The Phnom Penh Post

Nepal reinstates a $2.5B hydro deal

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NEPAL has reinstated a deal with a Chinese state-owned company to build a $2.5 billion hydroelect­ric plant scrapped by the previous government, officials confirmed on Monday, as the new pro-Beijing administra­tion seeks massive infrastruc­ture investment.

The agreement with the China Gezhouba Group Corporatio­n (CGGC) to construct Nepal’s largest hydro plant was abruptly cancelled by the outgoing government just weeks before a general election late last year.

“The decision to scrap the agreement with the Chinese company by the previous government was taken without any grounds,” informatio­n minister Gokul Baskota said.

“We decided to correct that, because Nepal doesn’t have the capacity to build such a big project and funding is also challengin­g.”

‘Heavy national debt’

The long-mooted 1,200 megawatt Budhi-Gandaki plant would nearly double Nepal’s hydropower production. The impoverish­ed landlocked country suffers chronic energy shortages and is forced to buy electricit­y from neighbouri­ng India.

Beijing has been lobbying the new Communist government in Kathmandu to restore the contract since it took office in February, Baskota said.

Nepal wants the project to be part of the One Belt, One Road Initiative (OBOR), China’s massive infrastruc­ture drive at the centre of the Asian giant’s push to expand its global influence. Nepal signed up to the plan in May 2017.

Critics say the contract should have been open for internatio­nal bidding and warned of the risks of Chinese loans.

Awarding such a lucrative contract in an opaque manner risked inflating the cost of the project “leading to a heavy national debt burden”, tweeted former finance minister Ram Sharan Mahat.

Water-rich Nepal has a mountain river system that could make it an energy-producing powerhouse, but failure to develop its hydropower sector has weighed heavily on its ailing economy.

Nepa l has awa rded contracts for its mega hydropower projects to its t wo g ia nt neighbours, rivals India and China, but constructi­on has been slow.

Constructi­on finally began on the $1.4 billion India-backed Arun Three hydropower plant earlier this year, 26 years after it was first proposed.

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