Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Lanka’s port plan will not pay off

I By wooing China, it will lose revenue from Indian shipping

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ndia has reaffirmed its commitment to the developmen­t of Trincomale­e port in Sri Lanka during Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe’s recent State visit. These plans pale in comparison to the billion dollar investment that China has made to the port of Hambantota. The last Sri Lankan government of Mahinda Rajapaksa placed his country into a Beijing debt trap, borrowing $8 billion at absurdly high rates of interest, to build the port. Colombo today struggles to pay

ourtake this off, largely by being forced to borrow money from more user-friendly sources.

Sri Lankans envision a future in which they become a logistical hub for the Indian Ocean. This has been encouraged by Sri Lanka’s lucrative role as the major transshipm­ent point for Indian cargo. About a quarter of India’s containeri­sed ocean cargo goes through Sri Lanka. The last Sri Lankan government had a vision of becoming a base for Chinese manufactur­ing and re-exporting as well. However, Sri Lanka’s “grand port strategy” has a number of contradict­ions. The most important is the growing conflict between trying to be the logistics gateway of India as well as an Indian Ocean hub for China. New Delhi inevitably sees Chinese owned and managed critical infrastruc­ture on its periphery in geopolitic­al and not commercial terms. A concern brought to the fore by Mr Rajapaksa’s ill-considered decision to allow Chinese nuclear submarines to dock in Sri Lanka. Serving as the southern gateway to India would mean integratin­g Sri Lanka into the manufactur­ing supply chains of southern India. A large Chinese presence along such chains would be seen as a potential threat to the Indian economy, something that Sri Lankans, taken up by the money to made from port constructi­on and the fees they believe will follow, fail to understand. Similarly, New Delhi has put plans for a second bilateral free trade agreement on hold because of Colombo’s attempts to sign one with Beijing.

Colombo’s attempts to play China against India have spurred New Delhi in an obvious direction – build ports at home to reduce Sri Lanka’s importance as a transshipm­ent point. The Enayam port in Tamil Nadu is designed to do exactly that. By the time it is completed in 2030, the Enayam port complex should be able to handle 8 million TEUs of containeri­ed cargo. In comparison, Sri Lanka handled about 1.2 million TEUs of Indian transshipm­ent cargo in 2014-15. Serendipit­y is a selling point for tourists, but it is a synonym for naivete in the realm of maritime geopolitic­s.

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