But will anyone notice?
By Ian MacWilliam
BBC Central Asia correspondent
An Afghan fuel station employee waits for customers at a service station in the Shomali plain, 20 kms north of Kabul
Afghanistan's energy need are growing as it recovers from war
The United States has outlined an ambitious energy project to develop the energy sources of the ex-Soviet republics of Central Asia.
The plan would develop a regional power grid from Kazakhstan to India.
The grid would feed the growing energy needs of India, Pakistan and Afghanistan, and help integrate the economies of Central and South Asia.
The far-reaching plan would also reduce Central Asia's reliance on routes through Russia for its energy exports.
The US Assistant Secretary of State, Richard Boucher, presented the plan to committee in Congress.
He explained how the development of a power grid through Afghanistan would enable the energy-rich nations of Central Asia to sell electricity to energy-poor India and Pakistan.
We want to give South Asians access to the vast and rapidly growing energy resources in Central Asia
Richard Boucher
US Assistant Secretary of State
The impoverished mountainous republics of Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan both want to develop their large hydro-electricity potential.
Kazakhstan, with abundant oil and gas, is rapidly becoming a top energy producer while Turkmenistan has some of the world's largest gas reserves.
India and Pakistan have both been seeking ways to import Central Asian oil, gas and electricity to fuel their expanding economies.
Historic ties
Even Afghanistan now needs more energy as its war shattered economy begins to recover.
Mr Boucher said the opening up of Afghanistan meant that it should now be seen as a bridge not an obstacle between Central and South Asia.
Historically, Central Asia always had close ties with Afghanistan and India until they were broken by Soviet isolationism imposed by Moscow.
But continuing insecurity in parts of Afghanistan has long prevented the rebuilding of economic ties. Now American officials and other observers say the best way to reintegrate Afghanistan and to improve stability in the entire region is to boost economic integration.
Under President Vladimir Putin, Russia has been increasing its efforts to recover lost economic influence in Central Asia, but US policy has long been to wean the Central Asian republics away from their old reliance on Moscow.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4952784.stm
Iraq Afghan Wars Cost 439 Billion So Far
http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Iraq_Afghan_Wars_Cost_439_Billion_So_Far.html
That, of course, is what American taxpayers are on the hook for. The profits from the above plans - and flailing "reconstruction" war profiteering - will go straight into the pockets of the energy giants and contractors connected to the warmakers behind this Aggression.
The fall and fall of Afghanistan
By William Fisher
NEW YORK - "Contractors in Afghanistan are making big money for bad work." That is the conclusion reached in a new report from CorpWatch written by an Afghan-American journalist who returned to her native country to examine the progress of reconstruction.
"The [George W] Bush administration touts the reconstruction effort in Afghanistan as a success story," the report said, but claimed that reconstruction has been "bungled" by "many of the same politically connected corporations which are doing similar work in Iraq", receiving "massive open-ended contracts" without competitive bidding or with limited competition.
"These companies are pocketing millions, and leaving behind a people increasingly frustrated and angry with the results," the report said. Foreign contractors "make as much as US$1,000 a day, while the Afghans they employ make $5 per day," the report charged.
Examples cited in the report by author Fariba Nawa included a highway that began crumbling before it was finished; a school with a collapsed roof; a clinic with faulty plumbing; a farmers' cooperative that farmers can't use; Afghan police and military that, after training, are incapable of providing the most basic security.
http://atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/HE06Df04.html