From Shahjahan’s Taj Mahal in Agra to Aurangzeb’s Badshahi Mosque, the subcontinent is laden with monuments that stand in testimony to the magnificence of the material used in their making: marble.
Newly-formed Pakistan continued the tradition when it constructed the tomb of its founder out of sang-i-marmar. Jinnah’s tomb, built in the 1960s, laid the foundation of the marble industry in Karachi. It would not have been unreasonable to expect that the nascent state would carry on the legacy of the past and prioritise marble as a commodity of prime interest. Instead of harnessing the potential of marble, which the country is generously endowed with, Pakistan’s marble industry is in the doldrums.
Pakistan’s marble resources are spread largely across three provinces: KP, Balochistan and Punjab. Some quarries also exist in Sindh and parts of Gilgit-Baltistan. A report published around 2010 by the Trade Development Authority of Pakistan (TDAP) estimates marble and onyx reserves to be more than 300 billion tonnes while granite reserves are estimated to be 1,000 billion tonnes. In comparison, marble reserves in India are estimated to be 1,931 million tonnes.
Marble and onyx reserves are found largely in Mohmand Agency, Chitral, Buner, Swat, Parachinar, Gilgit, Hunza, Swabi, Bajour, Mardan, Wazirstan, Azad Kashmir, Lasbela, Chagai and Khuzdar. The biggest onyx reserves are said to be in Chaghai District in quarries largely owned by members of the Zehri tribe. Meanwhile, the report lists Gilgit, Dir, Chitral, Swabi, Kohistan, Nagarparker, Chagai, Mansehra, Malakand and Swat as places where granite deposits exist. However, the only known sources of “workable granite” according to this official report are in Nagarparkar and Mansehra.
The most consequential impact of the export of raw marble to China is that it’s simply preventing the local industry from developing value-adding capacity.
Given the vast reserves that exist, it follows that their mining and processing would need to be formalised and have greater infrastructure. In pursuance of this goal, five marble cities were inaugurated and funds invested in them. These cities existed in Gadani, Mohmand Agency, Risalpur, Chitral and Loralai. Processing of marble, as per the TDAP report, exists in Karachi in Sindh; Mansehra, Mardan and Peshawar in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa; Mohmand Agency, Khyber Agency and Bajur Agency in FATA; and Quetta, Loralai and Lasbela in Balochistan.
But as with many other resources in Pakistan, the marble sector too is blighted by ad-hocism and parochial policies. For instance, the Marble City in Mohmand Agency exists only on paper. It is technically supposed to be constructed over 300 acres of land while the 2010 TDAP report claims that the FATA Development Authority invested 352 million rupees to procure land and to set up a grid station and access road. Seven years into the plan, however, none of this exists on the ground.
Revolution, interrupted
Back in 2001, the government of General Pervez Musharraf planned a separate zone to mine and process marble in Hub City — a 300-acre site located on the outskirts of Karachi. This plan was in pursuance of Musharraf’s policy of promoting “development” in Balochistan — mining and ship-breaking were the top two sectors, apart from natural gas, that could engage the locals and provide some form of employment.
A simultaneous development came in 2006 when Pakistan and China inked a Free Trade Agreement, which came into effect a year later. The FTA turned the (export) tariff rates into “preferential” ones for China — not zero but not the lucrative sums that ought to have been charged either.