Skip to main content

Pakistan moves on Havelian-Thakot section of China-Pak Corridor

Pakistan’s infrastructure and economic development agency the Central Development Working Party approved six projects worth US$865 million, including the China-Pak Economic Corridor (CPEC) Raikot section Phase-1. The Raikot section is the 120km Havalian-Thakot stretch and alone is worth around $830 million, according to a report from The Nation newspaper. The agency’s approval is for land acquisition, affected properties compensation and relocation of utilities to give the road a throughway. A report
June 18, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
Pakistan’s infrastructure and economic development agency the Central Development Working Party approved six projects worth US$865 million, including the China-Pak Economic Corridor (CPEC) Raikot section Phase-1.

The Raikot section is the 120km Havalian-Thakot stretch and alone is worth around $830 million, according to a report from The Nation newspaper. The agency’s approval is for land acquisition, affected properties compensation and relocation of utilities to give the road a throughway.

A report by the news agency Dawn last December said the Havalian to Thakot section of the corridor is being financed by China while other sections of the corridor will be carried out on the basis of Build Operate and Transfer (BOT).

The second section of the corridor is the motorway from Karachi to Hyderabad which was awarded to Pakistani construction company Frontier Works Organisation. The government set up Frontier Works in 1966 specifically to build the Karakoram Highway – reportedly the highest paved international road in the world. It connects Sinkiang Uighur in China and Gilgit–Baltistan in Pakistan across the Karakoram mountain range, through the Khunjerab Pass.

Frontier Works remains a government-military business made up of military administrative non-combatant staff as well as civilian engineers and scientists. After the Gulf war of 1991, Frontier Works won a reconstruction contract in Kuwait, to clear 3,000km2 of highly mined area.

The third main section of the corridor is the Multan-Sukkur Motorway.

Dawn reported that a senior official of Pakistan’s National Highway Authority said in an interview that there is no truth in the reports that only Chinese firms will be chosen for the work, apparat from Frontiers Work. He said bids had been invited from international and domestic firms.

He said in a major strategic shift the authority’s financial regime had been changed and all mega road projects were being executed on the basis of BOT. In past such projects were conducted through government assistance.

The official said the firms which would invest their money in the PCEC project would be paid through collection of road toll. “We will not give any prior financial guarantee to the firms but they will be given toll plazas, service areas and the right-of-way of the sections they will execute,” he said.

Related Content

  • Linking Kenya and Uganda with a new road project
    May 10, 2018
    An upgraded road link will improve transport between Uganda and Kenya - Shem Oirere reports Rainfall patterns and type of soil in an agricultural rich area shared by the neighbouring East African countries of Kenya and Uganda was a key consideration in arriving at the decision to upgrade to bitumen standards 73km of the 118km Kapchorwa-Kitale road that links the two countries. Initially, Uganda had proposed to have the road between Kapchorwa and Suam on its border with Kenya re-gravelled and widened to a
  • Polish project causes further legal headaches
    February 28, 2012
    The long tale of woe concerning Poland's troubled A2 highway project looks set to continue with the latest developments in the case.
  • Auckland’s causeway project
    April 4, 2014
    When it is finished in early 2017, the causeway on Auckland’s North-western Motorway, State Highway 16, will have been raised 1.5m to stop flooding at extreme high tides. There will be four lanes city-bound and four/five lanes westbound with dedicated bus lanes in each direction, and the existing North-western cycleway that runs alongside it will be upgraded.
  • Hydrogen tender for Lower Thames Crossing
    July 11, 2023
    The road tunnel crossing near London would be the first major UK infrastructure project to use hydrogen to power the heavy machinery of a project’s main contractors.