Dawei to become new entry point for Mideast trade with Asia

Dawai special economic zoneAn agreement signed in July between Japan, Myanmar and Thailand on the mutual development of the long-delayed Dawei Special Economic Zone in Myanmar will lead to the opening a new trade axis between the Middle East and East Asia. When completed, planners expect the zone to be the largest of its kind in entire Southeast Asia and a new economic gateway linking the Indian and the Pacific Oceans.

Dawei, a village located at the Andaman coast in southeastern Myanmar very close to the Thai border, is supposed to be transformed into a special economic zone including a deep-sea port under a project that actually dates back a couple of years and was suspended in 2013 as the then-Shinawatra government in Thailand missed to arrange necessary credit lines from Japan to go ahead with the project.

However, relations have improved, and on July 4, the said agreement has been signed in Tokyo on the sidelines of the 7th Mekong-Japan Summit. In a next step, on July 24, Italian-Thai Development Plc, one of the largest construction firms in Thailand, through its subsidiary Dawei Development Company signed a contract with the Myanmar government to develop and kick off works at the zone. Dawei Development Company will also be commissioned by the Myanmar government to operate the Dawei Special Economic Zone for at least 50 years.

Development of phase one will cover 27 square kilometers, and the initial investment is estimated to reach $1.7 billion. The first piece of infrastructure to be built is a 138-kilometer road stretch from Dawei to Kanchanaburi province 119 kilometers northwest of Bangkok, where it will connect to other transnational highways. Further developments will include the construction of public utilities, liquefied national gas yards, a power plant and the port.

The final size of the Dawei Special Economic Zone is expected to be 205 square kilometers, whereby the project is backed by development loans worth $6.1 billion assigned by Tokyo. The entire costs of the project are believed to be more than $8 billion.

When finished, the new economic zone will allow cargo to bypass the narrow and congested Strait of Malacca to forge shorter trade routes from the Middle East and Africa to China, Japan and other part of Southeast and East Asia. It will probably also put an end to the controversy around the much-discussed Kra Canal, a project that entails digging a canal across the smallest part of the Thai Isthmus to cut a new shipping line between the Indian Ocean and the South China Sea.

Another reason for Japan’s interest in the revived project is to counter Thailand’s influence in Myanmar, which welcomes the much-needed infrastructure for its rapidly emerging economy. Dawei’s road connections to Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam and the planned deep-sea port will give regional traders easy access to global markets and, in turn, will make it an attractive location for Middle East oil and gas shipments keen to reach the Southeast and East Asian markets, as well as for Western companies to reach out to other economic development areas such as the Mekong region and to plug into Myanmar’s plentiful natural resources and low labour costs and avoid shipping via the Strait of Malacca, especially after the launch of the ASEAN Economic Community at the end of 2015 which will reduce tariffs on trade across the region.

PowerPoint Presentation
The land bridge concept for the transport of crude oil from the Middle East through Dawei and across Thailand to East Asian refineries. Source: Dawei Development Company



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An agreement signed in July between Japan, Myanmar and Thailand on the mutual development of the long-delayed Dawei Special Economic Zone in Myanmar will lead to the opening a new trade axis between the Middle East and East Asia. When completed, planners expect the zone to be the largest of its kind in entire Southeast Asia and a new economic gateway linking the Indian and the Pacific Oceans. Dawei, a village located at the Andaman coast in southeastern Myanmar very close to the Thai border, is supposed to be transformed into a special economic zone including a deep-sea port under...

Dawai special economic zoneAn agreement signed in July between Japan, Myanmar and Thailand on the mutual development of the long-delayed Dawei Special Economic Zone in Myanmar will lead to the opening a new trade axis between the Middle East and East Asia. When completed, planners expect the zone to be the largest of its kind in entire Southeast Asia and a new economic gateway linking the Indian and the Pacific Oceans.

Dawei, a village located at the Andaman coast in southeastern Myanmar very close to the Thai border, is supposed to be transformed into a special economic zone including a deep-sea port under a project that actually dates back a couple of years and was suspended in 2013 as the then-Shinawatra government in Thailand missed to arrange necessary credit lines from Japan to go ahead with the project.

However, relations have improved, and on July 4, the said agreement has been signed in Tokyo on the sidelines of the 7th Mekong-Japan Summit. In a next step, on July 24, Italian-Thai Development Plc, one of the largest construction firms in Thailand, through its subsidiary Dawei Development Company signed a contract with the Myanmar government to develop and kick off works at the zone. Dawei Development Company will also be commissioned by the Myanmar government to operate the Dawei Special Economic Zone for at least 50 years.

Development of phase one will cover 27 square kilometers, and the initial investment is estimated to reach $1.7 billion. The first piece of infrastructure to be built is a 138-kilometer road stretch from Dawei to Kanchanaburi province 119 kilometers northwest of Bangkok, where it will connect to other transnational highways. Further developments will include the construction of public utilities, liquefied national gas yards, a power plant and the port.

The final size of the Dawei Special Economic Zone is expected to be 205 square kilometers, whereby the project is backed by development loans worth $6.1 billion assigned by Tokyo. The entire costs of the project are believed to be more than $8 billion.

When finished, the new economic zone will allow cargo to bypass the narrow and congested Strait of Malacca to forge shorter trade routes from the Middle East and Africa to China, Japan and other part of Southeast and East Asia. It will probably also put an end to the controversy around the much-discussed Kra Canal, a project that entails digging a canal across the smallest part of the Thai Isthmus to cut a new shipping line between the Indian Ocean and the South China Sea.

Another reason for Japan’s interest in the revived project is to counter Thailand’s influence in Myanmar, which welcomes the much-needed infrastructure for its rapidly emerging economy. Dawei’s road connections to Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam and the planned deep-sea port will give regional traders easy access to global markets and, in turn, will make it an attractive location for Middle East oil and gas shipments keen to reach the Southeast and East Asian markets, as well as for Western companies to reach out to other economic development areas such as the Mekong region and to plug into Myanmar’s plentiful natural resources and low labour costs and avoid shipping via the Strait of Malacca, especially after the launch of the ASEAN Economic Community at the end of 2015 which will reduce tariffs on trade across the region.

PowerPoint Presentation
The land bridge concept for the transport of crude oil from the Middle East through Dawei and across Thailand to East Asian refineries. Source: Dawei Development Company



Support ASEAN news

Investvine has been a consistent voice in ASEAN news for more than a decade. From breaking news to exclusive interviews with key ASEAN leaders, we have brought you factual and engaging reports – the stories that matter, free of charge.

Like many news organisations, we are striving to survive in an age of reduced advertising and biased journalism. Our mission is to rise above today’s challenges and chart tomorrow’s world with clear, dependable reporting.

Support us now with a donation of your choosing. Your contribution will help us shine a light on important ASEAN stories, reach more people and lift the manifold voices of this dynamic, influential region.

 

 

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