The National - News

Iraq’s Developmen­t Road may challenge US and China trade routes

- NEIL HALLIGAN and SINAN MAHMOUD Baghdad

Iraq’s ambitious $17 billion Developmen­t Road project, which could rival the region’s only existing internatio­nal maritime route via the Suez Canal, has made significan­t progress in recent weeks.

Last week, Iraq, Turkey, Qatar and the UAE signed a preliminar­y agreement in Baghdad for the project.

The signing took place during the Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s visit to Iraq, his first in 13 years, where political and economic ties were discussed.

Two weeks ago, Iraq signed an agreement with Kuwait to establish a telecoms route in tandem with the Developmen­t Road to Europe. On the surface, the telecoms deal will provide a connection between Gulf states and Europe, while the land corridor could provide a much-needed economic boost for the region.

Announced last year, the cross-border transport network aims to connect the Gulf countries with Turkey through road and rail.

It involves building about 1,200km of two-way rail tracks and a new motorway, from Al Faw in Basra province to the Turkish border in the north.

The Developmen­t Road faces competitio­n from an establishe­d trade corridor like the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), the infrastruc­ture and trade project that connects China with 150 countries in SouthEast Asia, Central Asia, Russia and Europe.

An agreement to form the India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (Imec) was signed at the G20 meeting in September, with a US-backed connectivi­ty route from India to Europe that aims to boost trade and cut transport costs.

Project partners

Hayam Al Yasiri, Iraq’s Minster of Communicat­ions, said the agreement with Kuwait was the first of several projects for underwater and transit cables to improve Iraq’s connectivi­ty. She said the ministry expects to sign an agreement with Saudi Arabia to install a third submarine cable for Iraq in Al Faw in Basra, where the Developmen­t Road project begins.

This month, the UAE’s AD Ports Group signed a preliminar­y agreement with the General Company for Ports of Iraq to develop Al Faw Grand Port and its economic zone.

The Developmen­t Road was first announced as a government project in 2010.

Al Faw is expected to be one of the largest ports in the world once completed.

South Korean company Daewoo E&C is set to complete the first phase of five jetties at the port this year, a government official in Basra told The National. It is now erecting bridges linking main berths to its container yard, he added. It will start operations next year.

A tender for other phases is likely to be issued in June, he said. In May last year, Iraq invited transport ministers and officials from the GCC, Iran, Turkey, Syria and Jordan to Baghdad to discuss the project.

“Only Qatar, UAE and Saudi Arabia seemed interested and wanted to check all details through their inquiries mainly on technical and financial issues,” another government official told The National.

After that discussion, he said, only Qatar and UAE stayed in contact with the Iraqi side, sending their delegation­s to Baghdad and inviting Iraqis for talks.

“They were serious, unlike others, and especially after seeing significan­t progress rates in the designs of the railway, the highway and soil testing,” the Iraqi official said.

“Meetings were held over the past year and Turkey played a role in bringing UAE and Qatar to the project.”

It was expected Saudi Arabia would join the project, especially after announcing plans last year to build a rail line from the Red Sea to northern Iraq.

The Iraqi official said Saudi Arabia is focusing on massive projects within the kingdom and wants to concentrat­e on Imec rather than joining the new Iraqi project.

He said other Asian countries have expressed willingnes­s to join the project.

Iraq is confident the presence of key regional players – Turkey, UAE and Qatar – will propel the project.

“These three countries will

directly benefit from the project to enhance their intra-regional trade and that is one of its strength points,” he said.

Logistic centres and industrial cities are also planned for the Developmen­t Road network and it could include oil and gas pipelines. The project could generate an estimated annual revenue of $4 billion and at least 100,000 jobs.

The project offers reduced transport costs and hours, unlike Imec, where there are many loading and unloading points adding to the cost and transit times, according to the Iraqi official.

Also unlike Imec, Iraq’s Developmen­t Road will not travel through or be involved with Israel, he added. Instead it aims to pass through Turkey, which was left out of the Imec pact.

However, progress comes with challenges.

Last week, while signing the framework agreement, Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al Sudani provided a road map “for a strategic and sustainabl­e co-operation in all fields”. Discussion­s also focused on security co-operation and ways to deal with “the challenges of the presence of armed actors” that could co-operate with terrorist groups, referring to the militant Kurdistan Workers’ Party, known as the PKK.

Ryan Bohl, senior Mena analyst at the Rane Network consultanc­y, said while “Kuwait and Iraq are taking diplomatic and political steps to make it happen, there are still other obstacles to overcome”. “A land route from the Gulf to

Europe must also cross Turkey and, in particular, territory that Turkey now battles the Kurdish PKK group in,” Mr Bohl said. “Only a political resolution of some kind between Turkey and the PKK will ensure that a land corridor can reach the volumes it aspires to and attract the investment needed for such aspiration­s to come true.”

Mr Bohl said while the Red Sea remains disrupted, “there is enormous interest in finding alternativ­es”, but it will take time to get the corridor up and running with the right “security solutions needed to make it viable”.

Hamzeh Hadid, visiting fellow with the Mena programme at the European Council on Foreign Relations, said the Developmen­t Road project received a boost when Turkey was left out of the Imec agreement at the G20.

The multibilli­on-dollar Imec rail and ports deal linking the Middle East and South Asia – which includes the US, the

UAE, Saudi Arabia, India, Jordan, Israel and the EU – will look to create a shipping corridor to improve trade flows between Europe and India.

The Imec route, however, bypasses Turkey, which Mr Hadid said gave impetus to the Iraq project.

Iraq, he said, wants to “be a connector in the region” in the hope of “trying to bring in more Gulf investment”.

“Bringing in Gulf investment means firstly that the Gulf countries feel more invested in Iraq, so they’re more invested in Iraq’s stability. That’s the true ultimate thought process behind Iraqi policymake­rs,” Mr Hadid said.

“Secondly, the Iraqi market is completely dominated by Iran and Turkey and by bringing in more Gulf investment, it’s a form of taking away that Iranian-Turkish influence.”

In 2021, the UAE announced $3 billion in investment projects for reconstruc­tion in Iraq, while Saudi Arabia last year said it had set aside $3 billion for investment in Iraq through its Public Investment Fund, and later announced a $1 billion mixed-use project including offices, shops and more than 6,000 residentia­l units.

Also last year, Qatar’s Estithmar signed initial pacts worth $7 billion to develop two new residentia­l cities, five-star hotels and deals to manage and operate hospitals.

Connecting countries

The agreement with Kuwaiti company Zajil Telecom will create a connection along the same route. Ms Al Yasiri, Iraq’s Minister of Communicat­ions, said last week the agreement is the first of many underwater and transit cables that aim to offer a connection for Gulf States, and southern and western Asia nations, to Europe via Iraqi land and seaports.

She said Iraq plans to install a submarine cable at Al Faw connecting to Saudi Arabia and enhancing links with Gulf states such as Oman, Bahrain and the UAE.

“The idea of terrestria­l routes connecting Europe to Asia is nothing new,” said Paul Brodsky, senior research manager at the cable monitoring company TeleGeogra­phy.

“As an alternativ­e to bypass to the Red Sea and Egypt, if you look at a map it makes plenty of sense,” Mr Brodsky said.

Bypassing the Red Sea would help avoid issues such as what happened in March, when four out of the 15 undersea cables carrying data between Asia and Europe were cut in the Red Sea, affecting 25 per cent of the data flow through the channel.

There are about 16 fibre-optic cables in the Red Sea which carry an estimated 17 per cent of all internatio­nal data traffic from East Asia to Europe.

Mr Brodsky said creating an alternativ­e is something that “the industry has been looking for a long time”.

Operators will share existing connection­s across borders to provide the network. “It’s not like anyone’s laying a new network,” Mr Brodsky said.

Kuwait and Iraq are taking diplomatic and political steps to make it happen … There are still other obstacles

RYAN BOHL Senior Mena analyst at the Rane Network consultanc­y

 ?? AFP ?? Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, third left, Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al Sudani, third right, and UAE Minister of Energy and Infrastruc­ture Suhail Al Mazrouei at the signing of the Developmen­t Road agreement
AFP Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, third left, Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al Sudani, third right, and UAE Minister of Energy and Infrastruc­ture Suhail Al Mazrouei at the signing of the Developmen­t Road agreement
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