Analysts say China’s retreat highlights the risks of overdependence on a single patron for massive infrastructure funding. Financial uncertainties and rising debt concerns have made the ML-1 project less viable under Chinese terms.
In a move signalling a profound shift in Pakistan’s infrastructure financing and geopolitical posture, China has withdrawn from financing the pivotal Main Line-1 (ML-1) railway project, a cornerstone of the China–Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC). Islamabad has now turned to the Asian Development Bank (ADB) to fill the void left by Beijing – and possibly redefine its strategic alignments.
The ML-1 railway upgrade – stretching roughly 1,800 km between Karachi and Peshawar – was long touted as the transformational heart of CPEC amid plans to inject $60 billion into Pakistan’s infrastructure under the Belt and Road Initiative. But after years of negotiations and concerns around Pakistan’s fiscal health, China has stepped back from the project entirely, redirecting the spotlight toward more manageable avenues such as agriculture, solar energy, and health, outlined in MoUs signed during Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s visit to Beijing.
ADB to the Rescue: Filling the Funding Gap
With China sidelining the project, Pakistan urgently turned to an alternative. The ADB is now stepping in, preparing a $2 billion loan to upgrade the critical Karachi–Rohri segment – a roughly 480–500 km stretch – of ML-1. This marks the first time a multilateral lender is taking the lead on what was once CPEC’s flagship venture.
Financial and Strategic Ramifications
This funding is not just about tracks and trains – it’s deeply tied to Pakistan’s broader economic ambitions. The ML-1 upgrade is critical to transporting copper ore from the Reko Diq mine in Balochistan to ports for export. The mine, developed by Canada’s Barrick Gold, is expected to begin production by 2028. Without a functional and modern railway, Pakistan risks choking a major source of future export revenues. Already, the ADB has committed $410 million toward infrastructure directly linked to Reko Diq.
Pakistan’s shift from Chinese to multilateral financing reflects a nuanced diplomatic balancing act. Army Chief Asim Munir emphasized, “We will not sacrifice one friend for the other,” signalling Beijing that the new direction isn’t an outright rejection, but a pragmatic diversification. Indeed, sources suggest the decision has been coordinated with China to avoid overt strain in their “all-weather” relationship.
This change also comes amid renewed attention from Washington on the Reko Diq project – underscoring how Pakistan is keen to broaden its strategic relationships beyond China.
Analysts say China’s retreat highlights the risks of overdependence on a single patron for massive infrastructure funding. Financial uncertainties and rising debt concerns have made the ML-1 project less viable under Chinese terms. The ADB loan, while potentially more expensive due to market-based lending terms, offers a lifeline – albeit with the caveat of stricter financial oversight.
The shift is also geopolitically resonant. It signals to regional and Western partners that Pakistan is open to multilateral investment and less tied exclusively to China – possibly easing some diplomatic frictions.
Geopolitical Recalibration
If finalized, the ADB-led loan will likely be announced later this month, anticipated to involve international engineering firms engaged through competitive bidding procedures. Pakistan stands at a crossroads: its mining sector, especially Reko Diq, could become a jewel of its export profile – but only if infrastructure and security challenges are addressed.
Security remains a significant concern. The Reko Diq region and the railway corridor traverse insurgency-prone areas, requiring Pakistan to ramp up protection for both infrastructure and personnel.
Meanwhile, the broader CPEC vision of a $60 billion integrated corridor is increasingly fragmented. With the ML-1 now restructured under multilateral finance, the infrastructure corridor is evolving into a patchwork of bilateral and multilateral initiatives.
China’s exit from Pakistan’s flagship CPEC railway project and the nation’s pivot toward the ADB represents both a financial necessity and a geopolitical recalibration. For Islamabad, the move offers a lifeline to vital infrastructure funding, greater global legitimacy, and an opportunity to hedge its strategic dependencies. For observers, it signals that CPEC is no longer just a bilateral story but one shaped increasingly by Islamabad’s efforts to navigate a more complex global landscape.
As negotiations progress and details of the ADB loan crystallize, all eyes are on Pakistan’s capacity to deliver on this revised infrastructure roadmap – and on whether Reko Diq will indeed power the next wave of economic growth.

