Thailand Losing out to China in Battle of the Burma Ports | The Irrawaddy Magazine
 WILLIAM BOOT / THE IRRAWADDY,       February 21, 2013  
Thailand’s dream of acquiring a trade gateway to the Indian Ocean may  be scuppered not because of lukewarm interest by Japanese investors but  because of Burmese and Chinese business interests.
The Bangkok government has blamed problems in securing Japanese  investment for the latest delay in forging ahead with the Dawei  industrial port project on Burma’s southeast coast. In fact, the  grandiose multi-billion dollar scheme first envisaged by the private  Thai developer Italian-Thai Development (ITD) as long ago as 2008 was in  limbo long before the Thai government moved in last September to try to  help it along.
The Burmese government had clearly gone cold on Dawei—which is closer  to Bangkok than Rangoon by 300 km—when it refused to approve a huge  4,000 megawatt coal-fueled electricity generating plant at the site for  ITD back in February 2012.
By then, Chinese government money was already building an oil  transhipment terminal on the central coast at Kyaukphyu, another sleepy  Burmese seaside town where gas from the Shwe field out in the Bay of  Bengal will also come ashore.
Kyaukphyu is where oil and natural gas pipelines now being completed  through Burma into China’s neighboring Yunnan Province begin. It’s where  China plans to take a fast railway line from Yunnan carrying exports,  and it’s where the Burmese government on the back of these developments  has ambitions to build an economic zone to attract manufacturers and  create a major import-export port with thousands of jobs.
Kyaukphyu is not close to Rangoon but it is only 250 km to Naypyidaw  and less to the central Irrawaddy belt of towns leading up to Mandalay.
“The fundamental problem with the Dawei project is that its main  beneficiary is always going to be Bangkok,” regional energy industries  analyst-consultant Collin Reynolds told The Irrawaddy on Feb. 19. “The  Thais want it primarily as a crude oil transhipment point much the same  as the Chinese are achieving with their Kyaukphyu set up.
“Thailand also sees Dawei as a place where it could expand its  petrochemicals industry, which is stymied on the edge of Bangkok because  of environmental and health concerns.
“Japanese investment could go into Dawei in support of this because  Japanese firms are among those that have been restricted at Bangkok’s  Map Ta Phut petrochemicals industrial estate. But I think Japan sees  bigger prospects in and around the port in Rangoon where some of its  large industrial corporations have committed to a new economic zone.”
Whereas the Naypyidaw government has had no direct input on  Dawei—beyond polite meetings with Thai government delegations led by  Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra—it has already appointed a minister,  Myint Thein, to oversee a development agency for Kyaukphyu.
Naypyidaw has signed an agreement with China to permit a combined  railway and highway which would link Kyaukphyu with towns in central  Burma and especially Yunnan’s provincial capital Kunming.
No timetable for the 1,200-km-long railway’s construction has been  announced, but the natural gas pipeline controlled by China National  Petroleum Corporation is being tested this month and is scheduled to  begin commercial operations in April, while the parallel oil pipeline  should be completed by the end of this year.
Kyaukphyu is ideally placed for an expected growth in Burma’s  offshore oil and gas exploitation. There are 20 or more untouched blocks  dotted along the coast both sides of Kyaukphyu which are likely to go  up for auction sometime this year.
“The Kyaukphyu Economic Zone is a specially designated area in which  foreign companies will construct and operate petrochemical plants and  oversee the export of Chinese-made products,” says Arakan Oil Watch, an  NGO concerned about environmental and human rights issues such as land  confiscation.
The NGO said a special economic zone law was established by the  former military junta in January 2011 and is still in force, regulating  investor privileges, land use, finance management and labor.
The Naypyidaw government has said it will consult local people,  something that hasn’t happened at other major development sites, before  finalizing industrial zoning at Kyaukphyu.
Thailand’s Transport Minister Chadchat Sittipunt, who chairs the  Thai-Myanmar Joint Coordination Committee for Dawei, said on Feb. 12  there were serious problems preventing the Dawei project proceeding. It  could be another whole year before Japan made a firm commitment, he  said.
“Thailand’s Office of Transport and Traffic Policy and Planning has  said it will have to conduct a new feasibility study on several aspects  of the project as Japan disagrees on [ITD’s] planning of the location of  the port and infrastructure details,” said Hong Kong’s Inside Investor,  which provides advice to business investors across Asia.
If Dawei does finally return to its sleepy seaside status, the Thais  can still secure their gateway to the Indian Ocean and, like the  Chinese, avoid using the Malacca Strait for oil shipments. The Thai  Ministry of Transport is carrying out yet another feasibility study into  a so-called land bridge across Thailand’s narrowest point.
It’s not as handy for Bangkok as Dawei, but Pakbara in southern  Thailand near the Malaysian island of Langkawi on the Andaman Sea is  only 100 km across to the Gulf of Thailand at Mueang Songkhla, short  enough to build oil pipelines for transhipment.
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