Deutsche Welle, 14 June 2013
A Chinese tycoon has managed to push through Nicaragua's congress a bill granting his company the rights to build the country's largest-ever development project. However, experts see huge challenges ahead.
A Chinese tycoon has managed to push through Nicaragua's congress a bill granting his company the rights to build the country's largest-ever development project. However, experts see huge challenges ahead.
According
to media reports, the legislation approved in the National Assembly dominated
by President Daniel Ortega's Sandinista Front contains no specific route for
the canal and virtually no details of its financing or economic viability. It
simply grants the Hong Kong-based HKND Group, owned by Beijing-based
entrepreneur Wang Jing, 50 years of exclusive rights to study the plan, build
and operate a canal linking the Pacific and Caribbean in exchange for Nicaragua
receiving a minority share of any profits. The projected cost of the canal is
40 billions dollars.
However,
despite the expected business opportunities, the project bears plenty of risks
for both the environment and international relations, said Karl-Dieter
Hoffmann, head of the Latin American Studies Institute at the Catholic
University of Eichstätt-Ingolstadt in a DW interview.
DW: Why is
Nicaragua attempting to build this canal?
Karl-Dieter
Hoffmann: There are mainly economic reasons behind this. Nicaragua is one of
Latin America's poorest countries. Initially, the project had been turned down
because of its enormous costs. However, Nicaraguan President Ortega now seems
to have found in Wang Jing a wealthy investor backed the Chinese government.
This has allowed him to push the controversial deal through the Nicaraguan
congress and start the search for much-needed income sources.
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| Hoffmann believes there are geopolitical reasons behind China's decision to finance the canal's construction |
How would
China profit from the project?
At the
moment, China is the second-largest user of the Panama Canal which is being
expanded because of an increase in trade between Asia and the nations in the
Western Hemisphere.
I believe
there are not only economic but only geopolitical motives behind Beijing's
backing of the Nicaraguan project. China is currently investing more in Latin
America than any other country. It has even overtaken the US and Europe as
South America's largest trading partner.
So it
appears that the Chinese are now extending their economic might into Central
America, where some of the countries still have diplomatic relations with
Taipei instead of Beijing. So far, the Taiwanese government has managed to
maintain such ties by investing heavily in development and infrastructure
projects in the region. But Beijing's growing influence might cause this to
change, just as in the case of Nicaragua's neighbor Costa Rica.
What
effects would this have on global trade?
The
viability of the canal project will depend on how maritime transportation
develops over the next years. In the case of a global recession the new canal
could trigger a cut-throat competition with the Panama Canal, since both of
them would be vying to offer the lowest transit fees. Such a development would,
in turn, have drastic repercussions on Chinese investment.
On the
other hand, a Nicaraguan canal would also have an immediate impact on other
forms of transportation such as rail freight, and even drive some companies out
of business.
What are
the risks involved?
The project
bears all sorts of risks. First of all, no studies have been released neither
on the feasibility of the canal, nor on its possible environmental impact.
There is, for instance, no data on how construction would affect water supply
in the region or even on how many locks the canal will have.
But there
might also be political consequences. In order to build the canal, engineers
would make partial use of Lake Nicaragua, but tapping the outflowing San Juan
River could lead to a diplomatic dispute with Costa Rica. The Nicaraguan
government seems to have been caught off guard by the project. This hasn't been
a transparent process.
![]() |
| Hoffmann believes tapping the San Juan river could lead to a diplomatic dispute between Nicaragua and Costa Rica |
The Panama
Canal was completed by the United States. What political message would a
Chinese-built canal sent to the world?
Chinese
President Xi Jinping returned from a Latin America tour a few days ago, but no
word on the construction of the canal had been made public. So far, there has
been no official reaction from the US government on the issue, but I believe
that particularly members of the Republican Party will be alarmed by the Chinese
constructing a canal so close to the US mainland, possibly affecting American
interests in the region. For the first time in history, the United States would
have a global competitor directly at its doorstep.
The
interview was conducted by Gabriel DomÃnguez.
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