ISLAMABAD: Pakistan and China on Thursday
decided to make water security a part of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor
(CPEC) framework amid threats by India to review its position on the 1960 Indus
Waters Treaty.
The decision to exploit full hydel potential of
Pakistan was taken during the sixth meeting of the Joint Cooperation Committee
(JCC) of the CPEC which was held in Beijing. The JCC is the highest policy
making forum of the CPEC.
The JCC also decided, in principle, to make the
mass transit projects of all four provinces part of the CPEC. These projects
will be formally made part of the CPEC after their financial and technical
vetting by Working Group on Transport in February next year.
For development of hydroelectric projects on the
Indus River, particularly construction of the Diamer-Bhasha dam, the JCC on
Thursday constituted a group, said Planning and Development Minister Ahsan
Iqbal after the meeting. The planning ministry released the video of his
statement.
“Pakistan may face a very severe water crisis and
for economic and food security of the country, the immediate construction of
Diamer-Bhasha is crucial,” he said. If the Diamer-Bhasha dam becomes part of
the CPEC, it will be a landmark achievement, he added.
For more than two decades, Pakistan has been trying
to construct the Diamer-Bhasha dam that has an estimated cost of $14 billion.
Due to opposition by India, both the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank
have refused to lend money under one pretext or another.
After the rise in tensions along the Line of
Control (LoC) in recent months, India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi had
threatened to cut Pakistan’s water supply. He has managed to influence the WB
that recently paused the process of playing mediator, which it is bound to play
under the 1960 Indus Waters Treaty, according to experts on the accord. Chinese
help to secure Pakistan’s water rights will be seen as a major development,
according to them.
The Indus River is a source of more than 17
gigawatts of hydropower capacity in India and Pakistan and feeds the Indus
Basin Irrigation System, the largest contiguous irrigation network in the
world. Pakistan is particularly dependent on the Indus, as more than 90% of its
agricultural production comes from this basin.
Ahsan Iqbal said that the sixth JCC has taken the
CPEC to the next level, which will ensure Pakistan’s industrialisation and
inclusion of all the provinces.
The minister said that the JCC approved to make
mass transit projects of four provinces part of the CPEC framework. He said
that these projects are Orange Line metro project Lahore, Karachi Circular
Railway, Peshawar Greater Circular Railway and Quetta Circular Railway.
Their inclusion in the CPEC will ensure huge tax
exemptions and availability of finances for execution. The inclusion of these
projects into CPEC is a gift for the people of provincial capitals, said the
planning minister.
The planning minister said that the JCC approved to
construct one industrial park in each province, Islamabad Capital Territory and
in special areas of the country. He said that the Chinese experts would visit
Pakistan in February to review their feasibility. The JCC also approved to make
three more infrastructure projects part of the CPEC. These are Dera Ismail
Kha-Zhob road project, Baseema-Khuzdar road project and a missing link of the
Karakoram Highway project.
The minister said the JCC also decided to start
construction work on Matiari-Lahore Transmission Line project. He said the new
projects that the provinces had proposed for inclusion into the CPEC have been
recommended to the respective working groups for their financial and technical
evaluations.
He said it has also been agreed that the Gwadar
City Master plan will be completed within one year. The minister said that
China also agreed to transfer knowledge in five areas, including water
resources management, urban development, small and medium sized industries and
climate change.
The Peshawar circular rail project has been
accepted as part of the CPEC and the working group will approve it in next
meeting, said K-P Chief Minister Pervaiz Khattak after the JCC meeting. Khattak
went to Beijing to attend the meeting. He said that K-P’s projects would be approved
in February next year. He added that the JCC approved to make one industrial
park part of the CPEC while two more will be approved next year.
Published in The Express
Tribune, December 30th, 2016.
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