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Friday, 28 August 2015

Racing to beat China, Japan sweetens bid for Indonesia High Speed Rail project

Racing to beat China, Japan sweetens bid for Indonesia High Speed Rail project

Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has sent an envoy to Indonesia to offer a sweeter deal to build a high-speed railway, highlighting the importance of the multi-billion dollar project that China also wants to win

Jakarta: Japan’s prime minister has sent an envoy to Indonesia to offer a sweeter deal to build a high-speed railway, a Japanese embassy official said on Thursday, highlighting the importance of the multi-billion dollar project that China also wants to win.

The two Asian giants are in a neck-and-neck contest to win a contract to build Indonesia’s first high-speed rail, between the capital Jakarta and textile hub Bandung, a project that would bolster their influence in Southeast Asia’s biggest economy.

Japan and China have until August 31 to submit their best offers to Jakarta.

“Prime Minister Abe decided this project is very politically important so he dispatched a special envoy to meet President Joko Widodo again,” Yoshiko Kijima, attache for economic affairs at the Japanese embassy in Jakarta, told Reuters.

Japanese envoy Izumi Hiroto submitted the fresh proposal to the president late on Wednesday, the second such revision since China sweetened its bid on August 11.

Japan is offering a 40-year loan at an interest rate of 0.1 per cent with a 10-year grace period. The latest proposal also offers Japanese government guarantees on financing and increases the per centage of local content.

China has also mounted a high-profile campaign to win the deal, offering a loan of $5.5 billion with a 50-year tenure, an interest rate of 2 per cent and a grace period, as of August 14.

Indonesia has hired Boston Consulting Group to evaluate the two proposals and is set to announce a winner soon.

The contest has put Indonesia in a diplomatic bind, a government official said.

“There is definitely a feeling in government that this is a tricky one because both China and Japan are important trading partners and they don’t want to upset one or the other,” said one government source with knowledge of the matter.

Kijima, who attended Wednesday’s meeting with the Indonesian president, said Hiroto had made an “emotional” presentation of the latest offer.

“The high-speed rail is a symbol of national pride and development in Japan and it will come as a shock to Japan and its people if the project goes to China,” Kijima said.

She said business relations between Japan and Indonesia were expected to be normal regardless of the outcome.

Japan competes with Singapore as Indonesia’s top investor in Indonesia, while China is the Southeast Asian nation’s biggest trading partner.

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