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Malaysia Restarts Rail Project With China After Cost Cut

Malaysia Restarts Rail Project With China After Cost Cut

(Bloomberg) -- Malaysia restarted the China-linked East Coast Rail Link project on Thursday after downsizing building costs by a third to lighten the government’s debt burden.

The rail project, led by China Communications Construction Co. and Malaysia Rail Link Sdn., was canceled a year ago by Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad’s new government after he balked at the 65.5 billion ringgit ($16 billion) cost. He revived talks later and in April struck a deal with China to cut it down to 44 billion ringgit.

Malaysia hopes “the ECRL will bring economic benefits to the country, not just in construction, but that it would also connect all the railway tracks to the ports,” Transport Minister Anthony Loke said at the project relaunch in the east coast state of Terengganu on Thursday. “Hence the shipping and logistics industry would certainly enjoy more encouraging industry growth.”

The rail project is one of several infrastructure projects that Mahathir has sought to revive to help stoke economic growth, after a wave of spending cuts and a corruption crackdown last year following his election victory. For China, the resumption may be a boon for its Belt and Road Initiative, which has seen Asian governments from Myanmar to Maldives reassessing Chinese investments amid concern over sovereignty and large borrowings.

The 640 kilometer rail will connect Peninsular Malaysia’s eastern coast, whose economy lags the wealthier western coast, to states near the capital of Kuala Lumpur when completed in 2026. The amended deal increases local contractors participation while realigning certain routes.

Malaysia will sign a supplementary agreement soon with Export-Import Bank of China that will see the interest cost of its loan reduced for the East Coast Rail Link project, said Loke. The Exim Bank loan is to finance 85% of the 44 billion ringgit project, he said.

Malaysia will save about 12.6 billion ringgit in financing costs, Malaysia Rail Link CEO Darwis Abdul Razak told reporters. Financing costs will be reduced to 24 billion ringgit from 36 billion ringgit, he said.

The project’s cost had ballooned as construction went underway, with the finance ministry estimating that the price tag could reach as much as 81 billion ringgit. Mahathir said the original cost was inflated and would have been lower if the deal -- inked during his predecessor Najib Razak’s time as part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative -- was offered through an open tender.

To contact the reporter on this story: Anisah Shukry in Kuala Lumpur at ashukry2@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Yudith Ho at yho35@bloomberg.net, Chan Tien Hin, Elffie Chew

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