
Around a quarter of the estimated 50,000 workers required to build the inter-oceanic canal planned for Nicaragua – around 12,500 people – will come from China, says a detailed project plan released last month.
The plan produced by Hong Kong-based HKND Group, which has been given the concession to build and operate the canal, says that only half the workers will come from Nicaragua due to the “very limited highly skilled workforce readily available” in the country.
It predicts that the final quarter of workers will come from other countries.
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The report says that Spanish-speaking heavy-machine operators from the Americas and beyond would be recruited to give extensive training for Nicaraguan workers.
HKND will limit the hiring of Nicaraguans to designated recruitment centres in a few regional centres like Managua, Rivas, Nueva Guinea, and Bluefields to stop job seekers flocking to construction sites, where the company said no hiring would take place.
Nicaragua is often cited as the second poorest country in the Western Hemisphere with only Haiti having a lower GDP. The biggest industry in the country is agriculture. Coffee farming is a mainstay, but it has been hurt badly this year by the “coffee rust” fungus.
Work on the controversial canal officially started on 22 December with renovations to an access road near Rivas in the west of the country. Full excavation work will not begin until the third quarter of this year, the company said.
The Nicaraguan government says the canal, which it says will cost no less than $40bn, will bring transformational economic growth. HKND Group is organising funding for the mega-project but has yet to disclose the identities of the investors.
Read the rest of the article at GCR









