City
Epaper

Chinese company announces to cut production over non-payment of dues by Pakistan

By ANI | Updated: April 21, 2023 15:05 IST

Islamabad [Pakistan], April 21 : The relationship between "all-weather" ally Pakistan and China is deteriorating over the non-payment of ...

Open in App

Islamabad [Pakistan], April 21 : The relationship between "all-weather" ally Pakistan and China is deteriorating over the non-payment of dues by Islamabad, reported The Nation.

Delayed payments have been a recurring problem and have impacted the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) significantly.

Chinese mine operating company recently announced that it will be forced to cut production by half due to the non-payment of dues by the federal government, Pakistan owes USD 60 million to the corporation that provides coal to most of the coal-based power plants in the country, reported The Nation.

The China Machinery Engineering Corporation (CMEC) feeds coal to power plants that generate an average of 1360 megawatts of electricity.

After Pakistan's failure to pay the dues, the extraction and provision of coal to these power plants had to be cut down. What could be avenues to become a more efficient, cost-effective and productive economy are quickly turning into missed opportunities and incurring more liabilities for Pakistan, reported The Nation.

CMEC is warning the country of a complete half within the next month should this matter remain unresolved. According to details released by the corporation, payments have not been made since May of last year. Furthermore, slow operations could threaten Phase III of the project, resulting in Pakistan being forced to import coal rather than using local reserves, reported The Nation.

Pakistan barely have enough reserves remaining to cover basic imports for the next four months and if it adds more coal to the mix, the country will be incurring an exorbitant cost.

Matters like these have been recurrent in Pakistan; in the last few months, Chinese authorities had voiced their concerns about overdue payments worth USD 1.5 billion to Independent Power Plants (IPPs), reported The Nation.

Pakistan's poor economic condition has led to a severe dollar shortage, which is why it is likely that it may not be able to make these payments in the near future as well.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: China–Pakistan Economic CorridorpakistanislamabadThe NationDhs punjab
Open in App

Related Stories

Cricket'From Allah, to Allah': Pakistani Cricketer Aamir Jamal Mourns Newborn Baby's Death

OpinionsPak Trapped in Uncle Sam’s Game

Cricket'Immoral and Barbaric': Rashid Khan Reacts After Pakistan Airstrikes Kill 3 Cricketers in Afghanistan

InternationalPakistan-Afghanistan Conflict: At Least 15 Civilians Killed, Over 100 Injured in Pakistani Artillery Fire in Kandahar

Cricket'India Hamare Baap The..': Pakistani Fan Abuses Men in Green After Loss to India in Asia Cup 2025 Final (Watch)

International Realted Stories

InternationalEAM Jaishankar meets Singapore FM Balakrishnan, discusses global scenario, bilateral cooperation

International21st century belongs to India and ASEAN, PM Modi asserts at Summit

InternationalMelissa strengthens into Category 3 hurricane, threating catastrophic flooding in Jamaica, Haiti

InternationalIndia and ASEAN members adopt joint statement on Sustainable Tourism

InternationalSeychelles vital in advancing MAHASAGAR vision, priorities of Global South: VP Radhakrishnan