China’s island cities: Treasure or trouble for Asia?
COLOMBO: A high-rise city the size of central London rising out of the ocean next to Sri Lanka’s capital is laying down another marker for China’s global infrastructure ambitions whose epic scope is sounding alarm bells in Asia and beyond.
When it is completed, Port City will effectively double Colombo’s size and be part of a glimmering trio of new, Chinese-funded islands alongside a man-made archipelago off Malaysia and a planned futuristic metropolis adjoining Manila.
The projects have been linked to China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), a sweeping trillion-dollar infrastructure programme across Asia, Africa and Europe that is viewed with deep suspicion by countries like India and the United States and has divided opinion within the EU.
And in Sri Lanka, Malaysia and the Philippines, increasingly vocal concerns are being raised about the environmental impact of the island cities, a lack of transparency surrounding their funding and the possibility of a Chinese-sprung debt trap.
Theisland-buildingspreeis“part of a big picture of China’s rapidly expanding global influence done through connectivity,” said Wang Jiangyu, an associate professor at the National University of Singapore’s law faculty.
Port City will serve as a base for China in South Asia as well as a “model project which would showcase what big change China could bring to the countries, especially the less developed ones, along the BRI,” Wang said.
Leaders from 37 countries have been converging in Beijing for a BRI summit that opened Thursday, hoping to grab a piece of the US$1 trillion pie to improve their infrastructure.
Critics say the initiative comes with a heavy price as it favours Chinese companies and exacerbates debt problems in some countries.
In Colombo, two-thirds of the 665-acre (269-hectare) artificial island located near a deep-sea container port will be given to the Chinese developer on a 99-year lease. The land reclamation work ended in January and high-rises now need to be built, with the aim of creating a financial hub rivalling Dubai or Singapore.
The islands promise to bring much-needed development to poorer countries like Sri Lanka, whose capital is reeling from the deadly Easter Sunday bombings.
But it comes with a ‘hidden debt trap’, warned Ranil Senanayake, a former advisor to the ministry of megapolis development, which oversees the project.
“Oursewageandgarbagedisposal systems are cracking at their seams. So how can we support a so-called world-class city?” Senanayake told AFP.
“Either we have to borrow heavily to offer these services or its going to place a heavy burden on the Sri Lankan taxpayers.”
The interest rate for Chinese loans to Sri Lanka is about 6.5 per cent, double what other major lenders, India and Japan, charge, said Dushni Weerakoon, an independent economist.
Sri Lanka already had to hand a 99-year lease to China for its Hambantota deep-sea port because it could not repay loans to Beijing for the US$1.4 billion project.
The lack of transparency in deals struck between local governments and developers remains a thorny issue on Belt and Road-related projects.InPortCity,representatives of the Chinese developer will be part of a ‘governing body’ overlooking investment decisions linked to the artificial island, local media reported.
“The public has been left in the dark about this new governing body and it creates major concerns over the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the country,” Senanayake said.