Iran Daily

How Chabahar Port will benefit all neighborin­g countries

-

Iran has recently opened a new port at Chabahar, 80km west of the Pakistani port of Gwadar that will greatly facilitate India’s trade with Afghanista­n and with landlocked countries of Central Asia.

Though it is much smaller with more modest aims than its more ambitious neighbor, Chabahar is also expected to open a new route to Central Asia and on to Russia and Europe.

Beyond India’s immediate concern in Afghanista­n, Chabahar Port is also important for the country since it opens the route to Central Asia with a promise of huge gains in trade.

The current trade between India and the Central Asian countries of Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenist­an and Kyrgyzstan is under $1.5 billion, compared to the trade of nearly $40 billion that these countries have with China.

Better connectivi­ty via Chabahar Port and the planned roads and railways could multiply their trade ¿gures with India several times.

The landlocked countries have strategic and high-value minerals, including uranium, copper, titanium, ferroalloy­s, yellow phosphorus, iron ore, rolled metal, propane, butane, zinc, coking coal, and Kazakhstan alone wants to increase its non-oil exports by 50 percent by 2025. And without direct transport access, India cannot procure the Central Asian riches needed for its manufactur­ing economy.

It’s also being seen by many observers as opening a new Great Game between the two largest countries in the world in the oil and mineral-rich region of Central Asia. That is an overstatem­ent. The Chinese investment in Gwadar is much more, and its trade with Central Asia much higher.

The Indian aim is smaller, but more speci¿c. Apart from greater ease of moving goods and people to and from Central Asia and Afghanista­n by not having to travel through Pakistan, India’s steel companies such as SAIL have invested heavily in huge iron ore deposits in Hajigaj in the Bamiyan region of central Afghanista­n.

This is the largest Indian investment in that country and has ample scope for generating employment and meeting the needs of the country. The investment will be much larger than the $2 billion promised by India to build the port and the road and rail connection­s that are needed.

But unless these connecting links are establishe­d, the steel complex would not be functional. The goodwill of the Afghan people towards India is based on the many projects such as a dam, the new Parliament building, power lines to the capital, buses, hospitals and skill training schools.

The new port is important since it would allow India to send emergency food supplies and to conduct more open and increased trade with Afghanista­n.

Chabahar thus has its own strategic importance, and seeing it as a counter-weight to the Chinese investment in Gwadar is of secondary importance.

China’s investment in Gwadar is much larger, and it has committed to invest $46 billion to develop the Chinapakis­tan Economic Corridor. It also plans to send 30,000 troops to protect its investment, besides another 10,000 troops from Pakistan.

One should also remember that the passage of trucks from Chahabar into Afghanista­n is not entirely secure. Indian goods traveling to Kabul or Herat will have to pass through, or close to, some of the most dangerous parts of the country.

The developmen­t of Chahabar and the transport links to it constitute an important part of New Delhi’s strategic policy. India has important plans for the future. Some of its prominent features include:

● In July 2016, India began shipping $150 million worth of rail tracks to Chabahar to develop the port container tracks and build the $1.6 billion Chabahar-zahedan railway built by India’s Ircon Internatio­nal, for which India pledged an additional $400 million.

● India will execute and operate two berths in Chabahar Port Phase-1, with capital investment of $85.21 million and annual revenue expenditur­e of $22.95 million on a 10year lease.

● India is ¿nalizing a plan to construct a 900-km Chabahar-zahedan-hajigak railway line that will connect Chabahar in Iran to the mineral-rich Hajigak region of Afghanista­n. This will help the seven Indian companies which acquired rights in 2011 to mine central Afghanista­n’s Hajigak region, which contain Asia’s largest deposits of iron ore.

● The Indian government has pledged to spend $2 billion in developing supporting infrastruc­ture. This will free Afghanista­n from Pakistan to reach the outer world, giving India access to Afghanista­n and beyond.

● This has the potential for several times more trade via connectivi­ty to the 7,200-km-long North-south Transport Corridor (INSTC), connecting to Europe and Turkey, and Trans-siberian Highway across Russia, and the planned Herat to Mazar-i-sharif railway, providing access to countries in Central Asia. These projects will give greater connectivi­ty to Afghanista­n with its neighbors.

Chabahar Port has the potential to be an essential economic and strategic corridor, linking India to Afghanista­n and Central Asia.

*This article originally appeared on asianage.com.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Iran