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Today's Paper | May 04, 2024

Published 09 Feb, 2008 12:00am

Rs60bn needed to tide over water, power crisis: WB

ISLAMABAD, Feb 8: Pakistan’s water infrastructure is in poor condition and needs Rs60 billion ($1 billion) annual investment in reservoirs and related projects over the next five years, says a World Bank study.

“In the energy sector, the country will face severe power shortage of around 6,000 megawatts by 2010,” according to the bank’s latest study – Pakistan Infrastructure Implementation Capacity.

The bank has urged Pakistan to strengthen its capacity to undertake major infrastructure projects needed to boost economic growth and wipe out poverty.

“The country suffers from a dearth of infrastructure in the water, irrigation, power, and transport sectors.”

The bank believes that Pakistan is one of the most water stressed countries in the world, and its water resources are depleting rapidly.

Similarly, inefficiencies in the transport sector cost the economy between 4-5 per cent of the GDP each year.

To overcome these constraints, the government of Pakistan is tripling its annual infrastructure investment from an average of Rs150 billion ($2.5 billion) to Rs440 billion ($7.3 billion).

However, the report pointed out that mega projects in the past have experienced frequent delays and cost overruns, illustrating a lack of capacity in the industry to plan, programme and execute large projects.

“Lack of adequate irrigation, power, and transport infrastructure hinders growth and is affecting all sectors of the economy,” said Yusupha Crookes, the World Bank’s Country Director for Pakistan. “It is, therefore, critical to address the core challenges – scarcity of skilled workers and inefficient business processes – to enable the government’s very ambitious infrastructure plan to move forward.”

In the current environment, the report concludes that the construction industry does not have the capacity to deliver the government’s planned infrastructure programme. Its analysis found that contractors keep getting work even though they lack the capacity to perform.

The business environment has delivery constraints, planned projects often take longer to complete, and even longer to achieve a financial close. Issues such as poor project planning, insufficient programming, and weak implementation are common.

Shortage of adequately skilled workers, the report said, is particularly affecting the ability of the construction industry to deliver mega infrastructure. Over half the workers produced each year in civil, electrical, and mechanical engineering fields find employment overseas. The report calls for a development strategy to build up the existing human resources pool and upgrading the skill sets through urgent measures to enhance training capacity and to reverse the brain-drain.

“A long term industry overhaul and immediate innovative approaches for mega infrastructure delivery are needed”, said Amer Durrani, senior transport specialist and lead author of the report.

“A construction industry development organisation should be set up to anchor the development effort and provide an institutional mechanism for reform. In addition, a national construction industry development policy should be prepared and implemented for all stakeholders with immediate actions on procurement with ensured transparency and improved cost estimation,” he said.

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