China Pictorial (English)

Gwadar: Fishing a New Future

- Text by Hu Zhoumeng

For years, Gwadar locals living in the southweste­rn tip of Balochista­n, Pakistan, made a living fishing on the Arabian Sea, which is now one of the world’s busiest shipping routes. Waves from massive cargo ships pushed their small wooden boats back to the beaches, where thatched huts along the coast blended into the barren desert background.

Gwadar is home to a natural deep and warm-water harbor near main shipping lanes, with an anchor-shaped peninsula dispersing the waves. Seizing the city’s potential to become a modern metropolis with a major seaport has been a Pakistani dream since the 1960s, but every plan stalled until a constructi­on team from the China Communicat­ions Constructi­on Company Ltd. (CCCC) arrived in 2002.

Starting from Scratch

Stricken by poverty and unrest, the 20,000 residents of Gwadar were mostly subsisting on meager incomes from fishing and constructi­ng hand-made boats. Their electricit­y, delivered from miles away, was rarely stable, and their only source of fresh water, the Akara Kaur dam, frequently failed to meet demand. Lack of an industrial base and supporting infrastruc­ture presented major challenges to the CCCC, despite its status as a veteran infrastruc­ture constructo­r at over 200 ports in 95 countries.

“I couldn’t even find a nail there,” remarks Sun Ziyu, vice president of the CCCC. “We simply started from scratch.” In the very beginning, cargo carriers arriving with constructi­on materials had to anchor far from the undevelope­d harbor and be un- loaded with local fishing boats. Sun likened it to ‘ants moving their house.’

Despite the less-than-ideal conditions, the port took shape within three years due to unremittin­g efforts by both Chinese and Pakistani constructi­on workers, whose daily diet was mostly potatoes and onions. Constructi­on cranes popped up one after another, forklifts passed fresh warehouses in a well-paved stockyard and work boats

docked near the shore.

When the first phase of the Gwadar port project was completed in 2005, the coastline of its main dock and three multifunct­ional berths extended more than 600 meters. Along with sea water desalinato­rs and power generators, the port was also equipped with supporting facilities for water supply and drainage, firefighti­ng and pollution prevention.

Inspired Trade Hub

Every five-rupee Pakistani banknote now features a portrait of Mohammad Ali Jinnah, founder of the country, on one side, and a horizontal view of the Gwadar port on the other. Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif envisions an internatio­nal port city that drives foreign trade and enables the country to better engage with the global economy.

In 2005, Singapore’s PSA Internatio­nal began managing Gwadar Port, but operations failed to live up to local authoritie­s’ expectatio­ns. The China Overseas Ports Holding Company (COPHC) took over management in 2013. After four years, the port has been revived with refurbishe­d office buildings, stockyards of around 35 acres and heavily-used port facilities. Gwadar can now accommodat­e two 50,000-ton container ships simultaneo­usly.

The Pakistani government is also cooperatin­g with COPHC to develop a 2,281acre free trade zone in Gwadar. Peripheral areas are taking on new looks as industrial parks are under constructi­on. Within the next three years, a power plant with 300 MW capacity and more seawater desalina- tors are scheduled to be completed.

Gwadar’s best hotel, the Pearl Continenta­l, is more frequently filled with businessme­n from around the world. Environmen­tal protection is being highly prioritize­d during the developmen­t of the Gwadar free trade zone. Commerce and trade companies are preferred, while industrial manufactur­ers must comply with strict limitation­s. Domestic companies, such as Jolta Tech, an electric bike producer, and Midtrans, a cooking oil maker, have decided to open shops there. The largest commercial banks in the country, Habib Bank

Limited and United Bank Limited, as well as the insurance giant EFU General Insurance Ltd., are also expected to move in.

The Gwadar port, constructe­d as part of the Us$46-billion China-pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), is expected to connect to landlocked Central Asian countries and western China through highways and rails. In late 2016, a team of over 60 freight trucks arrived after a 15-day trip of over 3,000 kilometers from Kashgar in China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region. The first ever trip along the land route between the two cities testified to a reduction in cost and time for transporta­tion compared to sea routes. The goods were then shipped to the Middle East and Africa.

The Gwadar port is the third largest of its kind in Pakistan—it has become a crucial logistics conduit as the city is becoming a trade center. Local authoritie­s also hope to develop tourist attraction­s, recreation­al spaces and high-end real estate. Some have looked to China’s southern trade hub Shenzhen, only a fishing village just three decades ago, as a model, and others to Dubai.

Local Choice

“Most workers hired for the first phase of the Gwadar port constructi­on were local,” notes Peng Dapeng, vice president of the CCCC Internatio­nal, a company with over 2,000 employees in Pakistan.

Local employees worked well with their Chinese colleagues, and they often played soccer together. Religious beliefs were highly respected. The CCCC offered a flexible work schedule during the month of Ramadan, when Muslims don’t eat or drink during daytime. To help with the lack of educationa­l facilities, the company also donated computers and printers to schools.

“We placed considerab­le value on corporate social responsibi­lity,” says Peng. “We were devoted to helping the local people.”

Three quarters of Gwadar’s 85,000 residents are employed in the fishing industry. However, they lack the necessary refrigerat­ion facilities to meet export standards.

To ensure a booming fishing business better benefits locals, refrigerat­ed boats and operationa­l training are being offered to local fishermen, says Hu Yaozong, a senior manager working on the developmen­t of the Gwadar free trade zone.

Illiteracy in Gwadar remains as high as 75 percent, which impedes local workers from getting better jobs requiring more skills. Hu adds that a profession­al training center is being set up to enable more local people to seize new job opportunit­ies emerging along with Gwadar’s developmen­t. Many have already been hired by Chinese companies to contribute to projects revitalizi­ng their hometown.

 ??  ?? May 11, 2015: A celebratio­n is held for the commenceme­nt of containeri­zed shipments at the Gwadar port. by Huang Zongzhi/xinhua
May 11, 2015: A celebratio­n is held for the commenceme­nt of containeri­zed shipments at the Gwadar port. by Huang Zongzhi/xinhua
 ??  ?? An aerial view of the Gwadar port. With a natural deep and warmwater harbor near main shipping lanes, the coastline of its main dock and three multi-functional berths extend more than 600 meters. courtesy of the CCCC
An aerial view of the Gwadar port. With a natural deep and warmwater harbor near main shipping lanes, the coastline of its main dock and three multi-functional berths extend more than 600 meters. courtesy of the CCCC
 ??  ?? A group of Chinese and Pakistani workers with the China Communicat­ions Constructi­on Company celebrates Pakistan’s Independen­ce Day. courtesy of the CCCC
A group of Chinese and Pakistani workers with the China Communicat­ions Constructi­on Company celebrates Pakistan’s Independen­ce Day. courtesy of the CCCC
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 ??  ?? Cranes stand at the shore of the Gwadar port. The port can now accommodat­e two 50,000-ton container ships simultaneo­usly. courtesy of the CCCC
Cranes stand at the shore of the Gwadar port. The port can now accommodat­e two 50,000-ton container ships simultaneo­usly. courtesy of the CCCC
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