Amid Indian objections, China to build 1,100 MW
dam in PoK on Jhelum River (news)
-Dr.
Abdul Ruff
____________
China is building 100 MW dam in Pakistan-controlled Kashmir,
despite India’s strong objection for the same. Dam on the Jhelum River will be
constructed by China's company Three Gorges Corporation (CTGC) and on January
07 the company announced that it won the right to develop a hydropower project
in PoK. In September, CTGC registered a subsidiary for the project in Pakistan.
A Pakistani government supporting letter for the project was issued last week
One of China’s biggest state-run hydropower companies, the China Three Gorges
Corporation (CTGC) which manages the 22,500 MW Three Gorges Dam on the Yangtze
river - the world’s largest dam - has signed an agreement to develop the Kohala
hydropower project in PoK, the firm said in a statement posted on its website.
Total investment in this project is $2.4 billion, with a 30-year tariff for the
1,100 MW dam.
According to Pakistani media reports this 1,100 MW dam will come up on the
Jhelum River, downstream from Muzaffarabad in PoK. Both countries had agreed on
a 30-year tariff for the dam.
The China Three Gorges Corporation, which manages the world's largest dam on
the Yangtze River, stated on its website that it will go ahead on the agreement
with Pakistan to construct the Kohala dam on the Jhelum River, downstream from
Muzaffarabad in Azad Kashmir or Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK). Ignoring
Indian government's strong objections, China has decided to go ahead with the
construction of a mega dam in Pakistan-controlled Kashmir (PcK) on the Jhelum
River.
India even asked the company not to pursue the Kohala dam project by citing the
land dispute. The Chinese state-run company’s announcement of plans to go ahead
with a mega dam in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK), the latest indicator of
Beijing moving forward with major projects in the region despite India’s strong
opposition.
It appears the Chinese dam move has taken Indian government and New Delhi’s
strategist class by surprise, if not shock.
Established in 1993, CTGC is a clean energy group focusing on large-scale
hydropower development and operation. It manages the development and operation
of the Three Gorges Project, the world's largest hydropower project in terms of
installed capacity.
The Kohala Hydropower Project, the firm's biggest investment in the Pakistani
hydropower market, is expected to have an installed capacity of 1.1 million
kilowatts. The project is part of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, a
3,000-km network of roads, railways and energy infrastructure to assist
development in Pakistan and boost growth for the Chinese border economy.
Last year in September, Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif inaugurated five
tunnels on the key Karakoram Highway that connects the country with China.
According to a BBC report, these tunnels have been constructed by China over
the Attabad Lake in Gilgit-Baltistan's Hunza valley. The project has been named
as Pakistan-China Friendship Tunnels. The seven kilometre long five tunnels are
part of the 24km long portion of the Karakorum Highway (KKH) which was damaged
six years ago.
The Kohala dam has been billed as a key project in the new China Pakistan
Economic Corridor (CPEC) venture that envisages widening the Karakoram Highway,
exploring a railway link and a number of energy and infrastructure projects in
a corridor connecting Kashgar, in China’s far western Xinjiang region, through
PoK, to the Gwadar port in Pakistan on the Arabian Sea that is built and
managed by China.
Chinese President Xi Jinping had announced the ambitious 3,000 km-long
China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) during his visit to Pakistan in April,
2015. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi had raised "very strongly"
the issue of the China-Pakistan economic corridor during his visit to Beijing
and told them that it is "unacceptable".
The deal shows that China is unwilling to take on board India's objections to
projects in Azad Kashmir (PoK). Beijing apparently said that these are purely
commercial projects undertaken without prejudice to the Kashmir disputes
between India and Pakistan. This was despite India pointing to China's own
objections to exploration projects between India and Vietnam in the South China
Sea which China claims as its own.
The dam is part of several infrastructure projects planned for the China
Pakistan Economic Corridor that includes widening the Karakoram highway and
constructing a railway link connecting Kashgar in China with Pakistan's Gwadar
port, which was built and is managed by China. The Economic Corridor is part of
China President Xi Jinping's 'Belt and Road' that envisages a Silk Road
Economic Belt comprising China, Central Asia and Europe, and a Maritime Silk
Road to the Indian Ocean. India has said that it would cooperate with China on
this initiative only when there is a synergy between China's 'Belt and Road'
and India's own 'Act East' initiatives.
The deal for the dam underlines China’s willingness to go forward with major
projects in PoK, despite India’s consistent opposition. Beijing, however, has
said the ‘purely commercial’ projects were without prejudice to the Kashmir
issue and that it was not taking a position on territorial disputes between
India and Pakistan.
The CPEC has been pushed by President Xi Jinping as a key pillar of his pet
‘Belt and Road’ initiative, referring to a Silk Road Economic Belt connecting
China to Central Asia, Europe, and a Maritime Silk Road to Southeast Asia and
the Indian Ocean. The CPEC, emerging as a key part of the project, is a
significant reason for India declining to officially support the ‘Belt and
Road’, which has been backed by most of India’s neighbours.
Initially, India’s official stand was that as the ‘Belt and Road’ was a
domestic initiative of China’s, there was no need to back it as a national
initiative. That stand has since been somewhat toned down, with most of India’s
neighbours, including Sri Lanka, Nepal and Southeast Asian countries backing
the plan.
New Delhi has since said that it would cooperate with China where there was
‘synergy’ between the ‘Belt and Road’ and India’s own ‘Act East’ initiative.
Delhi has since emerged as the second biggest shareholder, after Beijing, in
the China-backed Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), committing
$8billion, although the bank is expected to fund many ‘Belt and Road’ projects.
India has repeatedly rebuffed Beijing’s requests to refer to the ‘Belt and
Road’ in joint statements and declined official backing in the project.
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