Pakistan eyes 2018 start for China-funded Diamer-Bhasha dam
Federal Planning and Development Minister Ahsan Iqbal says a Chinese company and a local partner will build the dam
ISLAMABAD:
Pakistan expects China to fund a long-delayed Indus river mega dam project in Gilgit-Baltistan with work beginning next year, Federal Minister for Planning and Development Ahsan Iqbal said in an interview with Reuters.
Pakistan has been keen for years to build a cascade of mega dams along the Indus flowing down from the Himalayas, but has struggled to raise money from international institutions amid opposition from its nuclear-armed neighbour India.
Those ambitions have been revived by China's Belt and Road infrastructure plans for Pakistan, a key cog in Beijing's creation of a modern-day Silk Road network of trade routes connecting Asia with Europe and Africa.
One more dam needed urgently, says expert
The $12-$14 billion Diamer-Bhasha dam should generate 4,500MW of electricity, and a vast new reservoir would regulate the flow of water to farmland that is vulnerable to increasingly erratic weather patterns.
Iqbal, the Islamabad lead on the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), said a Chinese company from a Beijing-picked shortlist and a local partner would build the dam over a 10-year period, and work should begin in the next financial year, which begins in July.
"This water reservoir is most critical for food security in Pakistan, so is a very high priority project for Pakistan," Iqbal told Reuters in an interview late on Monday at his ministerial home in Islamabad.
Nuclear war over water?
China and Pakistan signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) in December for Beijing to help fund and develop Pakistan's Indus Basin dams, though no timelines have been released. Pakistan estimates there is 40,000MW of hydro potential.
The Diamer-Bhasha dam and reservoir would displace more than 4,200 families in nearby areas and submerge a large section of the Karakoram Highway to China, Pakistan's Water and Power Development Authority estimates.
The federal minister also said Pakistani and Chinese engineers were also surveying other projects, including the 7,100MW Bunji hydro power project that would be the first in the cascade that stretches down to the Tarbela Dam near Islamabad.
India's foreign ministry and ministry for water resources did not respond to requests for comment.
Development schemes: Punjab govt allocates Rs1.2 billion
India this year fast-tracked $15 billion worth of dam projects in occupied Kashmir, despite fears from Islamabad that the power stations will disrupt vital Indus water flows into Pakistan.
Iqbal, a close ally of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, said India needed to "stop its myopic thinking towards CPEC" and accept the Chinese-funded project is going ahead. "Better still would be for India to become part of Beijing's Belt and Road plans," he said.
Pakistan expects China to fund a long-delayed Indus river mega dam project in Gilgit-Baltistan with work beginning next year, Federal Minister for Planning and Development Ahsan Iqbal said in an interview with Reuters.
Pakistan has been keen for years to build a cascade of mega dams along the Indus flowing down from the Himalayas, but has struggled to raise money from international institutions amid opposition from its nuclear-armed neighbour India.
Those ambitions have been revived by China's Belt and Road infrastructure plans for Pakistan, a key cog in Beijing's creation of a modern-day Silk Road network of trade routes connecting Asia with Europe and Africa.
One more dam needed urgently, says expert
The $12-$14 billion Diamer-Bhasha dam should generate 4,500MW of electricity, and a vast new reservoir would regulate the flow of water to farmland that is vulnerable to increasingly erratic weather patterns.
Iqbal, the Islamabad lead on the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), said a Chinese company from a Beijing-picked shortlist and a local partner would build the dam over a 10-year period, and work should begin in the next financial year, which begins in July.
"This water reservoir is most critical for food security in Pakistan, so is a very high priority project for Pakistan," Iqbal told Reuters in an interview late on Monday at his ministerial home in Islamabad.
Nuclear war over water?
China and Pakistan signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) in December for Beijing to help fund and develop Pakistan's Indus Basin dams, though no timelines have been released. Pakistan estimates there is 40,000MW of hydro potential.
The Diamer-Bhasha dam and reservoir would displace more than 4,200 families in nearby areas and submerge a large section of the Karakoram Highway to China, Pakistan's Water and Power Development Authority estimates.
The federal minister also said Pakistani and Chinese engineers were also surveying other projects, including the 7,100MW Bunji hydro power project that would be the first in the cascade that stretches down to the Tarbela Dam near Islamabad.
India's foreign ministry and ministry for water resources did not respond to requests for comment.
Development schemes: Punjab govt allocates Rs1.2 billion
India this year fast-tracked $15 billion worth of dam projects in occupied Kashmir, despite fears from Islamabad that the power stations will disrupt vital Indus water flows into Pakistan.
Iqbal, a close ally of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, said India needed to "stop its myopic thinking towards CPEC" and accept the Chinese-funded project is going ahead. "Better still would be for India to become part of Beijing's Belt and Road plans," he said.