PR expanding scope of CPEC to explore ‘Gateway of Prosperity’
Islamabad: Pakistan Railways (PR) has said it was expanding the scope of China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) to explore the “Gateway of Prosperity” for both countries and the region at large through the advancement of the Railways sector.
In an official statement, the PR mentioned that it considered CPEC as a long-term development project as it has the potential to serve as a corridor with multiple doors connecting China with Central Asia, the middle East, Africa, and Europe.
It added that the Chinese and Pakistani workforce, in a large number, was employed to ensure timely completion of the infrastructure projects.
There were also new projects launched such as Sukkur-Hyderabad Motorway (M-6), Peshawar-D.I.Khan Motorway (M-14), KKH Alternate Route (Gilgit-Shandor-Chitral), Swat Expressway (Phase-II), Dir Expressway, and Karachi Circular Railways, it elaborated.
Pakistan Railways, the statement mentioned, was providing one of the key modes of transport in the public sector which promoted national integration and economic growth.
Pakistan Railways comprised a total of 466 locomotives for a 7,791 km long route. During July-March FY2022, the gross earnings of railways were recorded at Pakistani Rs 43.73 billion, it said.
The modern transportation and communication system was one of the key inputs for achieving sustainable economic growth, the statement noted.
“A network of roads, highways, motorways, seaports, and airlines in a country makes it a center of economic activity by attracting investment, raising productivity, and reducing the cost of doing business,” it explained.
The government, it further said, was committed to upgrading the transportation and communication system with the development of new roads, highways motorways, railway tracks, and airports to improve connectivity under CPEC.
The CPEC was a pragmatic step for converting the unique geo-strategic location of Pakistan into geo-economics through various transport-related projects that would transform the road infrastructure of Pakistan and improve access to Central Asian, African, and European states, it observed.