No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveChinese firm gets concession for Nicaragua canal

Chinese firm gets concession for Nicaragua canal

MANAGUA – Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega has said a concession to build an inter-oceanic canal across his Central American nation was awarded to an unnamed Chinese consortium based in Hong Kong.

A lawmaker said the waterway would cost $40 billion to build.

Ortega made the announcement last Wednesday at ceremonies welcoming new ambassadors from Brazil, Canada, Switzerland, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. He encouraged these countries to invest in the canal.

On Friday, members of the political opposition characterized the project as potentially “fraudulent.”

The ambitious canal idea, Ortega said, includes a conventional canal, a “dry canal” – a rail line – as well as two airports and an oil pipeline to move petroleum from the Caribbean to the Pacific.

Work on the canal should begin in May 2014 after a feasibility study is completed, the president said.

Ortega sent to the National Assembly a bill that would set the legal framework for building the canal.

Opposition lawmaker Eliseo Nunez told reporters the bill “would give a 100-year concession, like that given to the United States (to build and operate the Panama Canal), and that the Chinese were going to build the canal, which would cost $40 billion.”

Oddly, Nicaragua and China do not have formal diplomatic relations because of Managua’s ties with Taiwan. But Nicaragua and China maintain economic relations.

In September 2012, Ortega said that the China-based HK-Nicaragua company would conduct the feasibility study to build the canal. In the Wednesday announcement he mentioned no names, but did say the concession was given to a consortium based in Hong Kong and formed by Chinese companies.

The Sandinista Renovation Movement, an opposition group, said, Ortega “pretends to issue a concession, privileges and tax exemptions to an unknown company.” They demanded Otega issue environmental study and financial reports for the project.

“If this information isn’t provided, we are free to assume that this is a fraudulent plan, an operation with a paper company to issue a concession that will later be sold to other parties. It’s a corrupt operation that is an opportunity for fraudulent investors to make a lot of money,” the movement said in a statement.

Plans to build a canal across Nicaragua date back many years, but were overtaken in 1914 when the 82-kilometer (51-mile) Panama Canal was completed.

In recent years, however, Nicaraguan governments have revived the concept as a way to promote development in the poorest country in the Americas after Haiti.

When the National Assembly authorized building the canal in mid-2012, it said the project would be operated as a joint public/private partnership, with the state maintaining a 51 percent stake.

Trending Now

Salvadoran Newspaper Says Bukele Froze Partners’ Assets After Documentary

The influential digital newspaper El Faro denounced on Thursday that the government of Nayib Bukele froze assets belonging to its partners in retaliation for...

What Is the Scope of the Mega-Trial Against MS-13 Leaders in El Salvador?

Shackled hand and foot, visibly aged, the MS-13 leaders on trial in El Salvador are now only a shadow of the violent gang members...

Latin American Clay-Court Hopes Take Center Stage at Italian Open in Rome

The Italian Open is underway at the Foro Italico, and for tennis fans across Latin America, this year’s tournament offers more than the usual...

Costa Rica Names New Head of Costa Rica Tourism Institute

President-elect Laura Fernández has named Marcos Borges as the incoming executive president of the Costa Rican Tourism Institute (ICT), placing him in one of...

Amnesty Urges El Salvador First Lady to Help Families of Detainees

Amnesty International on Sunday called on El Salvador’s first lady, Gabriela Rodríguez, to facilitate dialogue between authorities and the mothers of thousands of people...

Costa Rica’s Laura Fernández Names Rodrigo Chaves Minister of Presidency

President-elect Laura Fernández named outgoing President Rodrigo Chaves as minister of the Presidency and minister of Finance on Tuesday, giving her predecessor one of...
Avatar
Loading…

Latest News from Costa Rica

Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel