Legislative leader Rene Nunez yesterday said the company will use funds from investors around the world to build the USD 40 billion project.
Nunez talked to local media after two bills for streamlining the process of building the canal and assessing its environmental impact were presented to lawmakers.
Opposition congressman Luis Callejas said lawmakers have been asked to discuss the bills tomorrow. The government plans to grant the Chinese company a concession for 100 years, he said.
Nunez said the project is very important for Nicaragua and that's why is being pursued with urgency. He wouldn't identify the company or discuss the concession.
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President Daniel Ortega said recently that the canal would not go along the San Juan River as it had been planned. He said it would be built farther north, through the waters of Lake Nicaragua.
Ortega said the canal would serve as an alternative to the Panama Canal and it would generate jobs for impoverished Nicaragua and other Central American countries.
The consortium also includes Italy's Impregilo SpA, Belgian contractor Jan de Nul and Panama's Constructora Urbana SA, among others.