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China's Shanghai Electric to invest $9bn in Pakistan upgrades
by Staff Writers
Karachi (AFP) Dec 8, 2016


China completes $350 million power plant in Tajikistan
Dushanbe, Tajikistan (AFP) Dec 8, 2016 - A Chinese firm has completed a power plant worth $350 million in Tajikistan's capital Dushanbe, the ex-Soviet country said Thursday, indicating Beijing's growing economic dominance in the cash-strapped state.

Tebian Electric Apparatus (TBEA) began building the coal-powered plant in 2013 and received the rights to a gold mine in the north of the Central Asian country to offset the cost of the investment.

TBEA also built a 325-kilometre, $400 million electrical transmission line across Tajikistan in 2009.

It is one of several Chinese companies active in Tajikistan, where China's Exim Bank holds around half of all foreign debt.

Beijing has also invested heavily in minerals and transport links in its neighbour that endured a bitter civil war from 1992 to 1995.

The investments are in line with China's "One Road, One Belt" initiative to ramp up Beijing's westerly trade across Eurasia with strategic investments in infrastructure.

China's Shanghai Electric plans to spend $9 billion overhauling electricity infrastructure in Karachi, a minister told AFP, just months after the multinational revealed it was buying a Pakistan power company.

China is ramping up investment in its South Asian neighbour as part of a $46 billion project unveiled last year that will link its far-western Xinjiang region to Pakistan's Gwadar port with a series of infrastructure, power and transport upgrades.

In a presentation made to Pakistani authorities, Shanghai Electric said it would invest an average of $700 million a year until 2030 to increase capacity, improve cabling and target bill defaulters.

"The investment would be utilised in distribution, generation, transmission" and training, Miftah Ismail, minister for state and chairman of Pakistan's Board of Investment told AFP on Wednesday.

The investment would also aim to tackle widespread electricity theft and other losses that cost about $269 million a month in the city, partly by replacing above-ground grid stations with underground ones.

Shanghai Electric announced in August it would buy a majority stake in K-Electric, which is owned by Abraaj Group of Dubai, for $1.7 billion, which would be Pakistan's biggest ever private-sector acquisition.

K-Electric, formerly known as Karachi Electricity Supply Corporation, supplies electricity to more than 2.2 million households and commercial and industrial consumers.


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