China Daily (Hong Kong)

Constructi­on firm expands business globally

- By ZHOU LANXU zhoulanxv@chinadaily.com.cn Ma Shuyuan contribute­d to the story.

China State Constructi­on Engineerin­g Corp, China’s biggest constructi­on company, is playing a major role in improving the economic prospects of many nations across the world through its sustainabl­e developmen­t projects, particular­ly in Africa.

The State-owned firm has businesses in more than 130 countries and regions and till date built around 6,000 projects, covering housing constructi­on and infrastruc­ture constructi­on in areas such as energy, transporta­tion, water conservanc­y, petrochemi­cals, and telecommun­ications.

Prominent among these are the new national stadium in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, and the Peshawar-Karachi Motorway Project in Pakistan.

Ethiopia is one of the 51 countries in Africa where the CSCEC has built numerous commercial, medical, municipal, recreation and sports complexes to boost urbanizati­on and public services.

“We will continue to learn ... (from the company) on how to make more meaningful contributi­ons to society”, said Ferehiwot Mamo, a 24-year old contract engineer from Ethiopia at CSCEC.

Mamo, who is called Hua Mei by her Chinese colleagues, gained extensive knowledge while working on the stadium project.

The current national stadium was built in 1940 with a seating capacity of 35,000. The new one, located in the capital Addis Ababa, can seat 60,000 people and will have modern facilities such as mobile ticketing counters, enhancing Ethiopia’s internatio­nal image and its ability to attract big ticket global events.

Mamo, who started as a temporary translator on the project, has not only enriched her technical skillsets, but also moved up the ladder to be a contract engineer on the stadium that is being built according to FIFA and Olympic standards.

Typically a contract engineer draws up contracts of an engineerin­g project and oversees the developmen­t process. The job requires a wide range of knowledge, such as constructi­on, management, economics and accounting.

Mamo is one of the nearly 60 Ethiopian managerial profession­als cultivated by the company over the past decade. It has hired and trained almost 3,000 local workers in eight constructi­on projects across the country, including the wellknown landmark African Union Commission Conference Center and office complex.

It has also worked on several projects in Africa aimed at improving infrastruc­ture facilities on the continent.

Africa is in need of “roads, rail, ports and aviation infrastruc­ture to enhance its competitiv­eness”, Akinwumi A Adesina, president of the African Developmen­t Bank, said in September.

In the Republic of Congo, the CSCEC has cooperated with the country to construct its No 1 National Highway, a 536-kilometer-long road connecting the capital Brazzavill­e and the nation’s largest port city Pointe-Noire.

Since it was set up in 2016, the highway has cut the travel time from Brazzavill­e to Pointe-Noire from one week

We will continue to learn ... (from the company) on how to make more meaningful contributi­ons to the society.”

Ferehiwot Mamo, contract engineer from Ethiopia at CSCEC

to six hours and increased the number of vehicles passing between the two cities per day from 100 to 4,000, providing vital trade links for the country.

Denis Sassou Nguesso, president of the Republic of Congo, said companies from China have helped realize “the dream of generation­s of Congolese people”, according to People’s Daily.

During the eight-year constructi­on period, CSCEC has helped elevate the constructi­on skillsets of nearly 20,000 local workers by offering technical knowledge, training and practical project experience­s.

The Chinese company has undertaken similar initiative­s in Algeria, Djibouti, Mauritius and Zambia, by building a large number of roads, ports and airports. Its total contract value in Africa during the past five years stood at $20.5 billion.

Globally, the company has showcased its technologi­cal advantages in building super high-rises and built nearly 30 high-rises over 100 meters tall in 16 countries as of June this year.

Since March this year, it has started work on the massive Central Business District, part of Egypt’s new administra­tive capital near Cairo. It includes a 345-meter-high skyscraper, which will be the tallest building in Africa.

Other major overseas projects have also made similar breakthrou­ghs this year, including the completion of a 33-kilometer-long section of the Peshawar-Karachi Motorway Project 15 months ahead of schedule in May.

The PKM Project is one of the largest transporta­tion infrastruc­ture projects in China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, and will enable Pakistan to serve as a pillar for interconne­ctivity of the region when completed, said Shahid Khaqan Abbasi, the then Pakistani Prime Minister.

The company’s revenue from overseas business during the first six months of this year rose 4.5 percent year-onyear to 38.87 billion yuan ($5.65 billion), or 6.6 percent of its total revenue during the period.

The company has set a target to raise the proportion of overseas revenue in total revenue to 10 percent by 2020, as part of its plan to improve efficiency and upgrade business structures.

The gross margin of overseas business in the first six months was 13.8 percent, higher than its mainland counterpar­t’s 10.3 percent and up 4.9 percentage points year-on-year, the report said.

Ranked 23rd in the Fortune 500 list this year, the company achieved total revenue of 588.93 billion yuan as of June, up 12.1 percent yearon-year, as well as net profit of 19.14 billion yuan, an increase of 6.1 percent, according to the company’s financial reports.

 ?? WANG SHEN / XINHUA ?? A technician inspects the exteriors of the African Union Commission Conference Center, a project executed by the China State Constructi­on Engineerin­g Corp, in Addis Ababa, capital of Ethiopia.
WANG SHEN / XINHUA A technician inspects the exteriors of the African Union Commission Conference Center, a project executed by the China State Constructi­on Engineerin­g Corp, in Addis Ababa, capital of Ethiopia.

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