Economics/Business
Rebuilding the Legendary Silk Road | Rebuilding the Legendary Silk Road |
| Written by John Berthelsen | |
| Friday, 16 November 2007 | |
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A US$18.7 billion project to rebuild deteriorating infrastructure across Central Asia
In Beijing, it is a chaotic scene, in a vast parking lot where scores of trucks, on any given day, are loading up with supplies to trade their way thousands of miles into Russia. Families live aboard the trucks, packed with whatever the traders fancy will sell on the road and at the end of the line, from T-shirts to chickens. But it is high-level commerce — the ebb and flow of globalization — that needs the upgraded infrastructure most. And Central Asia, with its deteriorating physical plant, “is the missing link in the whole puzzle of the Eurasian continent,” says Sean D. O’Sullivan, the director for infrastructure for Central and West Asia for the ADB, the logical extension of China’s Go West policy, which has built or rebuilt roads, railway systems and communications all the way to the border.
Courtesy ADB
That is a good deal easier said than done. For 40 years, under the auspices of the United Nations, there has been an attempt to create a Trans-Asian Railway to provide a continuous 14,000-kilometer link between Singapore and Istanbul with connections radiating out to Europe and Africa, with a northern corridor connecting the rail networks of China, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, the Russian Federation and the Korean Peninsula, as well as a southern corridor connecting Thailand and the southern Chinese province of Yunnan with Turkey through Burma, Bangladesh, India, Pakistan and Iran.
While some of those rail links have taken place, the vast majority haven’t, at least partly because few countries have common-gauge rail lines. The cost of constructing new rail lines and the rolling stock to travel on them is prohibitive. Also, the problems of the Eurozone in creating customs-free borders, which ultimately came to pass with the European Union, are multiplied many times over by individual satrapies across Central Asia that don’t want to give up the money-spinning – and often corruption-enabling – bureaucracies created by borderless travel.
Nonetheless, O’Sullivan and his fellow officials are optimistic. “It is the opportunity that we are trying to capture – eight countries, with the five Central Asian countries at the core. They have come out of the negative GDP growth that followed independence (when the Soviet Union collapsed). Some are growing fast, some not so fast. But we expect GDP across the region to double during the 10 years of the strategic plan.”
One of the major goals of the transport plan therefore is nothing more than a major reorientation of trade flows. Currently, despite the fact that the Stans, the collective nickname for the landlocked countries, lie at the very epicenter of the Eurasian continent, less than 1 percent of all trade between Asia and Europe goes through the region. Most of the commerce goes around the region by sea or the Trans-Siberian Railway far to the north. According to the World Bank, railway density averages only 5.4 rail-kilometers per 1,000km, about a third of the average railway density of low- and middle-income countries. About 90 percent of total freight in the Central Asian countries travels by rail – an indication of how negatively low infrastructure levels affects trade across the region.
Thus the new transport corridors being proposed under the plan do not follow the routes taken by the Silk Road. The corridors will not only run from east to west but from north to south as well, connecting the Central Asian republics, Russia itself and China with seaports in South Asia and the Arabian Sea.
The obstacles are intimidating. Populations in the region, according to the ADB study of the program, “are concentrated at nodes, separated from each other and world markets by deserts, mountain ranges and the longest land transport distances on Earth.”
The agencies have been involved, for instance, in building a ring road around Afghanistan, barely a country, where war has been raging for generations.
“Between western China and Central Asia, you have huge mountains, so basically a lot of these roads go through the passes,” O’Sullivan says in an interview. “There are challenges for keeping them open in the winter, developing railways, but to the south, going towards Afghanistan, there is no railway infrastructure at all, so there is a huge move to do a ring road, so that it would provide the opportunity to the Central Asian countries to access the sea. Further to the east, you cross the Caspian and the Caucasus.
“I can’t say it is going to be easy,” O’Sullivan says. But as difficult as the projects are, he adds, when they are completed, the ability to move goods to market should triple the region’s GDP.
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