Tuesday, February 23, 2016
Friday, February 12, 2016
Miscellaneous Updates
S-2/Arihant SSBN Showcased In IFR-2016
Commemorative Booklet
Latest Full-Scale Models Of NAG and HELINA Anti-Armour Guided-Missiles
Final Configuration Of NAMICA
Existing Long-Range Battlefield Surveillance Sensors & Their New-Generation Variants
IRDE-Led R & D Activities For Multiple Application Optronic Sensors
JF-17 Block-2 Light MRCA With Additional MAWS Sensor Fitment & Aerial Refuelling Probe Undergoing Flight-Tests In Chengdu
Monday, February 1, 2016
Is It Really CPEC? Or Is It China's Karakoram Corridor That Is Now Unravelling?-2
For securing its energy supplies through
overland routes, China has since 2005 has been increasing its supply-linkages
with Russia and the Central Asian Republics at breakneck speeds. SINOPEC was allowed to buy a chunk of Russian producer Udmurtneft in 2006. In 2013, China acquired 12.5%
of Russia's Uralkali, the biggest producer of potash, and CNPC agreed to prepay
OAO Rosneft about $70 billion as part of a $270 billion, 25-year supply deal.
That was followed by Rosneft’s $85 billion, 10-year accord with China
Petrochemical Corp and CNPC's purchase of 20% of an Arctic gas project from
Novatek for an undisclosed sum. In September 2014, President Vladimir Putin,
who has been seeking new markets in Asia for Russian energy exports to replace
traditional customers in Europe, announced that he would welcome Chinese investment in Vankor, a vast new oil
field in remote eastern Siberia owned by the state firm Rosneft. All of
Vankor's output of 440,000 barrels per day of crude is already shipped east,
via the East Siberia-Pacific Ocean pipeline, which includes a spur feeding
China's northeast. A Russia-China pipeline will double capacity from 300,000 to
600,000 bpd by 2016. In fact, in 2014, China overtook Germany as Russia’s
biggest buyer of crude oil, thanks to Rosneft securing deals to boost supplies
via the East Siberia-Pacific Ocean pipeline and another crossing Kazakhstan. In
Beijing on November 9, 2014 Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese
President Xi Jinping signed a preliminary agreement under which
the Kremlin-run monopoly Gazprom would eventually supply nearly one-fifth of
the gas China is expected to need until 2020. All told, the deal, nearly as
huge as the countries’ $400 billion gas deal signed in May 2014, meant that
Gazprom would supply up to 1.3 trillion cubic feet of gas per year from western
Siberia to China in the next 30 years through the new 2,500-mile pipeline,
called the Power of Siberia-2. This pipeline will link Russia’s Altai Mountain
region to the Xinjiang province of China and northern India. A contract between Russian natural gas company
Gazprom and CNPC is for 30 years and calls for 1.3 trillion cubic feet of
natural gas per year, starting from 2018. And
CNPC in 2015 acquired 20% of
a $27 billion LNG project in Russia’s far north. It has also been offered
equity in oil licence blocks in the Arctic and East Siberia.
Then there is the high-speed rail link that will eventually connect Moscow
to Beijing. Vladimir Putin’s vision of a ‘Greater Europe’ from Lisbon to
Vladivostok, made up of the European Union and the Russia-led Eurasian Economic
Union, is now being replaced by a ‘Greater Asia’ from Shanghai to St Petersburg.
Putin agreed to give the planned Silk Road Economic Belt (a regional trade and
transportation plan that has been President Xi’s foreign policy priority since
2013) the green light after Xi agreed to include Trans-Siberian and BAM
railways in the scheme.
China is now the
largest trading partner of
Tajikistan, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, and Kyrgyzstan. Beijing has been investing billions of dollars in the energy sector, which
include a series of contracts with Kazakhstan worth $30 billion, 31 agreements
of $15 billion value with Uzbekistan, and natural gas transactions with
Turkmenistan in 2013, which reached about $16 billion. China has also provided
loans and aid worth $8 billion to Turkmenistan and is expected to provide at
least $1 billion to Tajikistan. In 2015, China upgraded relations with
Kyrgyzstan to a strategic level. Presently, Turkmenistan
is the largest supplier of natural gas to China, accounting for more than 50%
of the total imports. Turkmenistan, which
has the world’s fourth largest gas reserves, already supplies China 40 billion
cubic metres every year, with exports rising following the opening of a 1,833km-long
pipeline in 2009. Both nations had signed a deal in 2007 for the export of 30
billion cubic metres of natural gas annually for 30 years. Turkmenistan has
since agreed to increase its planned supply of natural gas to China by 25
billion cubic metres. Under this deal, CNPC has also received the right to
develop the Amu Darya gas fields. For ferrying gas from this area, a 8,700km-long
natural gas pipeline, which is the world’s longest, was operationalised on June
30, 2011. The pipeline, which links Turkmenistan with southern China, starts in
Huoerguosi on the China-Kazakhstan border, 670km northwest of Urumqi, capital
of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region. It boosted supplies to China’s booming
industrial zones in Shanghai, Guangzhou and Hongkong SAR. The pipeline has one
trunk and eight branches. Three branches have been completed and the other five
will be finished next year.
Earlier in December
2014, the Presidents of Iran, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan inaugurated a railway line that runs from western Kazakhstan to northern Iran.
The main goods to be transported via the railway will be oil and other energy
products, Kazakh grain and agricultural products, Turkmen cotton and cheap
China-origin consumer goods for markets in Central Asia, Iran and beyond.
Estimates suggest that by 2020, 10% of trade between China and Europe will be
transported via inland rail and road routes. Negotiations on the
China-Kyrgyzstan-Uzbekistan railway line, the ‘Silk Road Railroad’ that was
initially proposed in 1997, have seen significant progress in recent years.
In Kazakhstan, CNPC
beat India by agreeing to pay $4.18 billion in August 2005 for PetroKazakhstan,
then China’s biggest overseas oil deal. CNPC had trailed India’s ONGC and its
partner Lakhsmi N Mittal’s $4 billion bid at the close of bidding on August 15,
2005. But post-close of bidding, it was allowed to raise the offer price to
$4.18 billion, which saw PetroKazakhstan, a Canadian oil firm operating
in Central Asia,
go to CNPC. Kazakhstan, home to 3% of the world’s recoverable oil reserves, has
moved in recent years to exert greater management control and secure bigger
revenues from foreign-owned oil and gas projects. Kazmunaigas entered the
Kashagan consortium as a shareholder in 2005 and has since then doubled its
stake to 16.81%. Kashagan (a Caspian Sea field set to produce 370,000 barrels
of oil a day), with reserves estimated at 35 billion barrels of oil in place, produced
its first oil in September 2013. It was in July 2013 that the Kashagan
project—which contains some of the largest oil discoveries made in the world in
the past 40 years—was operationalised. CNPC had then entered the scene with the
help of the China Development Bank and the China Export-Import Bank.
KazMunaiGaz bought a US-based oil company’s 8.4% interest in the project, and
this stake in turn was sold to CNPC for a reported $5.4 billion. The Kashagan
project took off eight years later than initially planned and with costs
nearing $48 billion, double the early estimates.
In Tajikistan, CNPC and France’s TOTAL in June 2013 completed an agreement with Tethys Petroleum Ltd to develop oil and gas assets under
the. Bokhtar project. CNPC’s China National Oil and Gas Exploration and
Development Corp subsidiary and Total each took a one-third stake in the
concession, which Tethys has said may contain 3.22 trillion cubic metres of gas
and 8.5 billion barrels of oil. Tajikistan
imports more than 90% of the oil and gas it uses, and Dushanbe is eager to
develop its domestic resources, much of which lie in the southwest of the
country in an extension of the Amu Darya basin, which feeds huge gas fields in
neighbouring Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan. Tajikistan’s reserves could meet
China’s natural gas consumption for an estimated 24 years.
The CPEC
Conundrum
It is now known that just
6% of what China had promised Pakistan in terms of aid, assistance, and investment
between 2001 and 2011 was delivered ($66 billion was pledged in total). And
this is because there
is no economic rationale to the Kashgar-Gwadar China-Pakistan Economic Corridor
(CPEC). For, it is physically impossible to maintain year-long connectivity
between China and Pakistan through the Karakoram Highway (KKH), which links
Kashghar in Xinjiang with Gilgit and Abbottabad through the Khunjerab Pass.
Today, the KKH is functional for five months a year at best because of adverse
weather. A landslide and flooding in 2010 blocked the highway for more than one
year. China and Pakistan have discussed the possibility of building a parallel
highway that will feature extensive tunnels that cut through the Khunjerab
Pass, rendering landslides irrelevant, but still making it highly vulnerable to
earthquakes. Therefore, this idea of extensive tunnelling seems fanciful-and expensive,
estimated by Pakistan to cost more than $11 billion
The KKH presently runs approximately
1,300km (915 miles) from Kashgar, following the valley of the Chez River,
the Khunjerab Pass (at an elevation of 4,693
metres or 15,397 feet), Hunza (known as the original Shangri-La) for 310km
along the Indus River Valley, and along the (Gilgit and) Kunhar Rivers to
Islamabad in the Chillas District of Pakistan.
Roughly 494km of it lies in Chinese territory, while the remaining 806km
traverse through the highest mountains in Pakistan. An
extension of the KKH meets the Grand Trunk Road at Raikot, west of Hassanabdal
in Pakistan. On June
30, 2006, an MoU was signed between the Pakistani Highway
Administration and China’s State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration
Commission (SASAC) to rebuild and upgrade the KKH. According to SASAC, the
KKH’s width will be expanded from 10 metres to 30 metres (33 feet to 98 feet),
and its transport capacity will be increased three times its current capacity. In
addition, the upgraded KKH will be designed to particularly accommodate
heavy-laden vehicles in extreme weather conditions. On January 4, 2010, the KKH
was closed in the Hunza Valley, thereby eliminating
through traffic to China except by small boats. A massive landslide 15km
(9.3 miles) upstream from Hunza’s capital of Karimabad created
the potentially unstable Attabad Lake, which reached 22km
(14 miles) in length and over 100 metres (330 feet) in depth by the
first week of June 2010 when it finally began flowing over the landslide dam. Eventually, a new 24km route along the
southeastern side of the lake was completed in 2015 and opened to the public on
September 14, 2015. The route comprises 5 tunnels and several bridges. The
longest tunnel is 3,360 metres in length, followed by 2,736 metres, 435 metres,
410 metres and 195 metres. The
Attabad Tunnel was completed on September 14, 2015.
Had the intent been to ensure
all-weather, year-long road connectivity between China and Pakistan, then
logically the Khunjerab Pass should have been discarded as an option, and
instead focus should have been laid on five other passes of the Karakoram
mountain range. These include the Mintaka
Pass at over 4,700 metres
above sea level just west of Khunjerab, which was used by travellers on the
ancient Silk Route; the Shimshal Pass at 4,735 metres that leads to the
Shimshal Braldu River Valley; the Kilik Pass (elevation
4,827 metres or 15,837 feet), 30km to the west of Mintaka Pass, which is
a high mountain pass between Gilgit-Baltistan and Xinjiang; the
eastern or ‘Old’ Mustagh Pass (altitude
of about 5,422 metres); or the 5,600
metre-high ‘New’ Mustagh Pass, about
16km to the west.
The Silk Road Fund Co Ltd was
established in China in December 2014 to extend investment and financing
support worth $45.69 billion in commercial loans to all the envisaged CPEC
projects and to promote industrial cooperation with Pakistan. This fund
management company—set up as a consortium of leading Chinese banks, including
the China Exim Bank and the China Development Bank—had initial funds of $10
billion, which have now been raised to $40 billion. The money being offered by
China is thus project financing, not aid and not concessionary loans. The Silk
Road Fund is injecting the capital into a subsidiary of China Three Gorges
Corp. The concessionary nature of the proposed investments comes in when one
considers the fact that hardly anybody else is willing to invest in Pakistan. Foreign direct investment
into large infrastructure projects in Pakistan is not feasible since no private
investor is ready to acquire large stakes in this country, given its internal
instability realities. So one has a bilateral commitment from China instead,
which is part governmental in that the Silk Road Fund and the China Three
Gorges South Asia Investment, a subsidiary of the China Three Gorges Corp.
Out of the pledged $45.69 billion,
$33.79 billion has been earmarked for energy projects, $5.9 billion for road
construction, $3.69 billion for railway network construction, $1.6 billion for the
Lahore Mass Transit, $66 million for Gwadar Port, and a fibre-optic network project
worth $4 million. The prioritised, short-term projects involve more than $17 billion
in investment. Apart from the 720mW Karot hydropower project between the China
Development Bank Corp, EXIM Bank of China and Karot Power Company (Private) Ltd,
they include the upgrading of the 1,681km Peshawar-Lahore-Karachi railway line
($3.7 billion); 1,980mW Thar coal-fired powerplants ($2.8 billion); development
of two Thar coal mining blocks ($2.2 billion); the Gwadar-Nawabshah natural gas
pipeline ($2 billion); imported coal-based 1,320mW power plants at Port Qasim
worth ($2 billion); a 900mW solar park in Bahawalpur ($1.3 billion); the
Havelian-Islamabad road-link of the KKH ($930 million); a 260mW wind farm at
Jhimpir ($260 million); 870mW hydro-electric Suki Kinari project between EXIM
Bank of China, Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Ltd and SK Hydro
(Private) Ltd; Sahiwal coal-fired powerplant project between industrial and
Commercial Bank of China Ltd, Huaneng Shandong Electricity Ltd and Shandong
Ruyi Group; and the Gwadar International Airport ($230 million). The Sindh
Engro Coal Mining Company, a joint venture of Engro Powergen Ltd and the Sindh
government, holds the lease of Thar Block-II coalfields, while its Thar Power
Company will construct a series of mine-mouth power plants. In May 2015,
Pakistan concluded the implementation and the power purchase agreements for two
330mW projects, which are scheduled to begin commercial operations by December
2017. And the China Development Bank has finalised the terms and conditions for
financing a 3.8 million tonnes per annum coal-mining project as well as a power
project. On June 25, 2015, Pakistan approved another Thar coal-based mine-mouth
power project of 1,320mW capacity, which is being developed by the Shanghai
Electric (Group) Corp in partnership with Sino-Sindh Resources, a subsidiary of
Global Mining (China) Ltd. Sino-Sindh Resources will receive $1 billion from
the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China. This mine-mouth power project,
originally planned to start power generation in 2016, has now been rescheduled
for commissioning by 2018. A Letter of Intent from the Chinese banks was issued
in March 2015 for 75% project financing of the $2.6 billion project, 25% of
which will be equity. In addition, Chinese banks will provide financing for two
660mW imported coal-fired power plants at Port Qasim. A financing cooperation
agreement was recently signed by the China Exim Bank and the Port Qasim
Electric Power Company for the under-construction project. Pakistan’s National
Electric Power Regulatory Authority had approved the upfront tariff on February
13, 2015. The other 660mW project at Port Qasim is being developed by the Lucky
Electric Power Company. The two projects are scheduled to begin commercial
operations within four years. But they are likely to be delayed as a dedicated
jetty for each project has to be constructed for unloading the imported coal,
and the contracts for them have not yet been awarded. Meanwhile, the Punjab state
government has leased 4,500 acres of land to Chinese investors for the
development of Phase-2 of the 900mW Quaid-e-Azam Solar Park, to be commissioned
in 21 months. The China Development Bank, Exim Bank of China and Zonergy Co Ltd
are involved in it. Likewise, the draw-down agreement for the Jhimpir wind
project between UEP Wind Power (the borrower) and the China Development Bank
Corp (the lender) has been concluded. The project, having achieved financial
closure, is scheduled to begin commercial operations in 2016. Given the
timelines for completion, these power projects could possibly add reasonable generation
capacity to Pakistan’s national grid by 2018, but they would hardly provide any
relief to the nation in terms of the fast-growing demand for electricity. And
there is no silver lining for consumers as far as the cost of the electricity
is concerned. All the Chinese loans will be insured by the China Export and
Credit Insurance Corp (Sinosure) against non-payment risks, and the security of
the loans is guaranteed by the state. A framework agreement for energy projects
under CPEC was recently signed between Sinosure and Pakistan’s Water &
Power Ministry to provide sovereign guarantees. Sinosure is charging a fee of 7%
for debt servicing, which will be added to the capital cost of a project. For
instance, the capital cost of a 660mW project at Port Qasim is $767.9 million.
But it goes up to $956.1 million by adding Sinosure’s fee of $63.9 million, its
financing fee and charges of $21 million, and interest during construction of
$72.8 million; a 27.2% return on equity is guaranteed. Ironically, interest
during construction is allowed at the rate of 33.33% for the first year; 33.33%
for the second; 13.33% for the third; and 20% for the fourth year. This
scenario therefore presents a bleak picture, as the availability of affordable
energy will likely remain a pipedream.
Gwadar Port’s
Importance To China
Pakistan had identified Gwadar as a naval
base site as far back as 1954 when Gwadar was still under Omani rule. Pakistan's
interest in Gwadar started when, in 1954, it engaged the United States Geological Survey (USGS)
to conduct a survey of its coastline. The USGS deputed the surveyor, Worth
Condrick, who in turn identified Gwadar as a suitable site for a
seaport. After four years of negotiations, Pakistan purchased the Gwadar
enclave from Oman for $3 million on September 8, 1958
and Gwadar officially became part of Pakistan after 200 years of Omani rule. It
was offered to the USA for development in the early 1970s, but the US refused
to do so. It was only in 2001 that China agreed to co-develop the Gwadar Port
by providing $198 million in financial assistance. Gwadar Port was eventually developed
by China Harbour Engineering Company at
a cost of $248 million between 2002 and 2006. Phase-I covered the building of
three multipurpose berths and related port infrastructure and port handling
equipment. This phase was completed in December 2006 and commissioned inaugurated
on March 20, 2007. Under this phase, the following were constructed: 3
multipurpose berths each with a length of 602 metres and with a combined
capacity of bulk carriers of 30,000 DWT)
and container vessels of 25,000 DWT, an approach channel 4.5km-long dredged to
12.5 metres depth; a turning basin 450 metres in diameter; one 100-metre
service berth; and related port infrastructure and handling equipment, pilot
boats, tugs, survey vessels, etc. At the same time, a $200 million Makran
Coastal Highway connecting Gwadar to Karachi was completed. Phase-2 of the
project, now being built at a cost of $932 million. Will see the construction
of 4 container berths, one bulk cargo terminal with a capacity of 100,000 DWT
ships, one grain terminal, one ro-ro terminal, two oil terminals (capacity:
200,000 DWT ships each), and one approach channel to be dredged to 14.5 metres
depth. Also to be built was a China-supplied oil refinery, plus roads linking
Gwadar to Quertta in Balochistan and Ratodeo in Sindh. None of these, however,
were implemented, nor was the promised 584 acres of land in Gwadar handed over
by the Pakistan Navy to PSA.
Gwadar Port is presently owned by the
government-owned Gwadar Port Authority and operated by the China Overseas Port
Holding Company (COPHC). Earlier, between 2007 and 2012, it was operated by Singapore’s PSA International. Following the
completion of Phase-I, Pakistan had on February 1, 2007 signed a 40-year
agreement with PSA International for the development and operation of
the tax-free port and duty-free trade zone. PSA International was the highest
bidder for the Gwadar port after Dubai’s DP World backed out of the bidding
process. In a highly competitive environment, in order to enable Gwadar to
compete with its regional peers, the port fees was kept low by allowing a wide
range of tax concessions to PSA International to cut
operational and business costs. These included complete exemption from
corporate tax for 20 years, duty-free imports of materials and equipment for
construction and operations of the port and a free economic zone; and zero rate
of duty for shipping and bunker oil for 40 years. In addition to these
incentives, the provincial government of Baluchistan was also asked to exempt PSA International from the
levy of provincial and district taxes. According to this agreement, the Gwadar
Port Authority and Pakistan were to get a fixed share i.e. 9% of the revenue
from cargo and maritime services, and 15% of the revenue earned from the
free-trade zone. PSA International was
expected to invest US$550 million in the next five to ten years on creating the
operational facilities. The first commercial cargo vessel ‘Pos Glory’ berthed
at Gwadar Port with 70,000 metric tonnes of wheat on March 15, 2008. However,
by 2011 Gwadar was doing little business as a commercial port, and Pakistan had
then asked China to take over the operation. A year later, China
confirmed that it would be taking control of Gwadar for a period of 43 years.
Pakistan on February 18, 2013 formally awarded a contract for the further construction
and operation of Gwadar Port to China. Under this contract, COPHC also won the
right to acquire more than 2,000 acres of land.
Work
on the port development aspects of Gwadar picked up steam after 2008, when
China began sending its warships to the Gulf of Aden for anti-piracy
operations. In addition, it had become clear to Beijing in 2011 that it
desperately required a dedicated naval logistics support base and an air base
for supporting the staging operations of People’s Liberation Army’s (PLA) non-combatant
evacuation operations (NEO), such as the one in 2011 that saw China evacuating
35,000 of its citizens from Libya. This is when Beijing started serious work on
acquiring such facilities in Djibouti and Gwadar that will support the PLA’s
future NEOs that may need to be undertaken in either the Gulf of Aden, or the
Mediterranean Sea, or the Persian Gulf.