ISLAMABAD: Pakistan, World Bank sign five loan agreements of $787 million. Pakistan and the World Bank on Tuesday
signed five loan agreements of $787 million for development projects, majority
of them for Karachi uplift.
The agreements were signed by Economic
Affairs Division secretary Noor Ahmed, World Bank’s country director in
Islamabad Patchamuthu Illangovan and the representatives of governments of
Sindh and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and the National Transmission and Dispatch Company
Ltd. Minister for Economic Affairs Hammad Azhar witnessed the signing ceremony.
The World Bank will provide $652m for three
development projects in Karachi to support urban mobility, urban management and
service delivery, improve water and sewerage services, tourism and power
sectors.
The first loan of $382m was inked for Karachi
Mobility (Yellow Line) Project that is expected to improve mobility,
accessibility and safety along the yellow line Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) corridor
in Karachi.
The project will help to develop urban road infrastructure (Yellow
Corridor), rehabilitation or reconstruction of road infrastructure along the yellow
corridor, development and operationalisation of a BRT system and capacity
building.
The Yellow BRT corridor was recently approved
by the federal government with revised cost estimates of Rs61.436 billion. The
Sindh government had proposed the Karachi Urban Mobility Project (Yellow Line
Bus Rapid Transit) worth Rs65.968bn but the federal government had rationalised
its cost estimates down to Rs61.4bn.
Pakistan, World Bank sign five loan agreements of $787 million
Karachi to get $652m for three development
projects.
The corridor starts at Dawood Chowrangi in
the east, runs through the Korangi industrial area, and ends at Numaish
Chowrangi.
It is one of five priority lines in the city’s transport plan and
will benefit commuters along Surjani Town and Korangi industrial area, and will
reduce travel time, road traffic fatalities, and reduce emissions.
Another World Bank loan worth $230m will
finance Competitive and Livable City of Karachi Project.
The project is
targeted to improve the performance of Karachi Local Councils and agencies in
urban management, financing and service delivery and to improve the business
environment for development of the private sector.
The project is expected to
help address some of the challenges of urban management service delivery and
business environment being faced by Karachi by selectively tackling critical
bottlenecks.
The project will help improve performance and
service delivery by local councils through performance-based grants for urban
property tax system, incentivise private sector participation in service
delivery, enhance ease of doing business, and improve solid waste management.
Another loan worth $40m was signed for
Karachi Water and Sewerage Services Improvement project (Phase-1).
The project
aims to improve access to safe water services and to increase Karachi Water and
Sewerage Board’s financial and operational performance.
The project is
conceived as the first in a proposed series of projects that forms a long-term
programme to address the serious water, sanitation and hygiene service gaps in
rapidly growing Karachi.
The Executive Committee of the National
Economic Council had approved the project a few weeks ago at a cost of $105.21m
(Rs16.71bn) to improve water resources and quality of sewerage system in
Karachi.
The three projects have come following the
findings of the ‘Karachi Transformative Strategy’ that estimates infrastructure
needs of between $9-10bn in financing over a 10-year period to meet
infrastructure and service delivery needs of the country’s largest city through
urban transport, water supply and sanitation, and municipal solid waste.
Also, a $70m loan for Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
Integrated Tourism Development Project was signed to improve tourism-enabling
infrastructure, develop tourism assets, and strengthen management for
sustainable tourism development in KP.
Likewise, an additional financing agreement
worth $65m was signed for Central Asia South Asia Electricity Transmission and
Trade Project (CASA-1000) Project.
The objective of the ongoing project is to
create the conditions for sustainable electricity trade of 1,300MW between
Central Asian countries (Tajikistan and the Kyrgyz Republic) and South Asian
countries — Pakistan (1,000MW) and Afghanistan (300MW).
Pakistan, World Bank sign five loan agreements of $787 million
Minister for Economic Affairs Hammad Azhar on
the occasion said that the signing of five projects worth $787m was an
expression of resolve of the World Bank to support the development agenda of
the present government.
He thanked the World Bank for extending its continuous
support to the government in its efforts to achieve sustainable economic
development in the country.
The World Bank country representative
appreciated the reforms initiatives of the government and said the lending
agency would extend possible support and facilitation to help put Pakistan’s
economy back on track.
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Pakistan, World Bank sign five loan agreements of $787 million
Reviewed by DM NEWS
on
November 27, 2019
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