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Thursday, May 3, 2012

Myanmar Raises Doubts on Italian-Thai’s Deep-Sea Port Plans

By Flavia Krause-Jackson and Daniel Ten Kate - May 3, 2012 12:31 PM GMT+0700  ...

Myanmar President Thein Sein’s top political adviser questioned Italian-Thai Development Pcl (ITD)’s ability to oversee a planned $8.6 billion industrial zone in the country, raising doubts about the Dawei project’s viability.

Executives at Thailand’s biggest construction company “haven’t much experience in developing such a very big special economic zone,” presidential adviser Ko Ko Hlaing said yesterday in an interview in Yangon, Myanmar’s biggest city. “We need other big investors.”

  Myanmar's President Thein Sein
Thein Sein, Myanmar's president puts on his safety helmet before touring a plant Kawasaki City, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. Photographer: Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg

Thein Sein pitched both Dawei, 300 kilometers (186 miles) west of Bangkok, and Thilawa, a port 25 kilometers south of Yangon, to Japanese investors during meetings in Tokyo last month, he said. The trip ended with an agreement for Japan to study Thilawa’s potential that made no mention of Dawei.

Italian-Thai has struggled to win financing to build the Indian Ocean industrial hub that it was awarded a concession to develop in November 2010, before Thein Sein took power as Myanmar shifted from five decades of direct military rule. Earlier this year, Myanmar’s government told reporters it canceled plans for a 4,000-megawatt coal-fired power plant on the site without informing the company in advance.

Italian-Thai helped build the infrastructure for Map Ta Phut, Thailand’s biggest industrial estate, and can handle the project in Myanmar, according to Somchet Thinaphong, managing director of the Dawei Development Co., a unit of the company. Every project of this scale needs multiple investors to be successful, he said by phone today.

‘Global Project’

“This is a global project, it’s an international project,” Somchet said. “One company cannot handle.”
Italian-Thai shares fell 1.1 percent as of 12:26 p.m. in Bangkok, the most in a week. They have climbed 1.1 percent this year, compared with a 21 percent gain for Thailand’s benchmark SET index. The company has reported a loss three of the past four years, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

“One of their biggest problems is because it was so much supported by the previous government, now they need to restart again and try to get support from the new government,” said Ruth Banomyong, an assistant professor at Bangkok’s Thammasat University who has worked with the Asian Development Bank.

Italian-Thai likely needs financial guarantees from Thailand’s government for Dawei to be successful, he said.
Five days before Myanmar held elections in 2010, Italian- Thai signed an $8.6 billion contract with the government to build a deep-sea port and industrial estate, according to Vice President Anan Amarapala. The company expected to secure at least $12.5 billion in loan agreements this year to develop the project, Chairman Premchai Karnasuta told reporters on Dec. 26.

$70 Million

In July 2011, Italian-Thai obtained a credit facility valued at 2.17 billion baht ($70 million), according to an annual financial statement released on Feb. 29. Somchet said he couldn’t provide details on financing for the project.

The ADB would find it hard to lend money for Dawei given concerns “about how this project should move forward,” Craig Steffensen, the bank’s Thailand country director who also oversees Myanmar, said last month.

“I’m not sure it makes sense for them to borrow to build roads and rail connections and transmission lines for something they don’t own, where they will turn it over in 60 years, unless they get an extension,” he said, referring to Italian-Thai. “And I’m not sure it makes sense for the government to borrow from the ADB for investments in what is essentially an undertaking by a foreign investor in Myanmar.”

Japan, Myanmar’s biggest creditor, forgave $3.7 billion in debt last month during Thein Sein’s visit. Japan also agreed to complete a feasibility study by year’s end to develop a port and industrial estate at Thilawa that promote Japanese investment into Myanmar, according to a statement.

During his trip, Thein Sein visited power plants run by Tokyo Electric Power Co. and Electric Power Development Co., also known as J-Power.

To contact the reporters on this story: Daniel Ten Kate in Bangkok at dtenkate@bloomberg.net; Flavia Krause-Jackson in United Nations at fjackson@bloomberg.net
 
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Peter Hirschberg at phirschberg@bloomberg.net

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-05-03/myanmar-raises-doubts-on-italian-thai-s-8-6-billion-port-plans.html 

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