Govt running out of money on Projects. External sources pulling out of deals they were previously ch

AsifAmeer

Siasat.pk - Blogger
487224-NeelumJhelumhydropower-1356987187-682-640x480.jpg

http://tribune.com.pk/story/487224/...ls-increase-in-surcharge-expensive-bank-loan/



ISLAMABAD: As chances of Neelum Jhelum hydropower [HI]project coming to a standstill are increasing due to a whopping financing gap of Rs145 billion[/HI], the government is considering increasing the Neelum Jhelum [HI]surcharge by 100%[/HI] for all electricity consumers to partly cover the deficit.

A proposal to increase the [HI]surcharge from 10 paisa per unit to 20 paisa with effect from January 1 for all electricity consumers[/HI], including those of the Karachi Electric Supply Company, was discussed in a meeting at the Prime Ministers House here on Monday, sources told The Express Tribune.

Cabinet Secretary Nargis Sethi pointed to legal obstacles that stood in the way of increasing the surcharge. Others were of the view that this could be done through a notification. The government expects to collect Rs25 billion by doubling the surcharge.

Stakeholders working on the Neelum Jhelum project informed the premier that the financing gap has jumped to Rs145 billion, including Rs45 billion rupee component. To bridge the gap, officials of the ministries of finance and water and power tabled two financing plans for the premiers consideration.

Besides doubling the surcharge, they proposed utilisation of Rs20 billion of Wapdas hydroelectric receivables.

On the external front, they proposed to [HI]take an expensive loan of $526 million from Standard Chartered Bank at a rate of 8% and $130 million from the European Investment Bank[/HI]. There were no concrete proposals for the remaining foreign currency gap of $354 million.

The [HI]gap in external financing emerged after China refused to honour its commitment[/HI] to provide a loan of $448 million [HI]after Pakistan cancelled the controversial Safe City Project[/HI], Nandipur hydropower project, Jaglot-Skardu road project [HI]and delayed purchase of 75 locomotives[/HI], the premier was told.

Similarly, the [HI]Abu Dhabi Fund refused to lend $100 million and asked Pakistan to first resolve the dispute over $800 million that the UAE-based Etisalat had to pay to Pakistan[/HI]. UAE was seeking resolution of the grey traffic issue before any release of money, the officials said.

Approved at a cost of Rs85 billion, the cost of 969-megawatt Neelum Jhelum project [HI]has swelled to Rs275 billion[/HI] because of alleged involvement of kickbacks in procurement of tunnel boring machines, change in project design and delay in work. The revised cost had been [HI]approved by[/HI] the Chairman of Executive Committee of National Economic Council, [HI]Dr Abdul Hafeez Shaikh,[/HI] in November 2012.

Though the project [HI]commenced in January 2008, so far only 42% work has been completed.[/HI]

Sources said instead of picking any of the two options the premier, on the advice of Finance Minister Hafeez Shaikh, constituted a secretaries committee to find a solution to the problem that may stall the project.

A press release issued by the PM House stated the prime minister formed an oversight committee comprising secretaries of finance, planning, Economic Affairs Division, special secretary water and power, Wapda chairman and its member finance. He asked the committee to remove bottlenecks so that work on the project could be continued without interruption.

According to the release, [HI]Wapda requires Rs4 billion per month for the next six months in order to keep the project running[/HI] and if the money is not provided the project may come to a standstill and will be difficult to revive.

Owing to the financing gap, other financiers like the [HI]Islamic Development Bank, OPEC Fund for International Development, Saudi Fund for Development and Kuwait Fund for Development have threatened to stop their assistance[/HI] until the government shows serious commitment to the project.

The officials blamed former Wapda chairman Shakil Durrani and Neelum Jhelum Hydropower Company CEO Lieutenant General (Retired) Mohammad Zubair for misreporting facts. Before the start of work, both of them had assured the government that entire foreign funding had been arranged and lenders were just waiting for approval of the project.

Published in The Express Tribune, January 1[SUP]st[/SUP], 2013.



COMMENTS: What a bunch of junk... When inflation ticked up here in the US, alot of Govt contractors went belly up. There were roads and bridges left unfinished for months right here in the US. This is the same story there. State Bank keeps printing money (expansion of M2 and M3), cuts interest rates and devalues the rupee. Because of this price of power, oil, cement, machinery and raw materials go up and the contractors go bankrupt. I am not saying there was no corruption. Corruption is everywhere, even in the US. But inflation played a major role too. Plus, which contractor even secures external financing? What utter junk of lies! They arent even putting efforts in lying anymore... External financing for public projects is always backed by the ruling Govt. And notice how external lenders are backing out now... Its never a good idea to have Golden egg laying chicken biryani... Because tomorrow morning, you will be hungry again.
 

patriot_purdesi

Senator (1k+ posts)
What happened to "Pak-China the friendship tried and tested in all seasons":lol: the slogan seems to be valid, as long as Pakistani markets are open for dumping of 3rd grade Chinese products and the cheap Pakistani raw material is being exported to China. Pakistani industry is facing energy shortages due to some pre-planned foreign agenda, when our industrialist politician will understand that plan of destroying local industry and promotion of cheap foreign products.:13:
 

AsifAmeer

Siasat.pk - Blogger
This foreign agenda.. you guys are really in love with this idea.

Afterall whats not a foreign agenda?
1. Declaration of Independence by the Subcontinent surely was a foreign agenda for the brits.
2. Separation of Pakistan from India was a foreign agenda for India.
3. Separation of Bangladesh from Pakistan was a foreign agenda for Pakistan.

This foreign agenda is a common denominator in every world event so its pointless to even point to it.

Now the planned energy shortages. Let me sharing something interesting. This is the population growth chart for Pakistani cities
pkcitiespopulation.jpg



Where do you suppose energy is going to come from to support these mega-cities A land has a natural capacity to support a certain amount of humans. One simply cannot fill a million people in an apartment. Pakistan is running out of energy resources. The govt has continued to play games by propaganda in their education system by injecting fake national pride that SUI has 300 years of gas and Baluchistan has 100s of years of coal and gold. Many of these claims will turn out to be a lie too.



What happened to "Pak-China the friendship tried and tested in all seasons":lol: the slogan seems to be valid, as long as Pakistani markets are open for dumping of 3rd grade Chinese products and the cheap Pakistani raw material is being exported to China. Pakistani industry is facing energy shortages due to some [HI]pre-planned foreign agenda[/HI], when our industrialist politician will understand that plan of destroying local industry and promotion of cheap foreign products.:13:
 

patriot_purdesi

Senator (1k+ posts)
I agree the population growth has a role to play in resource shortages and I do not want to argue about Malthusian population trap here. Why we are after those huge projects which are totally dependent on foreign aid/loan. The politicians started debating about Kala bagh dam wasted time/money, now Neelum Jhelum Project is in jeopardy (truck ki batti ky pechy laga dya awam ko).

The simple formula is to build the small dams on rivers with indigenous resources and that can altogether generate so much energy and we can become self sufficient (like Chinese built 80,000 small dams in 50s and 60s on urgent basis).

This foreign agenda.. you guys are really in love with this idea.

Afterall whats not a foreign agenda?
1. Declaration of Independence by the Subcontinent surely was a foreign agenda for the brits.
2. Separation of Pakistan from India was a foreign agenda for India.
3. Separation of Bangladesh from Pakistan was a foreign agenda for Pakistan.

This foreign agenda is a common denominator in every world event so its pointless to even point to it.

Now the planned energy shortages. Let me sharing something interesting. This is the population growth chart for Pakistani cities
pkcitiespopulation.jpg



Where do you suppose energy is going to come from to support these mega-cities A land has a natural capacity to support a certain amount of humans. One simply cannot fill a million people in an apartment. Pakistan is running out of energy resources. The govt has continued to play games by propaganda in their education system by injecting fake national pride that SUI has 300 years of gas and Baluchistan has 100s of years of coal and gold. Many of these claims will turn out to be a lie too.
 

Back
Top