Chinese 'highway to nowhere' haunts
Montenegro
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[July 16, 2018]
By Noah Barkin and Aleksandar Vasovic
PODGORICA (Reuters) - Perched atop massive
cement pillars that tower above Montenegro's picturesque Moraca river
canyon, scores of Chinese workers are building a state-of-the-art
highway through some of the roughest terrain in southern Europe.
The government has described the 165 km (103 mile) highway, with its
imposing bridges and deep-cut tunnels, as the construction of the
century and a pathway to the modern world.
It is designed to link the port of Bar on Montenegro's Adriatic coast to
landlocked neighbor Serbia. But once the first, challenging 41 km
stretch through mountains north of the capital is completed, the
government faces a difficult choice.
A Chinese loan for the first phase has sent Montenegro's debt soaring
and forced the government to raise taxes, partially freeze public sector
wages and end a benefit for mothers to get its finances in order.
Despite those measures, Montenegro's debt is expected to approach 80
percent of gross domestic product (GDP) this year and the International
Monetary Fund says the country cannot afford to take on any more debt to
finish its ambitious project.
"There is a big question about how they complete it," said an EU
official who requested anonymity. "Their fiscal space has shrunk
enormously. They have strangled themselves. And for the time being this
is a highway to nowhere."
The road is at the heart of an intense debate about Chinese influence in
Europe, both within EU member states and countries aspiring to join the
bloc such as Montenegro and its Western Balkan neighbors Serbia,
Macedonia and Albania.
As Beijing extends its economic reach under the ambitious Belt and Road
Initiative (BRI), poor countries across Asia and Africa have seized on
attractive Chinese loans and the promise of transformative
infrastructure projects.
This has allowed them to develop in ways that may not have been possible
without access to China's vast foreign exchange reserves. But some
countries, such as Sri Lanka, Djibouti and Mongolia, have found
themselves weighed down by debt and ever more reliant on Beijing's
largesse.
Montenegro is the first country in Europe to find itself in this
position as its government presses on with its dream of a gleaming new
highway to lead the nation to a brighter future.
"This highway is a big deal in Montenegro. It reminds people of Tito and
the days of grand socialist projects in the region," said academic
Mladen Grgic, referring to former Yugoslavia's long-time communist
leader Josip Broz Tito.
"But it's a trap. Now that it's been started, the politicians can't stop
it – no matter how harmful it might be. And frankly they don't want to,"
said Grgic, author of a 2017 study on the highway.
'NOT BANKABLE'
The idea of building a highway from the coast to Serbia can be traced
back to 2005, a year before Montenegro's vote for independence from its
neighbor. The project was championed by Milo Djukanovic, who has served
as president or prime minister of Montenegro nearly uninterrupted since
1991.
The government hopes the highway will give an economic boost to the
country's underdeveloped north, bolster trade with Serbia and improve
road safety as Montenegro's narrow, winding mountain roads are
notoriously dangerous.
Having recognized that there is little scope to take on more debt, the
government's options for building the next three phases of the highway
are limited.
The option it now favors is a public private partnership (PPP) in which
an outside partner would build and operate the highway, then run it
under a concession from the state for 30 years to get a return on their
investment.
China Road and Bridge Corporation (CRBC), the large state-owned Chinese
company that is building the first section, signed a memorandum of
understanding (MOU) in March to complete the rest of the road on a PPP
basis.
But European lenders worry that Montenegro would need to offer costly
revenue guarantees to make that work, potentially deepening its
financial woes.
"We told them that their PPP model was not bankable, that they would be
taking on risks they don't know how to manage," said an official from
the European Investment Bank (EIB), the European Union's lender.
The IMF cautioned the government in May against a PPP solution that
could introduce large contingent liabilities. One official suggested
Montenegro would be better off waiting until it joined the EU before
finishing the highway.
Once it is part of the EU, Montenegro would have access to more
structural and cohesion funds from Brussels. But the process of joining
the bloc could take a decade or more, despite a loose target date of
2025 floated by the EU this year.
FEASIBILITY STUDIES
Doubts about the highway surfaced after two feasibility studies,
conducted in 2006 and 2012, showed it was not economically viable.
Reuters reviewed copies of the studies, the first carried out by French
firm Louis Berger for the Montenegrin government, and the second by U.S.
company URS for the EIB. Both concluded there would not be enough
traffic to justify a concession.
Louis Berger estimated the government would have to pay 35 million to 77
million euros a year in subsidies to make a toll-based system attractive
to outside investors.
URS looked at each section of the highway and concluded that all
possible combinations were economically unworkable. It recommended a
more modest upgrade of existing roads.
"The low current traffic volumes and the weak economic forecasts mean
that the economic benefits of the proposed route do not provide adequate
return on the investment," URS said.
To justify the grand highway envisioned by the Montenegrin government,
URS said internal rates of return of 8 percent would be required but it
estimated they would be below 2 percent.
Ivan Kekovic, an engineer who was involved in the project in its early
years but later issued an open letter to parliament warning against it,
told Reuters that average traffic of 22,000 to 25,000 vehicles a day
would be needed to justify a highway of the proposed scale.
Daily traffic on the busiest stretch, from the capital Podgorica to the
port of Bar, is less than 6,000 vehicles.
Early attempts to build the highway, first with a Croatian consortium
and then with a Greek-Israeli one, collapsed after both groups failed to
provide bank guarantees in time.
Critics breathed a sigh of relief, convinced the project was dead. Then
China appeared on the scene.
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A worker hides from the sun on the Bar-Boljare highway construction
site in Klopot, Montenegro June 11, 2018. Picture taken June 11,
2018. REUTERS/Stevo Vasiljevic
CHINA FILLS VOID
Economics professors at the University of Montenegro were paid by
the state-funded Export-Import Bank of China to conduct a new
feasibility study.
This one found the highway was viable, according to the government.
But this study has never been made public and attempts by Reuters to
see it were unsuccessful.
China Communications Construction Co., CRBC's parent firm, did not
respond to a request for comment about the studies.
MANS, an EU-financed anti-corruption watchdog, pressed the
government to provide members of parliament with data to support its
vision before a vote to approve the highway in 2014. It refused.
"We have no doubt that the data that the ministry of transport used
in order to justify the construction of the highway are fabricated,"
said Dejan Milovac, deputy executive director at MANS.
The government denies manipulating the numbers and says the highway
will deliver long-term economic and social benefits that prove the
skeptics wrong.
Zorana Mihajlovic, deputy prime minister of Serbia, which is
building a stretch of highway with Chinese help to link with the
Montenegrin road, took a similar view.
"There are investments that may not be economically justifiable from
a short-term perspective, but which are strategically important,"
she told Reuters.
The six Western Balkan countries – Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Kosovo, Macedonia, Montenegro and Serbia - are surrounded by EU
member states. But the region has suffered from under-investment and
poor governance since the independence wars of the 1990s, making it
an economic laggard.
Over the past decade, as the EU struggled with a succession of
crises and put enlargement of the bloc on hold, other powers,
including Russia and Turkey, have moved in to fill the void.
China has been especially active. In 2012, it began holding annual
"16+1" summits with eastern and southern European states to discuss
investment opportunities, infuriating Brussels.
A year later, it unveiled BRI, its grand plan to secure land and
maritime trade routes from Asia to Europe and Africa.
The Western Balkans, strategically positioned on Europe's southern
flank, is a key access point for China to reach central Europe and
beyond.
China's investments in the region total more than 6 billion euros -
including highways, rail lines and power plants. Serbia, the largest
economy in the region and Beijing's long-standing ally, has received
the lion's share.
Montenegro could be attractive to China for a number of reasons. It
gives Beijing a port of entry into Europe from the Adriatic, and
close economic and political ties with the government in Podgorica
could prove valuable for China if Montenegro becomes an EU member.
'DISBELIEVERS'
The 809 million euros Montenegro received from China's Export-Import
Bank covers 85 percent of the cost of the first section of the road.
The dollar-denominated loan carries a 2 percent interest rate,
20-year repayment schedule and 6-year grace period – attractive
terms but a major long-term burden for a country of roughly 620,000
people.
Under the terms of the contract, an arbitration court in China would
have jurisdiction in the event of any legal dispute. CRBC won
commitments that all imported construction materials, equipment and
other goods be exempt from customs and value-added tax. Chinese
workers were given 70 percent of the work.
Some 3,605 workers are busy building the first section of the
highway. Roughly two-thirds of them are from CRBC, one of the
largest engineering and construction firms in the world.
Four camps of neat blue-roofed bungalows house the Chinese workers.
Dotting the area are billboards in Chinese and English exhorting
them to be meticulous and responsible.
"CRBC expects to build the future sections of this project," Kang
Shifei, deputy project manager for CRBC, told Reuters on a blazing
hot afternoon in June, beneath the giant pillars that will support a
kilometer bridge above the Moraca canyon.
Because the government did not hedge against currency swings and
omitted a vital turnpike from its original blueprint, the cost has
continued to rise. It is now approaching 1 billion euros, nearly a
quarter of Montenegro's GDP.
A March report from the Washington-based Center for Global
Development which examined the debt risks associated with BRI listed
Montenegro as one of eight highly vulnerable countries, alongside
Djibouti, the Maldives, Laos, Mongolia, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan and
Pakistan.
The remaining three-quarters of the highway will plow through less
mountainous terrain. The IMF estimates it will cost another $1.2
billion to complete.
Prime Minister Dusko Markovic has said it will be finished at any
cost and promised to deepen cooperation with China in other areas,
including hydropower and tourism. He has dismissed critics as
"disbelievers".
But opposition politicians are worried – about the country's
finances and about China's role.
Dritan Abazovic, head of the United Reform Action opposition party,
said it was normal for an economic power such as China to seek a
role in the region, alongside the EU, United States and Russia.
But because of the scale of the project, he worries the deal with
the Chinese will end up giving Beijing much more influence over
Montenegro.
"It puts the Chinese in a very very comfortable position," he said.
(Editing by David Clarke)
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