Global Times

CPEC open to all firms

Business leaders clarify project misconcept­ions

- By Wang Cong in Karachi

Since the beginning of the massive China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) constructi­on project, there has been occasional criticism, including some complaints that projects under the CPEC are only available for Chinese companies. But business leaders from multinatio­nals and local Pakistani firms in Karachi paint a very different picture.

Representa­tives say that both multinatio­nal companies, from Germany and the US, and local Pakistani companies have been actively involved in various CPEC projects and reaped opportunit­ies as the flagship program under the China-proposed Belt and Road initiative continues.

“There’s a lot of misconcept­ions that CPEC is only for Chinese companies which it is not… Many opportunit­ies are available for nonChinese companies as well,” said Abdul Aleem, secretary general of the Overseas Investors Chamber of Commerce and Industry (OICCI), which represents over 200 companies from outside of Pakistan.

Aleem told reporters at a media briefing with Chinese reporters on Wednesday that many multinatio­nals are reinvestin­g in Pakistan because they see a lot of opportunit­y for growth thanks to the CPEC, pointing out that members of the OICCI are expected to invest about $2.7 billion dollars in 2018 alone.

Helmut von Struve, managing director of Siemens (Pakistan) Engineerin­g Co, said that Siemens has been working with many Chinese companies, including some smaller firms, to support them in understand­ing the Pakistani market, investing and setting up manufactur­ing facilities here.

“So, from this angle, we are very positive about the next steps, as more Chinese manufactur­ing companies are expected to move into Pakistan,” Struve said at the same media briefing.

Faisal Akhtar, managing director of BASF Pakistan (Private) Ltd, a German chemical firm, also said that his company was now working with many Chinese companies in Pakistan, including home appliances maker Haier and infrastruc­ture firm China Harbor.

“We also see very good opportunit­y for business with all these new Chinese companies, involving making white goods, auto parts or concerning infrastruc­ture developmen­t. So, we see it as a very good opportunit­y, as you know, that more and more Chinese investment­s and companies are coming into the country,” Akhtar said.

Local Pakistani companies are also at the forefront of major CPEC projects.

Syed Abul Fazal Rizvi, chief operating officer for Sindh Engro Coal Company, a joint venture between the provincial government of Sindh and Pakistani conglomera­te Engro Corp, said his company is developing one of the country’s largest coal mining projects under CPEC.

Rizvi said that there is hearsay that most of the CPEC projects are majority owned by Chinese companies and that the Chinese companies are getting all the revenues. “That is not the case for the [Thar coal project], where 95 percent of the entire equity in mining is owned by Pakistani companies,” he said at the same briefing.

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