcement of CPEC Edit Main article 2015 Xi Jinping visit to Pakistan Chinese President Xi Jinping on his fate changing visit to Pakistan for signing the CPEC agreement stated I feel as if I am going to visit the home of my own brother 51 and claimed that friendship between the two nations was higher than mountains deeper than oceans and sweeter than honey 1 China repeatedly uses terms like iron brothers and all weather friends while describing its relation with Pakistan 52 On 20 April 2015 Pakistan and China signed an agreement to commence work on the 46 billion agreement which is roughly 20 of Pakistan s annual GDP 53 with approximately 28 billion worth of fast tracked Early Harvest projects to be developed by the end of 2018 54 55 A vast network of highways and railways are to be built under the aegis of CPEC that will span the length and breadth of Pakistan Inefficiencies stemming from Pakistan s mostly dilapidated transportation network are estimated by the government to cause a loss of 3 55 of the country s annual GDP 56 Modern transportation networks built under CPEC will link seaports in Gwadar and Karachi with northern Pakistan as well as points further north in western China and Central Asia 57 A 1 100 kilometre long motorway will be built between the cities of Karachi and Lahore as part of CPEC 58 while the Karakoram Highway from Hasan Abdal to the Chinese border will be completely reconstructed and overhauled 36 The currently stalled Karachi Peshawar main railway line will also be upgraded to allow for train travel at up to 160 km per hour by December 2019 59 60 Pakistan s railway network will also be extended to eventually connect to China s Southern Xinjiang Railway in Kashgar 61 The estimated 11 billion required to modernise transportation networks will be financed by subsidized concessionary loans 62 Over 33 billion worth of energy infrastructure are to be constructed by private consortia to help alleviate Pakistan s chronic energy shortages 63 which regularly amount to over 4 500MW 64 and have shed an estimated 2 2 5 off Pakistan s annual gross domestic product 65 Over 10 400 MW of generating capacity is to be brought online by the end of 2018 with the majority developed as part of CPEC s fast tracked Early Harvest projects 66 A network of pipelines to transport liquefied natural gas and oil will also be laid as part of the project including a 2 5 billion pipeline between Gwadar and Nawabshah to eventually transport gas from Iran 67 Electricity from these projects will primarily be generated from fossil fuels though hydroelectric and wind power projects are also included as is the construction of one of the world s largest solar farms 68 Should the initial 46 billion worth of projects be implemented the value of those projects would be roughly equivalent to all foreign direct investment in Pakistan since 1970 36 and would be equal to 17 of Pakistan s 2015 gross domestic product 37 CPEC is seen as the main plank of China s Belt and Road Initiative 38 At the beginning of this project Pakistan has assigned about 10 000 troops to protect the Chinese investments 10 However this number increased to 15 000 actively deployed troops by 2016 Subsequent developments Edit On 12 August 2015 in the city of Karamay China and Pakistan signed 20 more agreements worth 1 6 billion to further augment the scale and scope of CPEC 69 Details of the plan are opaque 70 but are said to mainly focus on increasing energy generation capacity 71 better source needed As part of the agreement Pakistan and China have agreed to co operate in the field of space research 72 In September and October 2015 the government of the United Kingdom announced two separate grants to the Government of Pakistan for construction of roadways that are complementary to CPEC 73 74 In November 2015 China included the CPEC into its 13th five year development plan 75 while in December 2015 China and Pakistan agreed on a further 1 5 billion investment to set up an information and technology park as part of the CPEC project 76 On 8 April 2016 during the visit of Xinjiang s Communist Party chief Zhang Chunxian companies from Xinjiang with their Pakistan counterparts signed 2 billion of additional agreements covering infrastructure solar power and logistics 77 The first convoy from China arrived in Gwadar on 13 November 2016 thereby formalizing operation of CPEC 78 On 2 December 2016 the first cargo train launching the direct rail route and sea freight service between China and Pakistan departed from Yunnan A cargo train loaded with 500 tonnes of commodities left Kunming for the port city of Guangzhou from where the cargo will be loaded on ships and transported to Karachi marking the opening of the new route 79 The new rail sea freight will cut logistics cost including that of transport by 50 per cent 80 In November 2016 China announced an additional 8 5 billion investment in Pakistan with 4 5 billion allocated to upgrade Pakistan s main railway line from Karachi to Peshawar including tracks speed and signaling and 4 billion toward an LNG terminal and transmission lines to help alleviate energy shortages 81 In February 2017 the Egyptian Ambassador to Pakistan expressed interest in CPEC cooperation 82 In January 2017 Chief Minister Pervez Khattak of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa stated that he had received assurances from Chinese investment companies that they would invest up to 20 billion for projects 83 In March 2017 an agreement was signed for the projects which include a 1 5 billion oil refinery irrigation projects worth 2 billion a 2 billion motorway between Chitral and DI Khan and 7 billion worth of hydro electric projects 84 As of September 2017 more than 14 billion worth of projects were under construction 38 In March 2018 Pakistan announced that following the completion of under construction energy projects future CPEC energy projects would be geared towards hydropower projects 85 In 2022 Federal Minister for Planning Development and Special Initiatives Prof Ahsan Iqbal criticized CPEC authority for its inability to attract investments and called for its dissolution 86 On 17 August 2022 Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif approved in principle to abolish the China Pakistan Economic Corridor CPEC Authority subject to consent by China 87 Projects in Gwadar Port and City Edit A view of the Gwadar Promontory and isthmus Gwadar came in the focus of attention post the Kargil War when Pakistan felt the need of having a military naval port and the Karachi Gwadar Road Coastal Highway was built for defence purpose 88 Gwadar forms the crux of the CPEC project as it is envisaged to be the link between China s ambitious One Belt One Road project and its 21st Century Maritime Silk Road project 89 In total more than 1 billion worth of projects are to be developed around the port of Gwadar by December 2017 As of 2022 only three China Pakistan Economic Corridor projects 4 million Gwadar Smart Port City Master Plan 300 million Physical Infrastructure of Gwadar Port and the Free Zone Phase 1 and a 10 million Pak China Technical and Vocational Institute in Gwadar were declared successfully completed whereas one dozen projects worth nearly 2 billion remain undeveloped including water supply electricity provision expressway international airport fishing harbour and hospital among others 90 China has provided a total of 7 000 sets of solar panels for households in Gwadar over the past two years Another 10 000 sets of solar panels are under active preparation and will be allocated to poor people in Balochistan The Chinese Embassy in Pakistan is also to donate household solar units and other assistance to the people of Balochistan 17 Gwadar Port Complex Edit Main article Gwadar Port Initial infrastructure works at Gwadar Port commenced in 2002 and were completed in 2007 45 however plans to upgrade and expand Gwadar s port stalled Under CPEC agreement Gwadar Port will initially be expanded and upgraded to allow for docking of larger ships with deadweight tonnage of up to 70 000 91 Improvement plans also include construction of a 130 million breakwater around the port 92 as well as the construction of a floating liquefied natural gas facility that will have a capacity of 500 million cubic feet of liquefied natural gas per day and will be connected to the Gwadar Nawabshah segment of the Iran Pakistan gas pipeline 93 The expanded port is located near a 2 282 acre free trade area in Gwadar which is being modeled on the lines of the Special Economic Zones of China 94 The swathe of land was handed to the China Overseas Port Holding Company in November 2015 as part of a 43 year lease 95 The site will include manufacturing zones logistics hubs warehouses and display centres 96 Businesses located in the zone would be exempt from customs authorities as well as many provincial and federal taxes 91 Business established in the special economic zone will be exempt from Pakistani income sales and federal excise taxes for 23 years 97 Contractors and subcontractors associated with China Overseas Port Holding Company will be exempted from such taxes for 20 years 98 while a 40 year tax holiday will be granted for imports of equipment materials plant machinery appliances and accessories that are to be for construction of Gwadar Port and special economic zone 99 The special economic zone will be completed in three phases By 2025 it is envisaged that manufacturing and processing industries will be developed while further expansion of the zone is intended to be complete by 2030 45 On 10 April 2016 Zhang Baozhong chairman of China Overseas Port Holding Company said in a conversation with The Washington Post that his company planned to spend 4 5 billion on roads power hotels and other infrastructure for the industrial zone as well as other projects in Gwadar city 16 Projects in Gwadar city Edit Main article Gwadar China will grant Pakistan 230 million to construct a new international airport in Gwadar 100 The provincial government of Balochistan has set aside 4000 acres for the construction of the new 230 million Gwadar International Airport which will require an estimated 30 months for construction 101 the costs of which are to be fully funded by grants from the Chinese government which Pakistan will not be obliged to repay 102 The city of Gwadar is further being developed by the construction of a 300 MW coal power plant a desalinization plant and a new 300 bed hospital to be completed in 2023 103 Plans for Gwadar city also include construction of the Gwadar East Bay Expressway a 19 kilometre controlled access road that will connect Gwadar Port to the Makran Coastal Highway 104 These additional projects are estimated to cost 800 million and are to be financed by 0 interest loans extended by the Exim Bank of China to Pakistan 103 In addition to the aforementioned infrastructure works the Pakistani government announced in September 2015 its intention to establish a training institute named Pak China Technical and Vocational Institute at Gwadar 45 which is to be developed by the Gwadar Port Authority at the cost of 943 million rupees 45 and is designed to impart to residents the skills required to operate and work at the expanded Gwadar Port 45 As of 2017 in total there are 9 projects funded by China in and around Gwadar 105 Development of Gwadar includes the building of a hospital under a Chinese government grant Under the proposed project medical blocks nursing and paramedical institutes medical college central laboratory and other allied facilities are to be constructed with the supply of medical equipment and machinery 106 In 2020 Government which released funds of Rs 320 million for a seawater desalination plant at Gwadar with a capacity of five million gallons a day The funds were also to be used in the expansion of the optical fiber network in Gwadar 107 and construction of a fish landing jetty 108 Roadway projects Edit The CPEC roadway network The CPEC project envisages major upgrades and overhauls to Pakistan s transportation infrastructure Under the CPEC project China has announced financing for 10 63 billion worth of transportation infrastructure so far 6 1 billion have been allocated for constructing Early Harvest roadway projects at an interest rate of 1 6 percent 109 The remainder of funds will be allocated when the Pakistani government awards contracts for the construction of road segments which are still in the planning phase Three corridors have been identified for cargo transport the Eastern Alignment through the heavily populated provinces of Sindh and Punjab where most industries are located the Western Alignment through the less developed and more sparsely populated provinces of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan and the future Central Alignment which will pass through Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Punjab and Balochistan 110 Karakoram Highway Edit Main article Reconstruction of the Karakoram Highway Highlighted in red is the route of National Highway 35 which is to be completely rebuilt and upgraded under the CPEC agreement Highlighted in blue is the 175 kilometer road between Gilgit and Skardu which is to be upgraded to a 4 lane highway China and Pakistan already conduct trade via the Karakoram Highway The CPEC projects call for reconstruction and upgrade works on National Highway 35 N 35 which forms the Pakistani portion of the Karakoram Highway KKH The KKH spans the 887 kilometer long distance between the China Pakistan border and the town of Burhan near Hasan Abdal At Burhan the existing M1 motorway will intersect the N 35 at the Shah Maqsood Interchange From there access onwards to Islamabad and Lahore continues as part of the existing M1 and M2 motorways Burhan will also be at the intersection of the Eastern Alignment and Western Alignment Upgrades to the 487 kilometer long section between Burhan and Raikot of the Karakoram Highway are officially referred to in Pakistan as the Karakoram Highway Phase 2 project At the southern end of the N 35 works are already underway to construct a 59 kilometer long 4 lane controlled access highway between Burhan and Havelian which upon completion will be officially referred to as the E 35 expressway 111 North of Havelian the next 66 kilometres of road will be upgraded to a 4 lane dual carriageway between Havelian and Shinkiari 112 Groundbreaking on this portion commenced in April 2016 113 The entire 354 kilometres of roadway north of Shinkiari and ending in Raikot near Chilas will be constructed as a 2 lane highway 113 Construction on the first section between Shinkiari and Thakot commenced in April 2016 jointly with construction of the Havelian to Shinkiari 4 lane dual carriageway further south 114 Construction on both these sections is expected to be completed with 42 months at a cost of approximately 1 26 billion with 90 of funding to come from China s EXIM bank in the form of low interest rate concessional loans 114 115 116 Between Thakot and Raikot spans an area in which the government of Pakistan is currently either planning or actively constructing several hydropower projects most notably the Diamer Bhasha Dam and Dasu Dam Sections of the N 35 around these projects will be completely rebuilt in tandem with dam construction 117 In the interim this section of the N 35 is currently being upgraded from its current state until dam construction commences in full force at a later date Improvement projects on this section are expected to be completed by January 2017 at a cost of approximately 72 million 118 119 The next 335 kilometres of roadway connect Raikot to the China Pakistan border Reconstruction works on this section of roadway preceded the CPEC and were initiated after severe damage to roadways in the area following the 2010 Pakistan floods Most of this section of roadway was completed in September 2012 at a cost of 510 million 120 A large earthquake rocked the region nearest to the China Pakistan border in 2010 triggering massive landslides that dammed the Indus River resulting in the formation of the Attabad Lake Portions of the Karakoram Highway were submerged in the lake forcing all vehicular traffic onto barges to traverse the new reservoir Construction on a 24 kilometer series of bridges and tunnels to Attabad Lake began in 2012 and required 36 months for completion The bypass consists of 2 large bridges and 5 kilometres worth of tunnels that were inaugurated for public use on 14 September 2015 at a cost of 275 million 121 122 The 175 kilometre road between Gilgit and Skardu will be upgraded to a 4 lane road at a cost of 475 million to provide direct access to Skardu from the N 35 123 124 Eastern Alignment Edit Main articles M5 motorway Pakistan and M9 motorway Pakistan The term Eastern Alignment of CPEC refers to roadway projects located in Sindh and Punjab provinces some of which were first envisioned in 1991 125 As part of the Eastern Alignment a 1 152 km long motorway will connect Pakistan s two largest cities Karachi and Lahore with 6 lane controlled access highway designed for travel speeds up to 120 kilometres per hour 126 The entire project will cost approximately 6 6 billion with the bulk of financing to be distributed by various Chinese state owned banks 127 The entire Eastern Alignment motorway project is divided into four sections a 136 kilometer long section between Karachi and Hyderabad also known as the M9 motorway a 345 kilometer long section between Hyderabad and Sukkur a 392 kilometer long section between Sukkur and Multan 128 and a 333 kilometer section between Multan and Lahore via the town of Abdul Hakeem 129 The first section of the project is providing high speed road access from the Port of Karachi to the city of Hyderabad and interior Sindh Upgrade and construction works on this section currently known as Super Highway between Karachi and Hyderabad began in March 2015 and will convert the road into the 4 lane controlled access M9 Motorway which was completed in an estimated 30 months 130 In February 2017 a completed 75 kilometer stretch of the motorway was opened for public use by Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif 131 At the terminus of the M9 motorway in Hyderabad the Karachi Lahore Motorway will continue onwards to Sukkur as a six lane controlled access motorway known also as M6 motorway that will be 345 kilometers long 128 The planned cost for this project is 1 7 billion 132 and will provide high speed road access to interior Sindh especially near the towns of Matiari Nawabshah and Khairpur The project will require the construction of seven interchanges and 25 bridges on the Indus river and irrigation canals 133 The planned route of the motorway runs roughly parallel to the existing National Highway and Indus Highway at various portions In July 2016 the Pakistani government announced that the project would be open to international bidders on a build operate transfer basis with Chinese and South Korean companies expressing interest in the project 132 The 392 kilometers Sukkur to Multan section of the motorway is estimated to cost 2 89 billion 126 with construction works inaugurated on this section of roadway on 6 May 2016 and completed in September 2019 134 The road will be a six lane wide controlled access highway 135 with 11 planned interchanges 10 rest facilities 492 underpasses and 54 bridges along its route 134 The Pakistani government in January 2016 awarded the contract to build this section to China State Construction Engineering 126 but final approvals required for disbursement of funds were not granted by the Government of the People s Republic of China until May 2016 116 126 90 of the project s cost is to be financed by concessionary loans from China with the remaining 10 to be financed by the government of Pakistan 136 Construction on this segment is expected to last 36 months 126 Construction of the portion between Multan and Lahore costing approximately 1 5 billion 137 was launched in November 2015 138 as a joint venture between the China Railway Construction Corporation Limited and Pakistan s Zahir Khan and Brothers Engineers 139 The total length of this motorway section is 333 kilometres however the first 102 kilometres of the road between Khanewal and Abdul Hakeem is designed as part of the M4 Motorway and is being funded by the Asian Development Bank 140 141 The portion of motorway between Abdul Hakeem and Lahore that is under construction as part of CPEC will consist of the remaining 231 kilometers 142 Western Alignment Edit Main articles Western Alignment and Brahma Bahtar Yarik Motorway The Western Alignment of CPEC is depicted by the red line The 1 153 kilometer route will link the Brahma Bahtar Interchange of the M1 Motorway with the city of Gwadar in Balochistan province The portion depicted by the orange line between Basima and Shahdadkot is sometimes regarded as part of the Western Alignment The CPEC project envisages an expanded and upgraded road network in the Pakistani provinces of Balochistan Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and western Punjab Province as part of the Western Alignment The Western Alignment project will result in the upgrading of several hundred kilometers worth of road into 2 and 4 lane divided highways by mid 2018 with land acquisition sufficient for upgrading parts of the road to a 6 lane motorway in the future 143 In total the CPEC project envisages reconstruction of 870 kilometers of road in Balochistan province alone as part of the Western Alignment Of those 870 kilometers of road 620 kilometers have already been rebuilt as of January 2016 144 The Western Alignment roadway network will begin at the Barahma Bahtar Interchange on the M1 Motorway near the towns of Burhan and Hasan Abdal in northern Punjab province 145 The newly reconstructed Karakoram Highway will connect to the Western Alignment at Burhan near where the new 285 kilometre long controlled access Brahma Bahtar Yarik Motorway will commence 146 The motorway will terminate near the town of Yarik just north of Dera Ismail Khan 147 Groundbreaking for the project took place on 17 May 2016 148 The motorway will traverse the Sindh Sagar Doab region and cross the Indus River at Mianwali before entering into Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province It will consist of 11 interchanges 74 culverts and 3 major bridges spanning the Indus Soan and Kurram Rivers 149 Total costs for the project are expected to be 1 05 billion 150 At the southern terminus of the new Brahma Bahtar Yarik motorway the N50 National Highway will also be upgraded between Dera Ismail Khan in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Zhob in neighbouring Balochistan province with eventual reconstruction between Zhob and Quetta 151 The upgraded roadway will consist of a 4 lane dual carriageway spanning the 205 kilometre distance between the two cities 152 The first portion of the N50 to be upgraded will be the 81 kilometre portion of the N50 between Zhob and Mughal Kot with construction works having begun in January 2016 153 Construction on this portion is expected to be completed by 2018 at a cost of 86 million 151 While the project is considered a vital link in the CPEC s Western Alignment 153 the project s cost will not be financed by Chinese state owned banks but instead by Asian Development Bank under a 2014 agreement which preceded CPEC 154 155 as well as by a grant provided by the United Kingdom s Department for International Development 156 Heading south from Quetta the Western Alignment of the CPEC will continue to the town of Surab in central Balochistan as the N25 National Highway From Surab a 470 kilometre long route known as the N85 National Highway will connect central Balochistan with the town of Hoshab in southwestern Balochistan province near the city of Turbat The stretch of road between these cities was completed in December 2016 157 as per schedule 158 Along the Western Alignment route the towns of Hoshab and Gwadar are connected by a newly built 193 kilometer long portion of the M8 Motorway the Hoshab to Gwadar portion of the motorway was completed and inaugurated in February 2016 by Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif 159 The Western Alignment will be flanked by special economic zones along its route 160 with at least seven special economic zones planned to be established in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa 143 Central Alignment Edit Long term plans for a Central Alignment of the CPEC consist of a network of roads which is shortest route of CPEC and will commence in Gwadar and travel upcountry via the cities of Basima Khuzdar Sukkur Rajanpur Layyah Muzaffargarh and terminating in Dera Ismail Khan with onward connections to Karakoram Highway via the Brahma Bahtar Yarik Motorway 161 Associated roadway projects Edit ADB funded projectsThe 184 kilometers long M 4 Motorway between Faisalabad and Multan does not fall under the scope of CPEC projects but is nevertheless considered vital to the CPEC transportation project It will instead be financed by the Asian Development Bank and the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank 140 and will be the first project jointly financed by those banks 162 Further funding comes from an additional 90 7 million grant announced in October 2015 by the government of the United Kingdom towards the construction of a portion of the M4 Motorway project 163 The Karakoram Highway south of the city of Mansehra will also be upgraded into a controlled access highway to officially be known as the E 35 expressway While it is considered to be a crucial part of the route between Gwadar and China the E35 will not be financed by CPEC funds The project will instead be financed by the Asian Development Bank 164 with a 121 6 million grant from the United Kingdom towards the project 165 Once completed the E35 Expressway the M4 Motorway and Karachi Lahore Motorway will provide continuous high speed road travel on controlled access motorways from Mansehra to Karachi 1 550 kilometers away Approximately halfway between Zhob and Quetta the town of Qilla Saifullah in Balochistan lies at the intersection of the N50 National Highway and the N70 National Highway The two roads form the 447 kilometer route between Quetta and Multan in southern Punjab While the N70 project is not officially a part of CPEC it will connect the CPEC s Western Alignment to the Karachi Lahore Motorway at Multan Reconstruction works on the 126 kilometre portion of the N70 between Qilla Saifullah and Wagum are slated for completion by 2018 166 and are financed as part of a 195 million package by the Asian Development Bank 155 and by a 72 4 million grant from the United Kingdom s Department for International Development 156 Railway projects Edit Phase 1 of the ML 1 overhaul and reconstruction is highlighted black between Peshawar and Lahore Overhauling and reconstruction of the line will allow trains to travel at up to 160 kilometres per hour Phase 2 of the ML 1 overhaul between Multan and Hyderabad is marked in orange Phase 3 of the project is indicated by the green line between Hyderabad and Karachi The CPEC project emphasises major upgrades to Pakistan s aging railway system including rebuilding of the entire Main Line 1 railway between Karachi and Peshawar by 2020 167 this single railway currently handles 70 of Pakistan Railways traffic 168 As of 25 05 2022 this project is in doldrums due to reluctance of China to provide funds 169 In addition to the stalled Main Line 1 railway upgrades and expansions are slated for the Main Line 2 railway Main Line 3 railway The CPEC plan also calls for completion of a rail link over the 4 693 meter high Khunjerab Pass The railway will provide direct access for Chinese and East Asian goods to Pakistani seaports at Karachi and Gwadar by 2030 168 Procurement of an initial 250 new passenger coaches and reconstruction of 21 train stations are also planned as part of the first phase of the project bringing the total investment in Pakistan s railway system to approximately 5 billion by the end of 2019 170 180 of the coaches are to be built at the Pakistan Railways Carriage Factory near Islamabad 171 while the Government of Pakistan intends to procure an additional 800 coaches at a later date with the intention of building 595 of those coaches in Pakistan 171 In September 2018 the new government led by Prime Minister Imran Khan reduced the Chinese investment in railways by 2 billion to 6 2 billion because of financing burdens 172 Main Line 1 Edit Main article Karachi Peshawar Railway Line ML 1 upgrade The CPEC Early Harvest plan includes citation needed a complete overhaul of the 1 687 kilometre long Main Line 1 railway ML 1 between Karachi and Peshawar The plan was initial floated in 2015 173 however as of January 2023 construction has not started on the project with funding only secured in November 2022 174 The total costs of the project are estimated to be US 8 2 billion 175 The upgrade plan involves doubling the track from Karachi to Peshawar providing grade separation as well as communications based train control 176 this will allow increased capacity and faster trains on the line 177 Main Line 2 Edit Main article Kotri Attock Railway Line ML 2 of Pakistan Railways is marked in purple while ML 3 is marked in orange Other lines are in blue In addition to upgrading the ML 1 the CPEC project also calls for similar major upgrade on the 1 254 kilometre long Main Line 2 ML 2 railway between Kotri in Sindh province and Attock in northern Punjab province via the cities of Larkana and Dera Ghazi Khan 178 The route towards northern Pakistan roughly parallels the Indus River as opposed to the ML 1 which takes a more eastward course towards Lahore The project also includes a plan to connect Gwadar to the town of Jacobabad Sindh 179 which lies at the intersection of the ML 2 and ML 3 railways Main Line 3 Edit Main article Rohri Chaman Railway Line Medium term plans for the Main Line 3 ML 3 railway line will also include construction of a 560 kilometer long railway line between Bostan near Quetta to Kotla Jam in Bhakkar District near the city of Dera Ismail Khan 180 which will provide access to southern Afghanistan The railway route will pass through the city of Quetta and Zhob before terminating in Kotla Jam and is expected to be constructed by 2025 168 Khunjerab Railway Edit Main article Khunjerab Railway The proposed route of the Khunjerab Railway is indicated by the brown line Longer term projects under CPEC also call for construction of the 682 kilometre long Khunjerab Railway line between the city of Havelian to the Khunjerab Pass on the Chinese border 180 with extension to China s Lanxin Railway in Kashgar Xinjiang The railway will roughly parallel the Karakoram Highway and is expected to be complete in 2030 168 The cost of the entire project is estimated to be approximately 12 billion and will require 5 years for completion A 300 million rupee study to establish final feasibility of constructing the rail line between Havelian and the Chinese border is already underway 181 A preliminary feasibility study was completed in 2008 by the Austrian engineering firm TBAC 182 Lahore Metro Edit Main article Orange Line Lahore Metro The 1 6 billion Orange Line of the Lahore Metro is regarded as a commercial project under CPEC 183 Construction on the line has already begun with initial planned completion by Winter 2017 however this has been delayed several times first to end of 2018 184 185 later to 2019 and 2020 It finally launched on 25 October 2020 186 The line will be 27 1 kilometre 16 8 mi long of which 25 4 kilometres 15 8 mi will be elevated with the remaining portion to be underground between Jain Mandir and Lakshmi Chowk 187 When complete the project will have the capacity to transport 250 000 commuters per day with plans to increase capacity to 500 000 commuters per day by 2025 188 Energy sector projects EditSee also China Pakistan Power Plant Corporation Pakistan s current energy generating capacity is 24 830 MW 189 Energy generation will be a major focus of the CPEC project with approximately 33 billion expected to be invested in this sector 63 An estimated 10 400 MW of electricity are slated for generation by March 2018 as part of CPEC s Early Harvest projects 66 The energy projects under CPEC will be constructed by private Independent Power Producers rather than by the governments of either China or Pakistan 190 The Exim Bank of China will finance these private investments at 5 6 interest rates while the government of Pakistan will be contractually obliged to purchase electricity from those firms at pre negotiated rates 191 In April 2020 hit by the COVID 19 pandemic Pakistan asked China to ease repayment terms on 30bn worth of power projects 192 193 Renewable energy Edit Main article Renewable energy in Pakistan In March 2018 Pakistan announced that hydropower projects would be prioritized following the completion of under construction power plants 85 Pakistan aims to produce 25 of its electricity requirements by renewable energy resources by 2030 194 China s Zonergy company will complete construction on the world s largest solar power plant the 6 500 acre Quaid e Azam Solar Park near the city of Bahawalpur with an estimated capacity of 1000 MW is expected to be completed in December 2016 195 196 The first phase of the project has been completed by Xinjiang SunOasis and has a generating capacity of 100 MW 197 The remaining 900 MW capacity will be installed by Zonergy under CPEC 197 The Jhimpir Wind Power Plant built by the Turkish company Zorlu Enerji has already begun to sell 56 4 MW of electricity to the government of Pakistan 198 though under CPEC another 250 MW of electricity are to be produced by the Chinese Pakistan consortium United Energy Pakistan and others at a cost of 659 million 199 200 Another wind farm the Dawood wind power project is under development by HydroChina at a cost of 115 million and will generate 50 MW of electricity by August 2016 201 SK Hydro Consortium is constructing the 870 MW Suki Kinari Hydropower Project in the Kaghan Valley of Pakistan s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province at a cost of 1 8 billion 202 SK Hydro will construct the project with financing by China s EXIM bank 203 The 1 6 billion 720 MW Karot Dam which is under construction is part of the CPEC plan but is to be financed separately by China s Silk Road Fund 204 Pakistan and China have also discussed the inclusion of the 4 500 MW 14 billion Diamer Bhasha Dam as part of the CPEC project 205 though as of December 2015 no firm decision has been made though Pakistani officials remain optimistic at its eventual inclusion 206 On 14 November 2017 Pakistan dropped its bid to have Diamer Bhasha Dam financed under the CPEC framework 207 The 2 4 billion 1 100 MW Kohala Hydropower Project being constructed by China s Three Gorges Corporation predates the announcement of CPEC though funding for the project will now come from CPEC fund 208 The project was approved by the government of Pakistani administered Kashmir the Chinese government and the Three Gorges corporation in 2020 209 the move was protested by India which claims Kashmir as its territory 210 Renewable energy projects also include a 640 MW Mahl hydro power project 211 Coal Edit Despite several renewable energy projects the bulk of new energy generation capacity under CPEC will be coal based plants with 5 8 billion worth of coal power projects expected to be completed by early 2019 as part of the CPEC s Early Harvest projects On 26 May it was unveiled that transmission line of 660 KV would be laid between matiari and Lahore The electricity would be produced from coal based power plants at Thar Port Qasim and Hub It would have the capacity to supply 2000MW with 10 percent overloaded capability for 2 hours 212 BalochistanIn Balochistan province a 970 million coal power plant at Hub near Karachi with a capacity of 660 MW to be built by a joint consortium of China s China Power Investment Corporation and the Pakistani firm Hub Power Company as part of a larger 2 billion project to produce 1 320 MW from coal 213 A 300 MW coal power plant is also being developed in the city of Gwadar and is being financed by a 0 interest loan 103 Development of Gwadar also include a 132 KV AIS Grid Station along with associated D C Transmission line at Down Town Gwadar along with other 132 KV Sub Stations at Deep Sea Port Gwadar 214 PunjabThe 1 8 billion Sahiwal Coal Power Project in full operation since 3 July 2017 215 is a project in central Punjab that has a capacity of 1 320 MW It was built by a joint venture of two Chinese firms the Huaneng Shandong company and Shandong Ruyi who will jointly own and operate the plant 216 Pakistan will purchase electricity from the consortium at a tariff of 8 36 US cents kWh 217 The 589 million project to establish a coal mine and a relatively small 300 MW coal power plant to be built in the town of Pind Dadan Khan by China Machinery Engineering Corporation in Punjab s Salt Range 218 Pakistan s NEPRA has been criticized for considering a relatively high tariff of 11 57 US cents kWH proposed by the Chinese firm 219 which had been initially agreed at 8 25 US cents kWH in 2014 220 The Chinese firm argued that coal transportation costs had greatly increased due to the nonavailability of coal from nearby mines which had initially been regarded as the primary coal source for the project The company argued that coal would instead have to be transported from distant Sindh province which along with inefficiencies in mining procedures increased the cost of fuel by 30 5 221 SindhThe Shanghai Electric company of China will construct two 660 MW power plants as part of the Thar I project in the Thar coalfield of Sindh province while Thar ll will be developed by a separate consortium 222 223 The facility will be powered by locally sourced coal 224 and is expected to be put into commercial use in 2018 225 Pakistan s National Electric Power Regulatory Authority NEPRA has agreed to purchase electricity from both Thar l and Thar ll at a tariff of 8 50 US cents kWh for the first 330 MW of electricity 8 33 US cents kWh for the next 660 MW and 7 99 US cents kWh for the next 1 099 MW as further phases are developed 226 227 Near the Thar I Project the China Machinery Engineering Corporation in conjunction with Pakistan s Engro Corporation will construct two 330 MW power plants as part of the Thar ll Project having initially proposed the simultaneous construction of two 660 MW power plants as well as developing a coal mine capable of producing up to 3 8 million tons of coal per year as part of the first phase of the project 228 better source needed The first phase is expected to be complete by early 2019 229 at a cost of 1 95 billion 230 Subsequent phases will eventually generate an additional 3 960 MW of electricity over the course of ten years 223 As part of infrastructure required for electricity distribution from the Thar l and ll Projects the 2 1 billion Matiari to Lahore Transmission Line and 1 5 billion in Matiari to Faisalabad transmission line are also to be built as part of the CPEC project 66 The 1 320 MW 2 08 billion Pakistan Port Qasim Power Project near Port Qasim will be a joint venture of Al Mirqab Capital from Qatar and China s Power Construction Corporation a subsidiary of Sinohydro Resources Limited 231 232 Pakistan s NEPRA and SinoHydro agreed to set the levelized tariff for electricity purchased from the consortium at 8 12 US cents kWh 233 The first 660 MW reactor was commissioned in November 2017 234 Liquified natural gas Edit Liquefied natural gas power LNG projects are also considered vital to CPEC The Chinese government has announced its intention to build a 2 5 billion 711 kilometre gas pipeline from Gwadar to Nawabshah in province as part of CPEC 235 The pipeline is designed to be a part of the 2 775 kilometre long Iran Pakistan gas pipeline with the 80 kilometre portion between Gwadar and the Iranian border to be connected when sanctions against Tehran are eased Iran has already completed a 900 kilometre long portion of the pipeline on its side of the border 67 The Pakistani portion of the pipeline is to be constructed by the state owned China Petroleum Pipeline Bureau 236 It will be 42 inches 1 1 metres in diameter and have the capacity to transport 1 109 cubic feet 2 8 107 m3 of liquified natural gas every day with an additional 500 106 cubic feet 1 4 107 m3 of additional capacity when the planned off shore LNG terminal is also completed 237 The project will not only provide gas exporters with access to the Pakistani market but will also allow China to secure a route for its own imports 238 The project should not be confused with the 2 billion 1 100 kilometre North South Pipeline liquified natural gas pipeline which is to be constructed with Russian assistance between Karachi and Lahore with anticipated completion by 2018 239 Nor should it be confused with the planned 7 5 billion TAPI Pipeline which is a planned project involving Turkmenistan Afghanistan Pakistan and India Other LNG projects are currently under construction with Chinese assistance and financing that will augment the scope of CPEC but are neither funded by nor officially considered a part of CPEC The 1 223 MW Balloki Power Plant is currently under construction near Kasur and is being constructed by China s Harbin Electric Company with financing from the China s EXIM bank is one such example In October 2015 Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif also inaugurated construction of the 1 180 MW Bhikhi Power Plant near Sheikhupura 240 which is to be jointly constructed by China s Harbin Electric Company and General Electric from the United States 241 It is expected to be Pakistan s most efficient power plant and will provide enough power for an estimated 6 million homes 241 The facility became operational in May 2018 242 Early Harvest projects Edit As part of the Early Harvest scheme of the CPEC over 10 000 megawatts of electricity generating capacity is to be developed between 2018 and 2020 66 While some Early Harvest projects will not be completed until 2020 the government of Pakistan plans to add approximately 10 000 MW of energy generating capacity to Pakistan s electric grid by 2018 through the completion of projects which complement CPEC Although not officially under the scope of CPEC the 1 223 MW Balloki Power Plant and the 1 180 MW Bhakki powerplants have both been completed in mid 2018 242 243 240 244 which along with the 969 MW Neelum Jhelum Hydropower Plant completed in summer 2018 and 1 410 MW Tarbela IV Extension Project competed in February 2018 245 will result in an additional 10 000 MW being added to Pakistan s electricity grid by the end of 2018 with a combination of CPEC and non CPEC projects 246 A further 1 000 MW of electricity will be imported to Pakistan from Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan as part of the CASA 1000 project which is expected to be launched in 2018 247 Table of projects Edit Early Harvest Energy Project 248 Capacity LocationPakistan Port Qasim Power Project 1 320 MW 2 x 660 MW plants SindhThar l Project 1 320 MW 4 x 330 MW plants SindhThar ll Project and coal mine 1 320 MW 2 x 660 MW plants SindhSahiwal Coal Power Project 1 320 MW 2 x 660 MW plants PunjabRahimyar Khan coal power project 1 320 MW 2 x 660 MW plants PunjabQuaid e Azam Solar Park 1 000 MW PunjabSuki Kinari Hydropower Project 870 MW expected completion in 2020 249 Khyber PakhtunkhwaKarot Hydropower Project 720 MW expected completion in 2021 250 251 PunjabChina Power Hub Generation Company 2X660 MW BalochistanThar Engro Coal Power Project 660 MW 2 x 330 MW plants SindhGwadar coal power project 300 MW BalochistanUEP Windfarm 100 MW SindhDawood wind power project 50 MW SindhSachal Windfarm 50 MW SindhSunnec Windfarm 50 MW SindhMatiari to Lahore Transmission Line 660 kilovolt Sindh and PunjabOther areas of cooperation EditThe CPEC announcement encompassed not only infrastructure works but also addressed areas of co operation between China and Pakistan Agriculture and aquaculture Edit CPEC includes provisions for cooperation in management of water resources livestock and other fields of agriculture Under the plan agricultural information project storage and distribution of agricultural equipment and construction project agricultural mechanisation demonstration and machinery leasing project and fertiliser production project for producing 800 000 tons of fertiliser and 100 000 tons of bio organic fertiliser will be implemented 252 253 The framework includes cooperation in Remote Sensing RS and Geographical Information System GIS food processing pre and post harvest handling and storage of agricultural produce selection and breeding of new breeds of animals and new varieties of plants specifically fisheries and aquaculture 254 Science and technology Edit As part of CPEC the two countries signed an Economic and Technical Cooperation Agreement 255 as well as pledged to China Pakistan Joint Cotton Bio Tech Laboratory 255 The two countries also pledged to establish the China Pakistan Joint Marine Research Center with State Oceanic Administration and Pakistan s Ministry of Science and Technology 255 Also as part of the CPEC agreement Pakistan and China have agreed to co operate in the field of space research 72 In February 2016 the two countries agreed to establish the Pak China Science Technology Commerce and Logistic Park near Islamabad at an estimated cost of 1 5 billion 256 The park will be situated on 500 hectares which will be provided by Pakistan to China s Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps with all investments expected to come from the Chinese side over the course of ten years 256 In May 2016 construction began on the 44 million 820 kilometer long Pakistan China Fiber Optic Project a Cross Border Optical Fiber Cable that will enhance telecommunication and ICT Industry in the Gilgit Baltistan Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Punjab region while offering Pakistan a fifth route by which to transmit telecommunication traffic 257 258 which will be extended to Gwadar 259 260 107 in May 2019 Vice President of China and Pakistan has decided to launch Huawei Technical Support Center in Pakistan 212 CPEC include establishment of pilot project of Digital Terrestrial Multimedia Broadcast for Pakistan Television Corporation through Chinese grant at Rebroadcast Station RBS at Murree 261 ZTE Corporation will provide Pakistan Television Corporation collaboration across R amp D of digital terrestrial television technologies staff training and content creation including partnerships with Chinese multinational companies in multiple areas including television sets and set top boxes as international Cooperation 262 Other fields Edit The two nations also pledged co operation in field ranging from anti narcotic efforts 255 to co operation in an effort to reduce climate change 255 The two nations also agreed to increase co operating between the banking sectors of the two countries as well as to establish closer ties between China Central Television and the Pakistan Television Corporation 255 Confucius Institute at University of Punjab is planned to be soon launched in 2019 212 Moreover Rashakai Special Economic Zone on M1 Highway a motorway junction near Nowshehra is planned as well 212 Finance EditConcessionary loans Edit Approximately 11 billion worth of infrastructure projects being developed by the Pakistani government will be financed at an interest rate of 1 6 92 after Pakistan successfully lobbied the Chinese government to reduce interest rates from an initial 3 263 Loans will be dispersed by the Exim Bank of China China Development Bank and the ICBC 264 For comparison loans for previous Pakistani infrastructure projects financed by the World Bank carried an interest rate between 5 and 8 5 265 while interest rates on market loans approach 12 266 The loan money would be used to finance projects which are planned and executed by the Pakistani government Portions of the approximately 6 6 billion 127 Karachi Lahore Motorway are already under construction 267 The 2 9 billion phase which will connect the city of Multan to the city of Sukkur over a distance of 392 kilometres has also been approved 268 with 90 of costs to be financed by the Chinese government at concessionary interest rates while the remaining 10 is to be financed by the Public Sector Development Programme of the Pakistani government 269 In May 2016 the 2 9 billion loan were given final approvals required prior to disbursement of the funds were given by the Government of the People s Republic of China on 4 May 2016 and will be concessionary loans with an interest rate of 2 0 116 The National Highway Authority of Pakistan reported that contractors arrived on site soon after the loan received final approval 116 The China Development Bank will finance the 920 million towards the cost of reconstruction of the 487 kilometer portion of the Karakoram Highway between Burhan and Raikot 270 271 An addition 1 26 billion will be lent by the China Exim Bank for the construction of the Havelian to Thakot portion of this 487 kilometer stretch of roadway 114 115 to be dispersed as low interest rate concessionary loans 116 7 billion of the planned 8 2 billion overhaul of the Main Line 1 railway is to be financed by concessionary loans which extended by China s state owned banks 272 The long planned 27 1 km long 1 6 billion Orange Line of the Lahore Metro is regarded as a commercial project 255 and does not qualify for the Exim Bank s 1 6 interest rate It will instead by financed at a 2 4 interest rate 184 after China agreed to reduce interest rates from an originally planned rate of 3 4 273 The 44 million Pakistan China Fiber Optic Project an 820 km long fibre optic wire connecting Pakistan and China will be constructed using concessionary loans at an interest rate of 2 rather than the 1 6 rate applied to other projects 274 Interest free loans Edit The government of China in August 2015 announced that concessionary loans for several projects in Gwadar totaling 757 million would be converted 0 interest loans 92 The projects which are now to financed by the 0 interest loans include the construction of the 140 million East Bay Expressway project installation of breakwaters in Gwadar which will cost 130 million a 360 million coal power plant in Gwadar a 27 million project to dredge berths in Gwadar harbor and a 100 million 300 bed hospital in Gwadar 92 Thus Pakistan only has to repay the principal on these loans In September 2015 the government of China also announced that the 230 million Gwadar International Airport project would no longer be financed by loans but would instead be constructed by grants which the government of Pakistan will not be required to repay 263 Private consortia Edit 15 5 billion worth of energy projects are to be constructed by joint Chinese Pakistani firms rather than by the governments of either China or Pakistan The Exim Bank of China will finance those investments at 5 6 interest rates while the government of Pakistan will be contractually obliged to purchase electricity from those firms at pre negotiated rates 191 As an example the 1 223 MW Balloki Power Plant does not fall under the concessionary loan rate of 1 6 as the project is not being developed by the Pakistani government Instead it is considered to be a private sector investment as its construction will be undertaken by a consortium of Harbin Electric and Habib Rafiq Limited after they successfully bid against international competitors 275 Chinese state owned banks will provide loans to the consortium that are subsidised by the Chinese government In the case of the Balloki Power Plant state owned banks will finance the project at an interest rate of 5 276 while the Pakistani government will purchase electricity at the lowest bid rate of 7 973 cents per unit 275 ADB assistance Edit While the Hazara Motorway is considered to be a crucial part of the route between Gwadar and China M 15 will not be financed by CPEC funds The project will instead be financed by the Asian Development Bank 164 The N70 project is not officially a part of CPEC but will connect the CPEC s Western Alignment to the Karachi Lahore Motorway at Multan The project will be financed as part of a 195 million package by the Asian Development Bank announced in May 2015 to upgrade the N70 National Highway and N50 National Highway 155 In January 2016 The United Kingdom s Department for International Development announced a 72 4 million grant to Pakistan for roadway improvements in the province of Balochistan thereby reducing the total Asian Development Bank loan from 195 million to 122 6 million 156 The M 4 Motorway between Faisalabad and Multan is not to be financed by the Chinese government as part of CPEC but will instead be the first infrastructure project partially financed by the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and will be co financed along with the Asian Development Bank for a total of approximately 275 million 140 Portions of the project will also be funded by a 90 7 million grant announced in October 2015 by the government of the United Kingdom towards the construction of the Gojra Shorkot section of the M4 Motorway project 163 Impact EditThe importance of CPEC to China is reflected by its inclusion as part of China s 13th five year development plan 277 278 CPEC projects will provide China with an alternate route for energy supplies as well as a new route by which Western China can conduct trade Pakistan stands to gain due to upgrade of infrastructure and introduction of a reliable energy supply 279 280 On 8 January 2017 Forbes claimed that CPEC is part of China s vision to write the rules of the next era of globalization and help its export and investment engines run for years to come 281 Writing in January 2017 Arun Mohan Sukumar of India s Observer Research Foundation claimed that CPEC is an important enough project whose economic and strategic consequences require methodical assessment adding that CPEC may be a bilateral endeavour but New Delhi cannot ignore its spillover effects on regional governance and concluding that India would be ill advised to rely on the false comfort that profits alone will drive China s business with Pakistan 282 According to China s prime minister Li Keqiang Pakistan s development through the project might wean the populace from fundamentalism 38 Environment Edit Pakistan is already distressed by climate change and global warming issues as about 5 000 its glaciers are melting at an alarming rate It is affected by extreme weather patterns and seasonal shifts occurring in recent past 283 The CPEC coal based power plants are not in line with Pakistan s own green policy It is estimated that by the year 2030 around 371 metric tonne of Carbon dioxide will be the Greenhouse gas emission from CPEC projects 56 of this will be contributed by energy sector CPEC expects a daily commute of 7000 trucks which can potentially emit 36 5 million tons of CO2 284 Since 2021 due to growing pressure on China for being the world s biggest polluter it has since shifted its focus from coal based energy investments in Pakistan to renewables This is being done in a bid to promote a more greener image of CPEC 285 Pakistani economy Edit The CPEC is a landmark project 286 in the annals of history of Pakistan It is the largest investment Pakistan has attracted since independence and largest by China in any foreign country 287 CPEC is considered economically vital to Pakistan in helping it drive economic growth 288 The Pakistani media and government have called CPEC investments a game and fate changer for the region 289 290 while both China and Pakistan intend that the massive investment plan will transform Pakistan into a regional economic hub and further boost the deepening ties between the two countries 291 Approximately 1 year after the announcement of CPEC Zhang Baozhong chairman of China Overseas Port Holding Company told The Washington Post that his company planned to spend an additional 4 5 billion on roads power hotels and other infrastructure for Gwadar s industrial zone 16 which would be one of the largest ever sums of foreign direct investment into Pakistan Pakistan as late as early 2017 faced energy shortfalls of over 4 500 MW on a regular basis 64 with routine power cuts of up to 12 hours per day 65 which has shed an estimated 2 2 5 off its annual GDP 65 The Financial Times noted that Pakistan s electricity shortages are a major hindrance to foreign investment and that Chinese investments in Pakistani infrastructure and power projects will lead to a virtuous cycle that will make the country more attractive for foreign investment in a variety of sectors 292 Poor availability of electricity is considered by the World Bank to be a main constraint to both economic growth and investment in Pakistan The impact of Chinese investments in Energy sector was soon visible as in December 2017 Pakistan succeeded in producing surplus electricity Pakistani Federal Minister for Power Division Awais Leghari announced a complete end to power cuts in 5 297 feeders out of total 8 600 and claimed that the country s current electricity production had gone up to 16 477 Megawatts which was 2700 megawatts more than the demand 293 Pakistan s large textile industry has also been negatively affected by several hour long power cuts with almost 20 of textile factories in the city of Faisalabad shutting down on account of power shortages 294 The CPEC s Early Harvest projects are expected to resolve shortages in power generation by 2018 by increasing Pakistan s power generation capacity by over 10 000 megawatts 66 As a result of improved infrastructure and energy supplies the Pakistani government expects that economic growth rates will reach 7 by 2018 295 Former Pakistan Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz also stated in May 2016 that predicted economic growth from CPEC projects would result in stabilization of Pakistan s security situation 296 which has also been cited by the World Bank as hindrance to sustained economic growth in Pakistan 297 According to Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Hua Chunying the corridor will serve as a driver for connectivity between South Asia and East Asia Mushahid Hussain chairman of the Pakistan China Institute told China Daily that the economic corridor will play a crucial role in regional integration of the Greater South Asia which includes China Iran Afghanistan and stretches all the way to Myanmar 48 When fully built the corridor is expected to generate significant revenue from transit fees levied on Chinese goods to the tune of several billion dollars per annum 298 According to The Guardian The Chinese are not just offering to build much needed infrastructure but also make Pakistan a key partner in its grand economic and strategic ambitions 299 Moody s Investors Service has described the project as a credit positive for Pakistan In 2015 the agency acknowledged that much of the project s key benefits would not materialize until 2017 but stated that it believes at least some of the benefits from the economic corridor would likely begin accruing even before then 300 The Asian Development Bank stated CPEC will connect economic agents along a defined geography It will provide connection between economic nodes or hubs centered on urban landscapes in which large amount of economic resources and actors are concentrated They link the supply and demand sides of markets 301 On 14 November 2016 Hyatt Hotels Corporation announced plan s to open four properties in Pakistan in partnership with Bahria Town Group citing the investment of CPEC as the reason behind the 600 million investment 302 On 12 March 2017 a consortium of Pakistani broker houses reported that Pakistan will end up paying 90 billion to China over a span of 30 years with annual average repayments of 3 4 billion per year post fiscal year 2020 The report further said that CPEC related transportation would earn 400 500 million per annum to Pakistan and would grow Pakistani exports by 4 5 a year till fiscal year 2025 303 CPEC and the Malacca Dilemma Edit Map showing territorial claims in South China Sea A high percentage of Chinese energy imports pass through this disputed region rendering much of China s energy imports vulnerable to conflict The Straits of Malacca provide China with its shortest maritime access to Europe Africa and the Middle East 304 Approximately 80 of its Middle Eastern energy imports also pass through the Straits of Malacca 305 As the world s biggest oil importer 53 energy security is a key concern for China while current sea routes used to import Middle Eastern oil are frequently patrolled by the United States Navy 306 In the event that China were to face hostile actions from a United States who energy imports through the Straits of Malacca could be impeded which in turn may jeopardise the Chinese economy in a scenario that is frequently referred to as the Malacca Dilemma 305 In addition to vulnerabilities faced in the Straits of Malacca region China is heavily dependent upon sea routes that pass through the South China Sea near the disputed Spratly Islands and Paracel Islands which are currently a source of tension between China Taiwan Vietnam the Philippines and the United States 307 The CPEC project will allow Chinese energy imports to circumvent these contentious areas and find a new artery in the west and thereby decrease the possibility of confrontation between the United States and China 308 However there is evidence to suggest that any pipelines from Gwadar up to China would be very expensive would encounter numerous logistical difficulties including difficult terrain and potential terrorism and would barely make any impact on China s overall energy security 309 China s stake in Gwadar will also allow it to expand its influence in the Indian Ocean a vital route for oil transportation between the Atlantic and the Pacific Another advantage to China is that it will be able to bypass the Strait of Malacca As of now 60 percent of China s imported oil comes from the Middle East and 80 percent of that is transported to China through this strait the dangerous piracy rife maritime route through the South China East China and Yellow Seas Council on Foreign Relations 310 Access to western China Edit The CPEC Alignments will improve connectivity to restive Xinjiang thereby increasing the region s potential to attract public and private investment 304 CPEC is considered central to China Pakistan relations its central importance is reflected by China s inclusion of the project as part of its 13th five year development plan 277 278 The CPEC projects will also complement China s Western Development plan which includes not only Xinjiang but also the neighbouring regions of Tibet and Qinghai 311 In addition to its significance to reduce Chinese dependence on the Sea of Malacca and South China Sea routes CPEC will provide China an alternative and shorter route for energy imports from the Middle East thereby reducing shipping costs and transit times The currently available sea route to China is roughly 12 000 kilometre long while the distance from Gwadar Port to Xinjiang province is approximately 3 000 kilometre with another 3 500 kilometre from Xinjiang to China s eastern coast 305 As a result of CPEC Chinese imports and exports to the Middle East Africa and Europe would require much shorter shipment times and distances Route to circumvent Afghanistan Edit Main article Quadrilateral Traffic in Transit Agreement Negotiations to provide an alternate route to the Central Asian republics by way of China predate the announcement of CPEC The Afghanistan Pakistan Transit Trade Agreement of 2010 provided Pakistan access to Central Asia via Afghanistan however the full agreement has yet to be fully implemented The Quadrilateral Agreement on Traffic in Transit QATT was first devised in 1995 and signed in 2004 by the governments of China Pakistan Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan to facilitate transit trade between the various countries with no inclusion of Afghanistan 312 Despite signing of the QATT the agreement s full potential was never realized largely on account of poor infrastructure links between the four countries prior to the announcement of CPEC During the visit of Afghan President Ashraf Ghani to India in April 2015 he stated We will not provide equal transit access to Central Asia for Pakistani trucks unless the Pakistani government included India as part of the 2010 Afghanistan Pakistan Transit Trade Agreement 313 The current Transit Trade Agreement provides Afghanistan access to the Port of Karachi to conduct export trade with India and allows Afghan goods to be transited up to any border of Pakistan but does not guarantee Afghan trucks the right to traverse the Wagah Border nor does the agreement permit Indian goods to be exported to Afghanistan via Pakistan 314 Owing to continued tensions between India and Pakistan the Pakistani government expressed reluctance to include India in any trade negotiations with Afghanistan and as a result little progress was made between the Afghan and Pakistani sides In February 2016 the Pakistani government signalled its intention to completely bypass Afghanistan in its quest to access Central Asia by announcing its intent to revive the QATT so that Central Asian states could access Pakistani ports via Kashgar instead of Afghanistan 315 thereby allowing the Central Asian republics to access Pakistan s deep water ports without having to rely on a politically unstable Afghanistan as a transit corridor In early March 2016 the Afghan government reportedly acquiesced to Pakistani requests to use Afghanistan as a corridor to Tajikistan after having dropped demands from reciprocal access to India via Pakistan 316 Alternate route to Central Asia Edit The heads of various Central Asian republics have expressed their desire to connect their infrastructure networks to the CPEC project via China During the August 2015 visit of Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to Kazakhstan the Kazakh Prime Minister Karim Massimov conveyed Kazakhstan s desire to link its road network to the CPEC project 317 During the November 2015 visit of Tajikistan President Emomali Rahmon to Pakistan the Tajik premier also expressed his government s desire to join the Quadrilateral Agreement on Traffic in Transit to use CPEC as a conduit for imports and exports to Tajikistan by circumventing Afghanistan 318 the request received political backing by the Pakistani Prime Minister 318 The Chinese government has already upgraded the road linking Kashgar to Osh in Kyrgyzstan via the Kyrgyz town of Erkeshtam while a railway between Urumqi China and Almaty Kazakhstan has also been completed as part of China s One Belt One Road initiative 319 Numerous land crossings already exist between Kazakhstan and China as well Additionally the Chinese government has announced plans to lay railway track from Tashkent Uzbekistan towards Kyrgyzstan with onwards connections to China and Pakistan 320 Further the Pamir Highway already provides Tajikistan access to Kashgar via the Kulma Pass These crossings complement the CPEC project to provide Central Asian states access to Pakistan s deepwater ports by completely bypassing Afghanistan a country which has been ravaged by civil war and political instability since the late 1970s Comparison to Chabahar Port Edit In May 2016 Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his counterpart Iranian President Hassan Rouhani signed a series of twelve agreements in Tehran in which India offered to refurbish one of Chabahar s ten existing berths and reconstruct another berth at the Port of Chabahar 321 in order to allow Indian goods to be exported to Iran with the possibility of onward connections to Afghanistan and Central Asia 322 As of February 2017 the project remains delayed while the governments of Iran and India blame one another for delays 323 A section of the Indian media described it as a counter to the China Pakistan Economic Corridor 324 although the total monetary value of projects has been noted to be significantly less than that of CPEC 325 As part of the twelve memorandums of understanding signed by Indian and Iranian delegations as per text released by India s Ministry of External Affairs India will offer a 150 million line of credit extended by the Exim Bank of India 326 while India Ports Global also signed a contract with Iran s Aria Banader to develop berths at the port 327 at a cost of 85 million 328 over the course of 18 months 329 Under the agreement India Ports Global will refurbish a 640 meter long container handling facility and reconstruct a 600 meter long berth at the port 321 India further agreed to extend a 400 million line of credit to be used for the import of steel for the construction of a rail link between Chabahar and Zahedan 330 while India s IRCON and Iran s Construction Development of Transport and Infrastructure Company signed a memorandum of understanding regarding the construction and finance of the Chabahar to Zahedan rail line at a cost of 1 6 billion 331 India s Highways and Shipping Minister Nitin Gadkari suggested that the free trade zone in Chabahar had the potential to attract upwards of 15 billion worth of investment in the future 332 although he stated that such investments are predicated upon Iran offering India natural gas at a rate of 1 50 per million British Thermal Units 333 which is substantially lower than the rate of 2 95 per million British Thermal Units offered by Iran 334 The two countries also signed a memorandum of understanding to explore the possibility of setting up an aluminum smelter at a cost of 2 billion citation needed as well as establishing a urea processing facility in Chahbahar 335 although these investments are also contingent upon Iran supplying low cost natural gas for operation of those facilities 336 India Iran and Afghanistan also signed an agreement with the intention of simplifying transit procedures between the three countries 328 Despite the expressed desire to circumvent Pakistan in order to augment Iranian and Indian economic ties Indian goods destined for Iran currently do not require transit through Pakistan as those goods can be exported to Iran via Bandar Abbas where India also currently maintains a diplomatic mission 337 Bandar Abbas is also consider a key node on the North South Transport Corridor backed by India and Russia since 2002 338 339 Indian goods also can be imported and transited across Iran upon arrival at Bandar e Emam Khomeyni near the Iraqi border As per the Afghanistan Pakistan Transit Trade Agreement Afghan goods can be transited across Pakistan for export to India as well though Indian goods cannot be exported to Afghanistan via Pakistan 340 Upon completion of Chabahar Indian exporters will benefit from the potential ability to export goods to Afghanistan a country with an annual gross domestic product estimated at 60 6 billion 341 After signing the agreement Iran s ambassador to Pakistan Mehdi Honerdoost stated that the agreement was not finished and that Iran would welcome the inclusion of both Pakistan and China in the project 342 While clarifying that Chabahar Port would not be a rival or enemy to Pakistan s Gwadar Port 343 he further stated that Pakistan and China had both been invited to contribute to the project before India but according to Pakistani media neither China nor Pakistan had expressed interest in joining 344 345 However eventually Iranian ambassador made it clear that Iran doesn t consider Chahbahar to be a project which could feasibly rival CPEC as he said Iran is eager to join CPEC with its full capabilities possibilities and abilities 346 In July 2020 Pakistani media The News International reported that the Iranian government has dropped India from a long stalled rail project and has instead signed a comprehensive deal with China 347 This report was later refuted by the government of Iran who stated that the investments from India didn t have anything to do with the railway project in the first place 348 349 Security Issues Edit While agreements have specifically cited improvements for Afghan connectivity to the world as a benefit of Indian investment in the region 350 Afghanistan s politically instability could limit the potential usefulness of transit corridors to population centers near Kabul or Kandahar 351 as those routes traverse southern and eastern Afghanistan where the Taliban is most active 352 The Chabahar plan relies upon connections to the Afghan Ring Road 353 By August 2016 the Taliban was noted to have captured large swathes of land in Helmand Province and threatened to capture the provincial capital of Lashkar Gah 354 which lies on the portion of the Afghan Ring Road connecting Chabahar to Kandahar and Kabul As a result portions of the Afghan Ring Road were closed due to Taliban insurgent activity 355 Also in August 2016 the Taliban claimed responsibility for an attack which left twelve foreign tourists dead as they were traveling on an alternative route to the Afghan Ring Road between Kabul and Herat 356 In September 2016 Iran s president Hassan Rouhani expressed his country s interest in joining CPEC during a meeting with Nawaz Sharif 357 The Pakistan Army has taken the security responsibility of CPEC employees and investors which become more effective and healthy relationship between China and Pakistan Security EditSecurity Forces Edit Pakistan Navy and Chinese Navy ships are to jointly guard the safety and security of the trade corridor as Pakistan seeks to expand the role of its maritime forces 358 From December 2016 Pakistan s Navy established a special taskforce TF 88 to ensure there is maritime security for trade 359 360 Chairman Parliamentary Committee on CPEC confirmed that Sindh province will dispatch 2000 police officers while Punjab will dispatch 5000 police officers for the project while the Pakistani Army will deploy 12 000 troops to safeguard the route 361 China plans to transfer 4 ships to the Pakistan Maritime Security Agency with two ships called PMSS Hingol and PMSS Basol 362 For territorial security Pakistan has formed the Special Security Division 363 Pakistan plans to train 12 000 security personnel to protect Chinese workers on the corridor 364 365 366 As of August 2015 8 000 Pakistani security officials were deployed for the protection of over 8 100 Chinese workers in Pakistan 367 Maqbool Ahmed an investigative journalist from the now closed Herald reported large scale land acquisition involving tens of thousands of acres near a lagoon in Gwadar by the Pakistani Navy for building a massive garrison in order to secure maritime security 368 As part of CPEC Pakistan has boosted its international engagement in terms of foreign policy with China Iran USA Turkey and Malaysia are to be engaged for the maritime economy related to CPEC 369 Iranian President Rouhani revealed his intentions to Pakistan to join CPEC in a meeting at the UN 370 Russia has also expressed support for CPEC 371 372 The Special Security Division headed by a Major General would consist of nine army battalions and six wings of civil armed forces Similarly Gwadar Security Task Force is another formation to be raised commanded by a Brigadier These security measures for Chinese projects would cost an estimated total of Rupees 10 Billion as of 2015 The Chief of Army Staff visited CPEC Security headquarters in February 2016 and vowed that the security forces are ready to pay any price for successful completion of CPEC projects The NEPRA in Pakistan has raised concerns on the alarming rate of growth in security expenditure of Power Projects under CPEC which it considers to be dark 373 Baloch militants Edit The Balochistan National Party Mengal BNP M the Baloch National Front BNF the Baloch Republican Party and militant organizations like the Balochistan Liberation Front the Balochistan Liberation Army and the Baloch Republican Army are among those that have raised objections with regards to CPEC 374 There have been instances of attacking and killing Chinese nationals associated with CPEC 375 Many Baloch prefer autonomy and control over their own local resources for their development instead of foreign mega projects 374 The Baluchistan province saw multiple attempted nationalist and separatist insurgencies before CPEC but investments in Balochistan have led to a significant drop in separatist groups and this effect has even seen the integration of the locals in Balochistan in the workforce at Gwadar Despite this Pakistan still alleges that India is supporting anti CPEC agenda and the Pakistani government often points to such evidence as the alleged Indian spy Kulbhushan Jadhav who was caught in the Baluchistan province on 3 March 2016 Information regarding Jadhav was then presented to the United Nations 376 Exiled Baloch nationalist Hyrbyair Marri in 2016 warned the safety of Chinese nationals working on the project could not be guaranteed 377 though violence in the region peaked in 2013 before sharply declining 378 note 1 The Pakistani government reported that over 800 Baloch militants surrendered to security forces in 2016 after the launch of a reconciliation programme 380 including over 200 at a single ceremony in November 2016 381 Balakh Sher Badini a senior militant commander of the Balochistan Liberation Army surrendered to Pakistani forces in January 2017 382 Another 21 militants from another militant group the Balochistan Republican Army surrendered shortly thereafter along with 3 militant commanders 383 A few days later high ranking militant commander Lal Din Bugti surrendered to Pakistani security forces along with 6 other commanders 384 Separatist violence had decreased in the province so much by 2017 that such groups had become much less of a threat compared to Islamist militants 385 Pakistan faced Taliban insurgent violence that largely began in 2008 during the rule of General Pervez Musharraf China reportedly also expressed concern that militant groups in Xinjiang could collaborate with Tehrik i Taliban militants in Pakistan 53 386 In 2014 Pakistan launched Operation Zarb e Azb to eradicate Tehrik i Taliban militants from Pakistani territory following an attack on Karachi s airport and the 2014 Peshawar school massacre in which terrorists from Tehrik i Taliban killed 148 school children Following the launch of Operation Zarb e Azb violence in Pakistan has drastically declined 387 2016 saw the lowest number of deaths from acts of violence since the current wave of violence began in 2007 388 with total fatalities dropping nearly 66 compared to 2014 388 Acts of terrorist violence fell 75 between 2014 and 2016 389 According to the South Asia Terrorism Portal civilian fatalities from terrorist attacks in 2013 stood at 3 001 while the number had declined to 612 by 2016 390 the lowest number since 2005 Uyghur militants Edit In the 1980s Uyghurs from China crossed into Pakistan to get enrolled in Madrassas and with the training and arms provided by Chinese government they have fought the Soviets in Afghanistan Upon returning back to China many joined the violent Uyghur nationalist groups 391 Pakistani intelligence agencies had undertaken crackdown on Uyghurs militants of Islamic State returning from Syria and East Turkistan Islamic Movement ETIM along with Baloch rebel groups involved in targeting CPEC projects They claim hostile Indian intelligence agencies are involved in training thousands of militants formerly belonging to Taliban factions Nearly 30 000 Chinese workers are employed in about 280 Chinese funded projects where almost 35 000 security personnel have been deployed 392 Alleged Indian subversion Edit CPEC passes through the disputed region of Kashmir where Indian and Pakistani border guards have occasionally exchanged fire across the Line of Control 393 394 though no CPEC project is located near the line Chinese intelligence agencies have also reportedly shared information with Pakistani authorities regarding alleged efforts by the India s Research and Analysis Wing to subvert CPEC 395 In March 2016 Pakistan reported that it had arrested Kulbhushan Yadav whom Pakistan claims to be a spy from India s Research and Analysis Wing and who entered Pakistan from Iran specifically to destabilize regions in Pakistan s Baluchistan province along with terrorist organization Tehrik i Taliban and Baloch liberation army B L A in order to hinder implementation of CPEC projects 396 original research India though has denied the claim saying that Yadav had been kidnapped last year from Iran and his subsequent presence in Pakistan has never been explained credibly 397 Former Chief of Army Staff General Raheel Sharif in April 2016 accused India s Research and Analysis Wing of destabilizing Pakistan in an attempt to disrupt and stymie implementation of various CPEC projects 398 Pakistan s Secretary of Defense Lieutenant General Alam Khattak stated in April 2016 that the arrest of Kulbhushan Yadav indicated Indian interference in CPEC and further alleged that India s Research and Analysis Wing in collusion with Afghanistan s National Directorate of Security had set up a dedicated espionage unit with express intent to sabotage CPEC 399 India moved to the International Court of Justice ICJ which after deliberation stayed execution of sentence passed by Pakistani military court the ICJ also found violation of Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations by Pakistan and directed Pakistan to provide consular access to Kulbhushan Yadav in its July 2019 verdict 400 401 List of major projects EditGwadar Projects Estimated Cost Status NotesGwadar Port 300 US million Partially Completed Phase 1 complete Phase 2 under construction 402 Tax exemptions for port and Free Zone notified in Finance Act 2020 46 enterprises have been registered for investment in Free Zone 03 companies started production First imports cum exports cargo by M s HKSUN received in Gwadar free zone on 7 April 2021 East Bay Expressway 179 US million Completed Project completed and inaugurated on 3 June 2022 255 Pak China Friendship Hospital 100 US million Under Construction Groundbreaking held on 16 December 2019 Expected completion in December 2022 255 Pak China Technical And Vocational Institute 10 US million Completed This project will aim at creating state of the art vocational and technical training institute in Gwadar Completed in October 2021 403 New Gwadar International Airport 230 US million Under Construction Construction work started on 31 October 2019 It will be operational in March 2023 255 404 Road Railway Projects Length Km Estimated Cost Status NotesGwadar Turbat Hoshab M 8 193 Rs 13 billion Completed Completed in 2016 it will connect the western central and eastern routes of CPEC with the Gwadar Port 405 406 Surab Hoshab N 85 449 Rs 17 97 Billion Completed N85 highway connects Hoshab to Sorab and is an essential link in the western route of CPEC 405 Zhob Quetta Kuchlak N 50 305 Rs 66 8 Billion Under Construction Tendering for construction work of two sections is completed and contractor mobilized whereas the remaining three sections tendering will process soon 407 Reconstruction of the Karakoram Highway Phase II 118 1 315 US million Completed It s Thakot Havelian Section of 118 km has been completed by March 2020 408 Multan Sukkur Motorway M 5 392 2 889 US million Completed Inaugurated on 5 November 2019 this 392 km Sukkur to Multan Motorway is a critical element of the Peshawar to Karachi Motorway Route 409 Abdul Hakeem Lahore Motorway M 3 230 Completed Project has been completed and inaugurated on 30 March 2019Hakla D I Khan Motorway 285 Rs 122 2 billion Completed It is part of the western alignment of CPEC Project completed and inaugurated on 5 January 2022 410 Khuzdar Basima Road N 30 110 19 19 Billion Rupee Under Construction 67 Completed It is expected to be completed by December2021 411 412 Orange Line Lahore Metro 27 1 626 US million Completed Project is completed and inaugurated on 25 Oct 2020 413 Upgradation of Karachi Peshawar Line ML 1 1 872 6 808 US million In Planning The entire track from Karachi to Peshawar to be doubled Speed of passenger trains to be raise from 65 110 km h to 160 km h ECNEC approved the project on 5 August 2020 414 Energy Projects Capacity MW Estimated Cost Status NotesKohala Hydropower Project 1 100 2 400 US million In Planning expected completion in 2026 415 Azad Pattan Hydropower Project 701 1 600 US million In Planning Expected commercial operation date COD 2026 416 Dawood wind power project 50 112 65 US million Completed Commercial operation date COD 5 April 2017 Fully operational 417 Karot Hydropower Project 720 1 720 US million Completed Completed and put into full commercial operations on 29 June 2022 418 Port Qasim Power Project 1 320 1 912 US million Completed Project has been completed on 25 April 2018 419 Quaid e Azam Solar Park 1 000 1 301 US million Partially Completed First phase complete generating 400 MW of electricity 197 600 MW Under implementation 195 Sahiwal Coal Power Project 1 320 1 912 US million Completed Completed in July 2017 In operation 215 UEP Wind Farm 99 250 US million Completed Commercial operation date COD 16 June 2017 Operational 420 Sachal Wind Farm 50 134 US million Completed Commercial operation date COD attained 11 April 2017 Operational 421 Three Gorges Second and Third Wind Power Projects 100 150 US million Completed Commercial operation date COD attained 9 Jul 2018 Operational 422 Western Energy Pvt Ltd Wind Power Project 50 63 12 US million In Planning Generation Licence Acquired Tariff in Review 423 Hubco Coal Power Project 1 320 1 912 US million Completed COD is 14 Aug 2019 fully operational 424 Suki Kinari Hydropower Project 870 2 000 US million Under Construction 70 Completed Commercial operation date COD December 2022 425 Coal Power Project of Engro Powergen Limited at Thar Block II 660 995 US million Completed COD is 10 July 2019 in operation 426 Coal Power Project of Shanghai Electric at Thar Block I 1 320 1 440 US million completed Project Completed on 5 February 2023 427 Coal Power Project of Thar Energy Limited at Thar Block II 330 498 US million Completed The Project has successfully achieved its commercial operations date on 1 October 2022 428 Coal Power Project of Thal Nova Power Limited at Thar Block II 330 498 US million completed Operational Synchronized with national grid on December 30 2022 428 Other Energy Projects Capacity Cost Status NotesMatiari to Lahore HVDC Transmission Line 878 Km 4 000 MW 1 658 US million Completed Project has been completed in September 2021 429 This state of the art transmission line is built to evacuate 4 000 MW of power from the coal power plants being developed in thar coal field to national grid stations located in central part of the country Open Pit Mine of SSRL in Block I of Thar Coal Field 7 6 Million tons year 1 080 US million Completed On 31 January 2022 the first shovel of lignite coal was extracted at the mine 430 It will enable mine mouth coal power project of Shanghai Electric to generate 1 320 MW electricity Open Pit Mine of SECMC in Block II of Thar Coal Field 7 6 Million tons year 630 US million Completed Thar block II unearthed coal on 10 June 2018 431 Coal is being provided to 660 MW coal power project of Engro Powergen Limited 330 MW TEL coal power plant and 330 MW Thal Nova coal power plant located at the site It has achieved a major milestone of completing phase II of mine expansion on October 10 2022 announcing the Commercial Operations Date COD for the 7 6 million tons per annum MTPA mine expansion from the previously 3 8 million tons per annum under phase I of its plan Mine capacity is being increased to 12 2 million tons year by June 2023 432 433 Special Economic Zones Area Status NotesRashakai Economic Zone M 1 Nowshera 702 Acres Launched Rashakai Special Economic Zone SEZ in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa was rolled out in Jun 2021 kicking off phase II of CPEC Dhabeji Special Economic Zone 1530 Acres Under Bidding Process The land has been allocated Allama Iqbal Industrial City Faisalabad 3217 Acres Launched Numerous national and international enterprises have been allotted plots in the SEZ Few companies have already started construction work Bostan Industrial Zone 1000 Acres Launched Phase 1 has been launched for allotment of industrial plots Cancelled projects EditProjects Capacity Location NotesGadani Power Project 6 600 MW 10 x 660 MW plants BalochistanRahimyar Khan coal power project 1 320 MW 2 x 660 MW plants Punjab 434 Muzaffargarh coal power project 1 320 MW 2 x 660 MW plants Punjab 434 Matiari to Faisalabad transmission line 660 kilovolt Sindh and PunjabImported Coal Based Power Project at Gwadar 330 MW Gwadar 435 Challenges EditPolitical Legal and Social Risks Edit Political regimes in Pakistan are not stable and the civil government establishments have often seen military interference Such scenarios result in frequent change in leadership thereby jeopardizing the agreements signed by previous leaders This increases the uncertainty in the commercial environment unreliable outcomes of investments and endangers the ease of doing business This risk gets magnified when foreign investments and workers are involved A flawed legal system in the country encourages sub standard construction procedures illegitimate bid activities corrupt and unprofessional interference breached contracts unethical discrimination and irregularity in laws Instances of crime extortion kidnapping arms conflict terrorist attacks extremism amp civil wars nationwide strikes protests riots and mass expropriations are hindrances to timely and successful completion of projects 436 In 2021 local residents of Gwadar protested against the perceived threat to their livelihoods due to illegal fishing in local waters allegedly by Chinese trawlers 437 In 2023 the provincial government undertook a crackdown on the illegal trawlers after months of protests resulting in reappearance of marine life 438 Known for its dominance over civil institutions and democratic rule 439 China had sought to enlist Pakistan s military for the lead role as it guarantees the successful completion of projects at a time when the politicians were infighting for the ownership of the corridor projects 440 During the tenure of Nawaz Sharif many projects were launched in Punjab Province which has a significant vote bank for the PML N leader Upon assuming power Imran Khan pressurised the Chinese for development of Rashakai SEZ in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province which is stronghold for the PTI leader 441 2017 official statistics shared with the parliament of Pakistan showed out of 330 CPEC related projects in Pakistan 176 are in Punjab province while Balochistan had an allocation of 8 CPEC projects 442 During 2018 national election campaign Imran Khan rallied against the alleged corruption of previous government and highlighted unfair contracts in CPEC 443 Sceptics also question on the efficient usage of foreign money to develop the infrastructure given the level of corruption 444 China even temporarily halted the release of funds for 3 projects in 2017 due to reports of corruption 445 In February 2023 the Gwadar Port was predicted to cost five times more which the officials blamed on the Gwadar Port Authority GPA and the Ministry of Maritime Affairs for having developed the dredging project in last year at Rs 1bn on guesstimates in emergency circumstances for the delivery and diverting of a couple 50 000DWT cargo ships due to navigational challenges However the costs were then increased based on a proper study conducted by Pakistan Navy followed by competitive bidding 446 The delay of the maintenance dredging for a few years were already to possibly have serious repercussions in terms of penalties and damages that might have been imposed on GPA by the Concession Holder due to loss in business 446 Pakistani economic crisis Edit See also 2022 2023 Pakistani economic crisis The worst economic crisis in Pakistan s history since 2022 calls into question whether CPEC can achieve its development goals 447 Criticism EditKaiser Bengali a senior economist who was associated with Benazir Income Support Programme BISP Government of Pakistan and has headed research institutions including Social Policy and Development Centre SPDC Karachi and Sustainable Development Policy Institute SDPI Islamabad has highlighted that no feasibility study was conducted for the CPEC and the negative economic implications from the drawbacks of tax exemption given to Chinese products Environmental Impact Assessment was also not done to offset the environmental cost of CPEC 88 Chinese Intent Edit Although announced as developed for commercial purposes chances of port infrastructure projects transforming into a well equipped military naval base in the future cannot be ruled out 448 449 The earliest hints of military PLA involvement in this ambitious global project started appearing in 2015 450 In 2018 The New York Times speculated military interests of China in Pakistan instead of an economic project with peaceful intent Beijing based military analysts and high ranking officials have highlighted geostrategic importance of Gwadar Port and indicated the need to develop a naval base in near vicinity similar to the one China built in Djibouti 451 449 452 However when asked about Pakistan s offer to turn Gwadar into a PLA naval base 453 the spokeswoman for the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs denied its existence stating I have not heard of it It s my understanding that this issue was not touched upon Observers have also pointed out that by involving nations in its megaprojects China has silenced it s allies including Pakistan on the Uyghur situation This is notable as all those who are vocal like Imran Khan on the religious aspects of conflicts in Palestine Kashmir or that of Rohingya people does not highlight or raise the issue of human right violations against the Uyghurs 454 In 2022 many countries including Pakistan voted against and rejected another motion by Western countries seeking debate on China s treatment of Uyghur Muslims and Human Rights violations 455 The fibreoptic project would aid in terrestrial distribution of broadcast Television in Pakistan which will cooperate with Chinese media in the dissemination of Chinese culture The CPEC plan anticipates an intense and wide ranging penetration in most sectors of Pakistan s economy as well as its society by Chinese enterprises and culture Access to the full supply chain of the agrarian economy is a top priority for the Chinese 30 In 2022 Twitter suspended fake accounts being operated from Pakistan identified in a report by the Indian non profit organization Digital Forensics Research and Analytics Centre D FRAC that were involved in disinformation campaigns regarding CPEC The report claimed they was spreading false Chinese narratives regarding CPEC 456 Debt Trap Edit CPEC is seen as the main plank of China s Belt and Road Initiative 457 Should the initial 46 billion worth of projects be implemented the value of those projects would be roughly equivalent to all foreign direct investment in Pakistan since 1970 458 and would be equal to 17 of Pakistan s 2015 gross domestic product 459 The external debt of Pakistan has surged significantly after accepting this Chinese offer 35 Chinese monetary offer for Pakistan under CPEC being a combination of Debt amp Equity it is evaluated that the Debt component will be serviced at 7 8 interest per annum while Equity component is expected to deliver an estimated ROE of 17 per annum The Pakistan government however claims that the Chinese loans will be repaid over a period of 20 25 years at rate of 2 interest 460 Christine Fair a South Asia expert at Georgetown University has termed CPEC as Colonizing Pakistan to Enrich China From early 1990s IMF has provided more than a dozen bailouts on requests by Pakistan to save its dwindling economy which has struggled 22 of the 30 years in meeting the austerity measures demanded by IMF Nadeem ul Haque a former IMF official and former deputy chairman of the Pakistani government s Planning Commission wrote The pattern is always the same with the Fund s blessing the government goes on a shopping spree taking out costly loans for expensive projects thus building up even more debt and adding new inefficiencies After a few years another crisis ensues and it is met by another IMF program 461 The Pakistani establishment sees Chinese loans as an alternative to IMF loans 462 Many of the nations with which China has partnered have a history of political instability military intervention in governance problems of law and order rampant corruption lack of transparency and no entrepreneurial culture Hence the critics call these projects a neo colonial scheme and a debt trap for many nations 454 38 Parallels with Sri Lanka Edit Observers have drawn comparisons with 2022 economic turmoil of Sri Lanka as a consequence of inability to repay 463 6 billion in loans used to construct an expensive Chinese led port and airport project in Hambantota Sri Lankan authorities settled the debt by giving up control of the port and some 15 000 acres of land around it to China on a 99 year lease Citing examples of several countries from Malaysia to Colombia involved in Belt and Road Initiative the opacity 462 involved in the Chinese ventures have evoked accusations that such projects lead to corruption and mismanagement that ultimately risk losing the natural resources and sovereignty of the participating nations 464 461 It is in resemblance with Gwadar Port given to Chinese control for a lease period of 40 years 437 Pakistan has already started negotiating the debt relief from China owing to difficulties to repay the loan and is seeking ease in the payment obligations towards debt and its interest for the projects under CPEC 40 As of 2022 Pakistan owes China about 30 billion which accounts for nearly 30 of its foreign debt 465 Financial Implications Edit According to official statistics 20 of CPEC is debt based finance 466 while 80 of CPEC are investments in Joint Ventures JV enterprise between Pakistan and China 467 with the initial estimate of project contributing to 40 000 jobs for local Pakistanis and 80 000 jobs for Chinese However at a later stage of project execution it was reported that in some cases China has apparently brought in its prisoners as workforce thereby depriving the opportunities for local Pakistani population 468 Official statistics suggested a return of US 6 billion to 8 billion from taxes per annum such as road and bridge tolls The total CPEC loan is 6 of Pakistan s GDP however many commentators and a few Governments claimed the project a debt trap 469 Nevertheless officials countered that 3 5 of Pakistani GDP per annum is lost due to poor transportation networks which the CPEC investment aims to remedy leading to added benefits for any lag in Pakistan s growth statistic Economic analysts have stated tangible benefits of this initiative including an end to the major energy shortages in Pakistan which had previously crippled economic growth 470 On 14 January 2020 Pakistan operationalized Gwadar Port for Afghan transit trade 471 On 31 May 2021 Gwadar Port become fully operational along with the availability of online booking for the delivery of goods 472 In addition to the aforementioned issues some sources have suggested that the interest rate for CPEC related loans would be high with India s Daily News and Analysis paper suggesting that Pakistan had unwittingly accepted loans that would be offered at very high rates of interest 473 although the actual interest rates were negotiated prior to acceptance and for most projects will be 1 6 92 conversely previous Pakistani infrastructure projects financed by the World Bank carried an interest rate between 5 and 8 5 in comparison and have strings attached 474 265 Several articles in Pakistan have criticised the project s finances as being shrouded in mystery while one article suggested that there is far too much secrecy and far too little transparency 475 The Private Power and Infrastructure Board has also been accused of irregularities in the approval process for coal power plants and the tariffs at which Pakistan is contractually obliged to purchase electricity from those plants 476 with special concern regarding potential irregularities in the tariff approved for the 300 MW coal power plant to be built in Pind Dadan Khan by China Machinery Engineering Corporation 477 In December 2017 it was reported that as per the Gwadar Port agreement the Chinese companies would get 91 per cent but the Gwadar Port Authority would get only 9 per cent of revenue In the same month a seven member delegation of Senators visited China On returning from China all the Senators issued press statements and unequivocally claimed that Balochistan would not get anything from the CPEC One of the senators Senator Kabir Muhammad Shahi also claimed that while 60 of the funds are being used for power generation other than 300 MW for Gwadar Port not even 1 MW of that would be given to Balochistan 478 479 Trade Imbalance Edit Local traders in Pakistan have expressed their reservations over CPEC 480 Chinese exports through the Karakoram Highway have entered the domestic Pakistani market and are cheaper due to the relatively higher cost of production in Pakistan 481 It has also been speculated that the CPEC will replace Pakistani exports by Chinese ones in external markets 481 Increasing import of automobiles weapons home appliances and agricultural products from China to Pakistan is major concern for the disproportion trade deficit 24 Baloch Nationalists Edit Resistance of impoverished locals in the Balochistan region s Gwadar is a major hurdle in this project 374 The region is a wealth of minerals but this does not reflect in the impoverished lives of residents 482 who struggle for basic minimum necessities such as clean drinking water reliable power supply education and health facilities Government neglect on poverty and unemployment has given rise to religious extremism Non consultation before taking up the plan and the denial of employment to local population by bringing people from other provinces to work for the project has increased the hostility 482 Some Baloch nationalists have opposed the large scale development projects envisioned by CPEC fearing that such developments in the province would eventually result in local residents losing control over natural resources 483 Others have alleged that CPEC is a conspiracy meant to stimulate the settlement of migrants from other regions of Pakistan in order to render ethnic Baloch a minority in the province 484 In accordance to the Pakistani Government s announcement of its intent to issue resident cards to the city s inhabitants as a security measure to prevent the movement of firearms into the city 485 former Chief Minister of Balochistan province Akhtar Mengal suggested at a political rally in November 2015 that execution of CPEC projects and the resident card policy would eventually result in ethnic Baloch being denied entry into the city 486 The resident cards measure would require any non resident visitor to the city to register at designated security checkpoints prior to entering the city by road 485 without any reference to ethnicity The former Chief Minister did however clarify that he would not oppose development projects in the province that he believed would uplift the plight of local residents 486 Shortly thereafter the Pakistani government announced its intention to establish a training institute named Pak China Technical and Vocational Institute at Gwadar which is to be completed at the cost of 943 million rupees to impart skills to local residents to train them to operate machinery at the port 45 Indian analyst Athar Hussain the director of the Asia Research Centre at London School of Economics has expressed concerns that the CPEC is likely to bring more development to regions that are already developed instead of poor areas such as Balochistan 487 Burzine Waghmar a member of the Centre for the Study of Pakistan SOAS University of London suggested that CPEC projects are not targeted towards benefiting the indigenous Baloch population and will accelerate human rights violations in the province 487 In December 2016 the Federation of Pakistan Chambers of Commerce and Industry FPCCI released a report that given the rate at which Chinese nationals were migrating to Balochistan for the CPEC project the Chinese would outnumber the Baloch people by 2048 raising concerns of marginalisation of the Baloch citizens 488 489 Gwadar residents concerns Edit Access to traditional fishing zones and subsistence fishing practices involvement and hiring of local people in the developmental projects curbing interference of security forces in daily city affairs and easing the navigation from checkpoints and surveillance installations right healthcare and quality education are among the demands of Gwadar residents 490 While nationalists openly oppose CPEC some local leaders and residents of Gwadar city have also expressed concern in regards to the project the head of Gwadar s local fisherman association stated in an interview with NBC News that Development is good China is our great friend this CPEC thing sounds amazing but don t forget that this is our land first 491 Other residents doubt they will see any of the benefits promised by CPEC while others fear they will be evicted from their homes in order to make way for infrastructure works 492 In response to concerns of local residents Lt General Amer Riaz who currently heads security operations in the province stated that locals would not be deprived of benefits and that local Gwadar residents would have the first right to everything 493 Pakistan s Minister of Planning National Reforms and Development Ahsan Iqbal further stated in May 2016 that Gwadar residents would be regarded as main stakeholders in the city s master plan and that fishermen specifically would also be accommodated by the plan 494 The developer of Gwadar Port COPHC has also announced that it will assist Gwadar s fishermen to help boost the region s seafood industry by developing programmes to improve the quality of local seafoods 495 KP Provincial Assembly Edit Some planning aspects and technicalities associated with the route have been criticised in political forums and by the media 496 The Provincial Assembly of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province adopted a resolution against the alleged decision of the central government to change the multibillion route of the proposed project by diverting it away from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province 497 The federal Minister of Planning Development and Reform Ahsan Iqbal formally denied any change in the alignment 50 498 499 According to Dr Ahmad Rashid Malik senior research fellow at the Institute of Strategic Studies Islamabad ISSI the route controversy is baseless and an unfounded reality 500 As a result of objections to CPEC the Chinese government in 2015 issued a statement urging Pakistani political parties to resolve their differences over the project 501 Indian objections Edit India s objections to Chinese activity in Pakistan administred Kashmir dates back to the 1970s when the People s Liberation Army built the Karakoram Highway that linked China s far western province of Xinjiang with northern Pakistan 502 The Government of India which shares tense relations with Pakistan objects to the CPEC project as upgrade works to the Karakoram Highway are taking place in Gilgit Baltistan territory that India claims as its own During the visit of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to China in 2015 the Indian Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj reportedly told Chinese Communist Party general secretary Xi Jinping that projects passing through Gilgit Baltistan are unacceptable as they require construction in the claimed territory 503 504 India s Foreign Secretary Subrahmanyam Jaishankar also confirmed that the issue had been raised with the Chinese government on the trip 505 Swaraj reiterated this stance during a meeting in August 2016 with Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi stating India would resolutely oppose the corridor in Kashmir 506 India further did not initially object to major Chinese sponsored upgrade works to the Karakoram Highway after a 2010 earthquake though it did object the presence of Chinese troops in the region that were sent to guard Chinese workers 507 India further did not object to construction of the Mangla Dam undertaken with World Bank funding and British technical assistance in southern Kashmir a region which India claims as its own territory India even maintained that the Wullar Barrage project in Indian administered Kashmir which Pakistan regards as a violation of the Indus Water Treaty would ultimately be beneficial for the Mangla Dam 508 India further did not object to construction works at the Kashmir s Neelum Jhelum Hydropower Plant under construction with Chinese assistance since 2008 India in 1991 did not raise objections to its construction 509 Following the 2005 Kashmir earthquake large scale reconstruction work of infrastructure took place across northern Kashmir with the assistance of South Korean Turkish and Saudi firms 510 Chinese companies took part in 14 post earthquake reconstruction projects in the disputed region worth 6 billion 511 India did not object to these works despite the fact that infrastructure near the militarily sensitive Line of Control were upgraded Indian objection to Chinese construction works in the Gilgit Baltistan arose in 2011 in response to a Chinese complaint regarding a joint Indian Vietnamese oil exploration project in the disputed South China Sea 512 The influential Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses a think tank funded by the Indian Ministry of Defence 513 in 2011 called for India to begin raising objection to Chinese projects in the region at the international level 514 See also Edit China portal Pakistan portal Engineering portalBangladesh China India Myanmar Economic Corridor Central Asia Regional Economic Cooperation Program China Pakistan relations Khyber Pass Economic Corridor Maritime Silk Road One Belt One Road initiative Quadrilateral Traffic in Transit Agreement String of Pearls Indian Ocean The China Pakistan Economic Corridor of the Belt and Road Initiative book Notes Edit Which Pakistan alleges are supported by Indian intelligence services 376 Between 2014 and 2015 acts of terrorism decreased by 50 in the province while sharp decreases were also noted in deaths kidnappings and sectarian killings 379 References Edit a b c d e f Jon Boone 20 April 2015 China president in Pakistan to sign 30bn land corridor agreement The Guardian Islamabad Retrieved 3 November 2022 Shayan Rauf China Pakistan Economic Corridor CPEC britannica com Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 4 November 2022 Investment under CPEC rises to 62 billion Zubair Business Recorder Works on CPEC projects to be accelerated in 2020 Asad Umar Dunya News Work on CPEC projects to be accelerated The Express Tribune 11 January 2020 Umair Jamal 3 November 2022 Pakistani 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would reverse a colossal loss of 3 5pc of GDP that Pakistan was incurring due to poor transport infrastructure Shah Saeed 20 April 2015 China s Xi Jinping Launches Investment Deal in Pakistan The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 23 April 2015 Karachi to Lahore Motorway Project Approved Dawn The Dawn Media Group 2014 Retrieved 5 September 2014 Railway track project planned from Karachi to Peshawar Pakistan Tribune 13 November 2015 Retrieved 6 March 2016 CPEC may get extra billion dollars Pakistan The Nation 22 June 2015 Retrieved 11 December 2015 Zhen Summer 11 November 2015 Chinese firm takes control of Gwadar Port free trade zone in Pakistan South China Morning Post Retrieved 11 December 2015 Salman Rafi 23 October 2016 A new East India Company in the making www atimes com Retrieved 22 November 2016 a b Malik Ahmad Rashid 7 December 2015 A miracle on the Indus River The Diplomat Retrieved 11 December 2015 a b Electricity shortfall increases to 4 500 MW Dunya News 29 June 2015 Retrieved 11 December 2015 a b c Kugelman Michael 9 July 2015 Pakistan s Other National Struggle Its Energy Crisis The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 11 December 2015 a b c d e Parliamentary body on CPEC expresses concern over coal import Daily Times 19 November 2015 Archived from the original on 22 December 2015 Retrieved 11 December 2015 a b Shah Saeed 9 April 2015 China to Build Pipeline From Iran to Pakistan The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 6 December 2015 Quaid e Azam Solar Park Solar energy s 100 MW to arrive in April The Express Tribune 27 March 2015 China Pakistan Sign Deals Worth USD 1 6 Billion to Beef Up CPEC Outlook India 12 August 2015 Retrieved 13 August 2015 Tiezzi Shannon 13 August 2016 The China Pakistan Economic Corridor Gets Even More Ambitious The Diplomate Retrieved 5 February 2016 China Pakistan sign co op agreements worth over 10 billion yuan Xinhua News Agency 12 August 2015 Retrieved 5 February 2016 a b Pakistan China to cooperate in space as part of Karamay declaration Dawn 19 August 2016 Retrieved 5 February 2016 Shahbaz Rana 1 September 2015 UK to partner in CPEC provide 121 6 million grant The Express Tribune Shahbaz Rana 23 October 2015 Pakistan ADB sign 178m agreement for M 4 section The Express Tribune CPEC made part of China s 13th 5 year development plan Weidong Pakistan Today 23 November 2015 Pak China Technology Park on anvil The Express Tribune 2 December 2015 China s Xinjiang seals Pakistan ties with 2 billion in deals The Express Tribune The Express Tribune 7 April 2016 Retrieved 8 April 2016 With Gwadar set to go operational CPEC dreams come true DAWN COM 13 November 2016 Retrieved 13 November 2016 Rail sea freight service open with China The Express Tribune The Express Tribune 2 December 2016 Retrieved 2 December 2016 First cargo train under CPEC leaves China for Karachi Daily Pakistan Global Retrieved 2 December 2016 Strohecker Karin 23 November 2016 Pakistan says China to make extra 8 5 billion investments in rail energy Reuters Egypt Expresses Desire to Join CPEC New Indian Express 6 February 2017 Retrieved 6 March 2017 Chinese firms to invest 20b in KP Khattak The News 7 January 2017 Retrieved 6 March 2017 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa inks deals worth 20bn with Chinese companies Dawn 3 March 2017 Retrieved 6 March 2017 a b Kiani Khaleeq 3 March 2018 Energy investments under CPEC shifted to hydropower sector DAWN COM Retrieved 3 March 2018 CPEC body brought no investment ISLAMABAD Dawn APP 19 August 2022 Retrieved 2 November 2022 Shahbaz Rana 18 August 2022 PM gives nod to abolish CPEC Authority The Express Tribune Retrieved 2 November 2022 a b Shahzada Irfan Ahmed 3 September 2017 CPEC is not a game changer it s game over Interview Kaiser Bengali The News on Sunday The News International Retrieved 30 December 2022 Saran Shyam 10 September 2015 What China s One Belt and One Road Strategy Means for India Asia and the World The Wire India Archived from the original on 18 November 2015 Retrieved 6 December 2015 Shabaz Rana 8 May 2022 Only 3 CPEC projects in Gwadar completed The Express Tribune Retrieved 2 November 2022 a b Industrial potential Deep sea port in Gwadar would turn things around The Express Tribune 17 March 2016 Retrieved 9 April 2016 a b c d e Butt Naveed 3 September 2015 Economic Corridor China to Extend Assistance at 1 6 Percent Interest Rate Business Recorder Archived from the original on 17 November 2015 Retrieved 16 December 2015 Gwadar Nawabshah LNG project part of CPEC The Nation 28 March 2016 Retrieved 9 April 2016 Li Yan Groundwork laid for China Pakistan FTZ ECNS Retrieved 6 December 2015 Economic Zone Government Hands Gwadar Land over to China Business Recorder 12 November 2015 Gwadar Port to become distribution center for ME market Zhang Business Recorder 17 March 2016 Retrieved 9 April 2016 include bonded warehouses manufacturing international purchasing transit and distribution transshipment commodity display and supporting services and where the federal provincial and local taxes Pakistan approves massive tax exemptions for Gwadar port operators Express Tribune 24 May 2016 Retrieved 25 May 2016 In a major move the ECC approved a complete income tax holiday for 23 years to businesses that will be established in the Gwadar Free Zone A 23 year exemption from sales tax and federal excise duty has also been granted to businesses that will be established inside the Gwadar Free Zone However if these businesses make supplies and sales outside the free zone they will be subject to taxation Pakistan approves massive tax exemptions for Gwadar port operators Express Tribune 24 May 2016 Retrieved 25 May 2016 Under the move the concession will extend to contractors and subcontractors and COPHCL companies for 20 years Pakistan approves massive tax exemptions for Gwadar port operators Express Tribune 24 May 2016 Retrieved 25 May 2016 Pakistan approved customs duty exemption for the COPHCL its operating companies contractors and subcontractors for a period of 40 years on import of equipment materials plants machinery appliances and accessories for the construction of Gwadar Port and the associated Free Zone Sial Amer 27 August 2015 China converts Rs 23b Gwadar Airport loan into grant Pakistan Today Retrieved 6 December 2015 China to build Pakistan s largest airport at Gwadar Daily Times 12 November 2015 Archived from the original on 14 November 2015 China converts 230m loan for Gwadar airport into grant Geo tv 23 September 2015 a b c Haider Mehtab 23 September 2015 China converts 230m loan for Gwadar airport into grant Geo TV Retrieved 6 December 2015 China kick starts Pakistan s Gwadar East Bay Expressway World Highway 9 September 2015 Archived from the original on 23 February 2019 Retrieved 9 April 2016 Ranade Jayadeva 30 June 2017 Does the China Pakistan Economic Corridor Really Help Pakistan Liberal Studies 2 1 33 41 ISSN 2688 9374 Archived from the original on 15 July 2020 Retrieved 14 September 2019 Pak China Friendship Hospital China Pakistan Economic Corridor CPEC Official Website cpec gov pk a b Rs12 13bn released for CPEC projects under PSDP 2019 20 Dunya News Budget 2019 20 Gwadar gets over Rs 4 billion for uplift of projects www thenews com pk PURCHASE OF POWER PAYMENTS TO CHINESE COMPANIES TO BE FACILITATED THROUGH REVOLVING FUND Business Recorder Retrieved 6 December 2015 Shahbaz Rana 26 July 2015 Eastern CPEC route unfeasible report The Express Tribune Retrieved 8 June 2016 Questions for Oral Answers and Their Replies PDF Senate Secretariat Question 126 Senate of Pakistan 23 October 2014 Retrieved 11 February 2016 From Havelian to Shah Maqsood Interchange the proposed alignment of CPEC will overlap with the alignment of E 35 This section will be 15 km long and undertaken with ADB assistance as 4 Lane Motorway with 6 Lane structures Shah Maqsood Interchange Islamabad section will be 50 km long and constructed along a new alignment as 4 Lane Motorway with 6 Lane structures a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint location link Questions for Oral Answers and Their Replies PDF Senate Secretariat Question 126 Senate of Pakistan 23 October 2014 Retrieved 11 February 2016 Shinkiari Mansehra Abbottabad section will be 50 km long and constructed as 4 Lane Expressway Abbottabad Havelian section will be 11 km in length and constructed as 4 Lane Motorway with 6 Lane structures Portion between Abbottabad and Havelian is now to be a dual carriageway rather than motorway a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint location link a b Questions for Oral Answers and Their Replies PDF Senate Secretariat Question 126 Senate of Pakistan 23 October 2014 Retrieved 11 February 2016 Raikot Thakot section will be 280 km in length and constructed as a 2 Lane highway along a new alignment Thakot Shinkiari section will be 74 km in length wherein existing 2 Lane KKH will be upgraded and improved a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint location link a b c PM Sharif performs ground breaking of Havelian Thakot Motorway The News Pakistan 28 April 2016 Retrieved 4 May 2016 a b 133 billion Pakistan rupees equivalent to US 1 26 billion as of May 2016 a b c d e CPEC eastern alignment Pakistan China ink agreements worth 4 2b Tribune Pakistan 4 May 2016 Retrieved 4 May 2016 Questions for Oral Answers and Their Replies PDF Senate Secretariat Question 126 Senate of Pakistan 23 October 2014 Retrieved 11 February 2016 Raikot Thakot section 2 Lane 255 8 km Feasibility Study Completed by Chinese Side However the Alignment falls under the Four Dams planned by WAPDA namely Bhasha Dasu Pattan and Thakot The Road construction is planned to commensurate with Dam Construction activities In the meanwhile the existing KKH is being improved in its present condition a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint location link NHA launches projects to improve KKH s condition The News 22 August 2015 Retrieved 11 February 2016 7 5 billion PKR 71 66 million USD as of 10 February 2016 PM LAUNCHES KKH PROJECTS THANKS CHINA FOR ROAD NETWORKS UPGRADATION HELP Pakistan Observer 29 September 2012 Archived from the original on 15 February 2016 Retrieved 11 February 2016 PM Nawaz inaugurates Pak China Friendship Tunnels over Attabad Lake Dawn 14 September 2015 Retrieved 11 February 2016 PM inaugurates tunnels over Attabad Lake in G B The Express Tribune 14 September 2015 Retrieved 11 February 2016 PM announces construction of Skardu Gilgit road Samaa TV 24 November 2015 Retrieved 6 December 2015 note 50 billion Pakistani Rupees US 475 million as of December 2015 First phase of Karachi Lahore motorway launched Dawn 12 March 2015 Retrieved 16 January 2016 a b c d e China s CSCEC to build 20000 9bn motorway in Pakistan as part of planned corridor Global Construction Review 8 January 2016 Retrieved 16 January 2016 a b Karachi Lahore motorway Project to be completed in 3 years Pakistan Tribune 29 January 2015 Retrieved 16 December 2015 700 Billion Pak rupees US 6 6 billion as of 16 December 2015 a b Peshawar Karachi Motorway cpec gov pk Retrieved 28 January 2018 Nawaz Sharif to inaugurate Karachi Lahore Motorway on Dec 19 Dispatch News Desk 17 December 2015 Retrieved 16 January 2016 Karachi Hyderabad Motorway will be completed in 30 months PM Pakistan The Nation 11 March 2015 Retrieved 11 December 2015 Nawaz inaugurates completed portion of Karachi Hyderabad M 9 motorway Dawn 3 February 2017 Retrieved 8 February 2017 a b Hyderabad Sukkur section China S Korea lobbying for M 6 motorway The Express Tribune 28 July 2016 Karachi Lahore motorway Stakeholders unhappy with environment impact report The Express Tribune 6 March 2015 Retrieved 16 January 2016 a b PAK PM inaugurates Sukkur Multan highway Business Standard 6 May 2016 Retrieved 8 May 2016 China s CSCEC to build 2 9bn motorway in Pakistan as part of planned corridor Global Construction Review Haider Mehtab 28 May 2014 Govt allocates Rs 73 billion for Pakistan China trade corridor The News Retrieved 6 December 2015 Samar Azeem 13 November 2015 JCC of CPEC decides to enhance capacity of Thar power projects to 2 600 MW The News Retrieved 6 December 2015 Rana Shahbaz 15 November 2015 ECNEC clears motorway s Lahore Multan section The Express Tribune Retrieved 11 December 2015 Consortium Wins Pakistan Contract The Wall Street Journal 9 December 2015 Retrieved 11 December 2015 a b c Kiani Khaleeq 16 December 2015 Two Asian banks to give Rs 29bn for M 4 project Dawn News Retrieved 16 December 2015 M 4 to Reduce Travel Time Contribute to Trade Corridor Pakistan Observer 7 January 2015 Archived from the original on 28 June 2015 Retrieved 16 January 2016 Ecnec approves 230 km sic Karachi Lahore Motorway Pakistan The Nation 25 November 2015 Retrieved 16 January 2016 a b KP remained part of CPEC Western Route meetings at federal level The News Pakistan 13 January 2016 Retrieved 16 January 2016 COAS Assures Balochistan People Will Prosper With Upcoming Projects Geo News 1 January 2016 Retrieved 26 January 2016 PM Inaugurates Western Alignment of CPEC Daily Frontier Star 31 December 2015 Retrieved 2 February 2016 China to finance 90 of Sukkur Multan Motorway Daily Times 12 May 2016 Retrieved 13 May 2016 CHINA PAKISTAN ECONOMIC CORRIDOR CPEC WESTERN ROUTE NEW FOUR LANE HIGHWAY FACILITY FROM BARAHMA BAHTAR TO D I KHAN AS PART OF WESTERN ROUTE OF CHINA PAKISTAN ECONOMIC CORRIDOR CPEC 285 km APPROX PACKAGES I TO V PDF National Highway Authority National Highway Authority p 38 Retrieved 2 February 2016 PM Nawaz performs groundbreaking of Motorway in D I Khan The News 17 May 2016 Retrieved 19 May 2016 Haider Mehtab 24 April 2016 Ecnec approves motorway from Burhan Hakla to DI Khan The News Retrieved 4 May 2016 Nawaz to open Gwadar Turbat Highway project today Business Recorder 3 February 2016 Retrieved 3 February 2016 110 billion Pakistani Rupees US 1 05 billion as of 3 Feb 2016 a b PARLIAMENTARY BODY MONITORING PROGRESS OF CPEC Business Recorder 9 January 2016 Retrieved 16 January 2016 Nawaz to open Gwadar Turbat Highway project today Business Recorder 3 February 2016 Retrieved 3 February 2016 a b PM inaugurates western route of CPEC in Zhob Dawn 6 January 2016 Retrieved 3 February 2016 ADB approves 197million for Balochistan road project Pakistan The Nation 6 July 2014 Retrieved 5 February 2016 a b c ADB Provides 197 Million to Develop Highway in Balochistan Asian Development Bank 12 May 2015 Retrieved 5 February 2016 a b c ADB to provide 72m for highways in Balochistan Dawn 15 January 2016 Retrieved 5 February 2016 NHA completes work on 3 delayed projects in Balochistan Pakistan Obserer 22 January 2017 Archived from the original on 11 February 2017 Retrieved 9 February 2017 PM inaugurates CPEC s western route in Zhob Tribune Pakistan 30 December 2015 Retrieved 29 January 2016 PM INAUGURATES 193 km LONG GWADAR HOSHAB M 8 Business Recorder Retrieved 3 February 2016 Pakistan to build CPEC western route by the middle of 2018 Economic Times India 15 January 2015 Retrieved 16 January 2016 Overcoming Challenges to CPEC Spearhead Research 27 May 2015 Archived from the original on 15 April 2016 Retrieved 9 April 2016 China s AIIB to co finance first project with ADB in Pakistan Reuters 3 May 2016 Retrieved 28 January 2023 a b M4 motorway PM to inaugurate Gojra Shorkot section today The Express Tribune Pakistan 16 November 2015 Retrieved 16 December 2015 a b Asian Bank UK to co finance 327m in economic corridor Daily Times Pakistan 1 September 2015 Retrieved 16 January 2016 Pakistan ADB sign 178m agreement for M 4 section The Express Tribune Pakistan 23 October 2015 Retrieved 16 January 2016 Multibillion dollar project Nawaz inaugurates CPEC s western route Daily Times 31 December 2015 Retrieved 16 January 2019 Feasibility study for rehab of Karachi Peshawar rail line in progress The Nation 23 January 2016 Retrieved 10 February 2016 a b c d Havelian to Khunjerab railway track to be upgraded under China Pakistan Economic Corridor Sost Today 15 January 2016 Retrieved 10 February 2016 Pakistan railway project hanging in balance as China delays finance Ani News 23 February 2022 Retrieved 29 May 2022 PESHAWAR KARACHI PR TRACK TO BE UPGRADED BY CHINA Pakistan Observer 12 November 2015 Archived from the original on 16 November 2015 a b 21 Railway Stations to be upgraded in three years Minister Dispatch News Desk 11 November 2015 Retrieved 11 December 2015 Pakistan cuts CPEC investment in railways by USD 2 billion citing huge burden of loans The Economic Times 2 October 2018 Purchase of power payments to Chinese companies to be facilitated through revolving fund Business Recorder 5 December 2015 Retrieved 6 December 2015 Bokhari Farhan Parkin Benjamin 4 January 2023 Pakistan taps Chinese credit for railway upgrade despite debt crisis Financial Times Retrieved 4 January 2023 China unveils rail network upgrade gas pipeline plans for Pakistan The Hindu Retrieved 9 August 2016 Expansion and reconstruction of existing Line ML 1 China Pakistan Economic Corridor CPEC Official Website cpec gov pk Retrieved 26 September 2020 Karachi Peshawar railway line being upgraded under CPEC Daily Times 22 January 2016 Retrieved 10 February 2016 Railway tracks to be built upgraded as part of CPEC project report Dawn 21 December 2015 Retrieved 10 February 2016 New railway tracks planned under CPEC Report Pakistan Today 21 December 2015 Retrieved 11 February 2016 a b New railway tracks planned under CPEC report Dawn 20 December 2015 Retrieved 10 February 2016 Mehtab Haider 28 May 2014 Govt allocates Rs 73 billion for Pakistan China trade corridor thenews com pk Archived from the original on 28 May 2014 CDWP approves uplift projects worth Rs 244bn Dawn 1 December 2013 Retrieved 10 February 2016 Orange Line part of CPEC LHC heard 22 January 2016 Retrieved 6 March 2016 Orange Line Project is part of China Pakistan Economic Corridor the Punjab government told the Lahore High Court yesterday a b Siddiqui Ahmed Hussain 13 July 2015 CPEC projects status cost and benefits Dawn Retrieved 6 December 2015 Rs 165bn Lahore metro train project approved Dawn 6 May 2015 Retrieved 6 December 2015 Lahore joins the metro club Railway Gazette Adnan Imran 9 October 2015 Work on Metro Train in Full Swing Express Tribune Pakistan Retrieved 9 February 2016 Good news on track Lahore to get Pakistan s first metro train Express Tribune Pakistan 23 May 2014 Retrieved 9 February 2016 Annual Plan 2015 16 PDF Ministry of Planning Development and Reform Pakistan p 130 Archived from the original PDF on 13 March 2016 Retrieved 13 March 2016 OVER 80 PERCENT INVESTMENT UNDER CPEC TO COME THROUGH PRIVATE SECTOR AHSAN Business Recorder 17 December 2015 Retrieved 29 January 2016 The minister said out of the total investment of US 46 billion US 38 billion would be spent on energy related projects which was on independent power producer IPP mode and would not increase burden of national debt a b Shoaib ur Rehman Siddiqui 17 April 2015 1ST PHASE OF CPEC TO BRING 35BN INVESTMENT IN ENERGY AHSAN IQBAL Business Recorder The pandemic is hurting China s Belt and Road Initiative The Economist 4 June 2020 Fazl e Haider Syed 29 July 2020 The Impact of the COVID 19 Pandemic on the China Pakistan Economic Corridor Jamestown Foundation Retrieved 31 July 2020 Faced with Blackouts Pakistan s Largest Public Park Goes Solar Voice of America 6 February 2017 Retrieved 8 February 2017 a b Pak China 900 MW Solar Power Project agreed to expedite The News Teller 27 June 2015 Archived from the original on 30 March 2019 Retrieved 11 December 2015 Butt Riaz 26 July 2015 In Pakistan Chinese firm helps ease an energy crisis The Telegraph Archived from the original on 22 December 2015 Retrieved 11 December 2015 a b c World s largest solar park to light up Pakistan s future Dawn No 8 September 2015 Retrieved 11 March 2016 Turkish firm sells power in Pakistan Hurriyet Daily News 26 July 2013 Retrieved 27 July 2013 Kiani Khaleeq 2 April 2015 6 000MW power project accords to be signed during Xi s visit Dawn Retrieved 11 December 2015 Kundi Imran Ali 18 July 2015 18 projects under CPEC to generate 13 880 MW Pakistan The Nation Retrieved 11 December 2015 China invests 115 million to develop wind energy in Pakistan The Nation 2 August 2015 Retrieved 20 May 2016 Deal signed for 870 MW hydropower project Nation 12 April 2014 Retrieved 11 December 2015 Pakistan China ink 51 MoUs Daily Times 20 April 2015 Retrieved 11 December 2015 Poon Daniel 8 December 2015 China s partnerships could lead the way Asia and the Pacific Policy Society Retrieved 11 December 2015 Govt seeks Bhasha Dam inclusion in CPEC The Nation 11 December 2015 Retrieved 11 December 2015 DIAMIR BHASHA DAM LIKELY TO BE PART OF CPEC AHSAN Business Recorder 18 November 2015 Retrieved 11 December 2015 Rana Shahbaz 15 November 2017 Pakistan stops bid to include Diamer Bhasha Dam in CPEC tribune com pk The Express Tribune Retrieved 19 November 2017 PURCHASE OF POWER PAYMENTS TO CHINESE COMPANIES TO BE FACILITATED THROUGH REVOLVING FUND Business Recorder 5 December 2015 Retrieved 11 December 2015 Deal worth 2 4b signed for Kohala power project The Express Tribune 1 June 2020 Retrieved 23 August 2020 China to construct 1 124 megawatt power project in PoK under CPEC The Economic Times Retrieved 23 August 2020 Azad Kashmir Bringing Water Power amp Beauty to Pakistan amp CPEC 6 October 2020 a b c d Four mega projects under CPEC launched The Nation 27 May 2019 Retrieved 27 May 2019 Hubco s power project on track Dawn 12 October 2015 Retrieved 20 February 2016 CPEC PSDP Funded Projects China Pakistan Economic Corridor CPEC Official Website cpec gov pk a b Second unit of Sahiwal power plant being inaugurated today The Nation 3 July 2017 Retrieved 6 July 2017 Liu Youliang 9 March 2015 Application For a Generation License of Huaneng Shandong Ruyi Pakistan Energy Private Limited For Its 2 X 660 MW Imported Coal Fired Power Project at Sahiwal Pakistan PDF NEPRA p 235 Archived from the original PDF on 7 March 2016 Retrieved 17 December 2015 Huaneng Shandong Ruyi Pakistan Energy Pvt Limited LAG 292 Huaneng Shandong Generation License PDF NEPRA p 18 Archived from the original PDF on 22 December 2015 Retrieved 17 December 2015 Nepra accepts tariff petition of Chinese firm for power plant Pakistan The Nation 1 May 2015 Retrieved 19 February 2016 TARIFF REVIEW PETITION FOR 1X330 MW LOCAL COAL FIRED POWER PROJECT IN PIND DADAN KHAN SALT RANGE PUNJAB PDF NEPRA pp See table on pages 19 20 Archived from the original PDF on 5 June 2016 Retrieved 11 August 2016 Under pressure Nepra may okay excessive tariff for CMEC The Nation Retrieved 11 August 2016 TARIFF REVIEW PETITION FOR 1X330 MW LOCAL COAL FIRED POWER PROJECT IN PIND DADAN KHAN SALT RANGE PUNJAB PDF NEPRA Archived from the original PDF on 5 June 2016 Retrieved 11 August 2016 In addition the Authority did not include the transportation or beneficiation cost required for Salt Range in the assumed price of US 86 95 t assuming the per Mm million btu price of Thar coal Since the 6 20 Petitioner has assumed an average of 50 km transportation distance from the coal mines to the power plant the transportation costs will work out to be US 13 5 assuming the transportation cost of US 0 27 t km approved for Thar coal This plus the assumed levelized beneficiation cost of US 11 t required for Salt Range coal will work out to be US 111 45 t From the above analysis it is clear that in light of the approved coal price for Thar Coal and the much smaller production scale and additional transportation amp beneficiation costs required for Salt Range coal the Petitioner s assumed coal price US 111 86 t in its tariff petition is reasonable and justified Progress on Thar coal projects Dawn 9 November 2015 Retrieved 19 February 2016 a b Shanghai govt sign Thar coal power project Dunya TV 21 August 2015 Retrieved 19 February 2016 LOI signed with Chinese company for 1320 MW project at Thar Pakistan Today 21 August 2015 Retrieved 19 February 2016 Pakistan China sign LoI to set up The News Pakistan 22 August 2015 Retrieved 19 February 2016 Mirza Javed 30 January 2015 Govt approves upfront tariffs for Thar coal fired power projects The News Pakistan Retrieved 14 March 2016 Nepra has notified upfront tariff of 8 5015 cents unit for Thar coal based power projects of 330 megawatts on foreign financing while tariff for similar capacity projects on local financing has been fixed at 9 5643cents unit The upfront tariff will be 8 3341 cents unit for coal fired power projects of 660 megawatts on foreign financing while tariff for similar capacity projects on local financing has been fixed at 9 5668 cents unit The upfront tariff will be 7 9889 cents unit for power projects of 1 099 megawatts on foreign financing while tariff for similar capacity projects on local financing has been fixed at 9 1368 cents unit Haq Shahram 20 March 2015 Chinese bank promises 1b for Thar coal mining Express Tribune Retrieved 11 August 2016 The cost of electricity for the initial 10 years will be 8 5 cents per unit and when the loan period ends the cost will come down to 6 cents per unit China Machinery Engineering to fund Pakistan coal projects China Daily 22 December 2015 Retrieved 19 February 2016 Thar coal field s Block II achieves financial close The News Pakistan 3 January 2016 Retrieved 19 February 2016 The production of remaining 660 megawatts from block II will begin by the end of 2018 or by the beginning of 2019 while the mining and energy projects in block I and block VI of Thar will also reach their financial close this year said the official Rapoza Kenneth 19 February 2016 China Shutters Coal Mines at Home Opens 2 Bln Mining Project in Pakistan Forbes Retrieved 19 February 2016 Shoh Han Tih 9 April 2015 Chinese and Qatari firms to build coal power plant in Pakistan South China Morning Post Retrieved 17 December 2015 Shih Toh Han 9 April 2015 Chinese firm in US 2 09 billion Pakistan power plant deal South China Morning Post Retrieved 17 December 2015 Kiani Khaleeq 14 February 2015 Nepra approves upfront tariff for Port Qasim plant Dawn Retrieved 17 December 2015 PM opens over 1 300 MW Port Qasim coal fired power project www thenews com pk Retrieved 27 February 2018 Bhatti Sohail Iqbal 30 September 2015 Chinese company to build LNG gas pipeline projects in Pakistan Dawn News Retrieved 6 December 2015 Bhatti Sohail 30 September 2015 Chinese company to build LNG gas pipeline projects in Pakistan Dawn Retrieved 2 February 2016 Financial bid for Gwadar LNG Terminal to be opened this week Pakistan Today 8 November 2015 Retrieved 6 December 2015 Kamal Maha Fall Winter 2015 Dynamics of Natural Gas Pricing The Critical Need For a Natural Gas Hub in South Asia Journal of International Affairs 69 1 81 Russia and Pakistan to construct 2bn gas pipeline Hydrocarbons Technology 19 October 2015 Retrieved 6 December 2015 a b Zain Ali 9 October 2015 PM Nawaz inaugurates 1180 MW Bhikhi Power Plant in Sheikhupura Daily Pakistan Retrieved 11 December 2015 a b a, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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