When most people envision the China–Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), they imagine highways, power plants, and seaports. Yet, hidden within the cranes and concrete is another, much more subtle revolution—the building of Pakistan’s Digital Silk Road. An extension of China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), it transcends physical trade corridors to forge interlinked digital environments: cross-border fibre-optic networks, e-commerce platforms, satellite links, and data centres. For Pakistan, this is not just about technology adoption, rather, it’s about repositioning the country as a hub in the global digital economy.
While CPEC Phase I largely focused on energy and infrastructure, Phase II and beyond carry a distinct technological emphasis. Projects include the laying of cross-border fibre-optic cables from China’s Xinjiang to Rawalpindi, development of smart city infrastructure in Gwadar, and expansion of e-commerce logistics corridors. These digital projects, often referred to as part of the “Digital Silk Road,” aim to integrate Pakistan into global data flows while strengthening domestic connectivity.
These projects showcase that China has emerged as a pivotal player in Pakistan’s digital landscape, establishing successful partnerships that have significantly contributed to the nation’s digital advancement. Zulfiqar Ali, Director General of Pakistan Regulatory Moderation Initiative at the Board of Investment (BOI), expressed optimism about China’s increasing role in driving digital investments in Pakistan.
During a panel discussion at the UN Asia-Pacific Innovation Forum held in conjunction with the 23rd China International Fair for Investment and Trade (CIFIT) from September 8th to September 11th, Zulfiqar Ali outlined Pakistan’s strategies for digital development. He underscored the vital role of foreign direct investment (FDI) in steering Pakistan’s digital transformation journey.
The Pakistan–China Fiber Optic Cable Project, which runs more than 820 kilometres from Khunjerab Pass to Rawalpindi, is at the heart of Pakistan’s Digital Silk Road vision. This high-capacity connection establishes a direct link between Pakistan and the Chinese network, limiting reliance on undersea cables that must go through other nations.
The implications are of course profound:
Phase II of this cable project will extend connectivity to Gwadar and Karachi, creating a complete north–south digital corridor.
With increasing data generation, Pakistan faces the challenge of data sovereignty and therefore a responsibility in ensuring that critical data is stored, processed, and protected within national borders. Chinese firms, for this purpose, in partnership with Pakistani entities, are investing in Tier-3 and Tier-4 data centres in Karachi, Lahore, and Islamabad.
These data centres are not merely warehouses; they’re the linchpin of cloud computing, artificial intelligence, and business analytics. For local businesses and startups, this translates into quicker services, reduced cost, and better data protection compliance for upcoming regulations. For the government, it provides a secure ecosystem for digital public services and e-governance.
An interesting aspect of The Digital Silk Road is that it is not confined to land-based networks, rather, Pakistan and China are jointly working on satellite launches and space-based services under the overall CPEC umbrella. These comprise remote sensing satellites for agriculture and disaster management, and communications satellites to extend broadband coverage to remote and hilly areas
According to Pakistan National Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR) Policy 2013, the most frequently occurring disasters in Pakistan include floods, droughts, storms, avalanches, glacial lack outbursts, landslides, earthquakes, and tsunamis. Despite the frequency of these events, Pakistan’s climate vulnerability is compounded by weak disaster management systems and policies. Thus, digital technologies and big data present transformative potential in addressing these disaster management challenges, and it is through enhancing data integration through such bilateral projects and internal efforts centred around developing domestic data competencies that the country can develop resilience and adaptability needed in pre-disaster preparedness and post-disaster recovery.
Moreover, with SUPARCO and China’s CNSA working closely, Pakistan gains both technical know-how and operational capabilities which are both crucial for precision farming, urban planning, and climate monitoring.
A truly connected economy needs seamless payment systems. Here, CPEC’s digital arm complements Pakistan’s own initiatives like Raast—which was part of Prime Minister Imran’s Digital Pakistan vision to include the poor segments of society in formal economy. It has been developed by the SBP in collaboration with Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Karandaaz, Pakistan. By integrating with Chinese fintech ecosystems, Pakistani merchants could directly access Chinese consumers, and vice versa.
This cross-border fintech integration can also enable micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs) in corridor towns to sell globally, bypassing traditional export bottlenecks.
Lastly, technology is only as transformative as the people who use it. The Digital Silk Road’s success in Pakistan depends on digital literacy and skills development. Scholarships, joint research programs, and vocational training centres are emerging under CPEC’s education cooperation agreements.
Universities in Pakistan are collaborating with Chinese institutions on AI, blockchain, and advanced telecom studies, ensuring that the workforce is ready to operate and innovate within this new digital ecosystem.
A good example of this is The University of Sargodha (UoS), Pakistan, and the Zaozhuang School of Technology (ZST) having formalized and entered into a strategic partnership by signing a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to establish a Joint Research Centre on Lithium Batteries at UoS. This initiative reflects the deepening scientific and technological cooperation between the two countries, particularly in areas critical to energy sustainability and climate-resilient innovation.
The agreement outlines expansive cooperation: faculty and researcher exchange, student training, joint supervision, seminars, workshops, and co-development of patents. Moreover, a Joint Coordination Committee with equal representation from both sides will meet annually to guide the centre’s progress and steer new research initiative.
Even with its potential, Pakistan’s Digital Silk Road is beset by challenges: Primarily regulatory clarity will be a Gideon knot the country will need to cut as historically a clear, concise, and concrete framework that mitigates red-tape and facilitates ease has been the country’s weak point. Therefore, clear guidelines for data sharing, investment, and digital trade are a pre-requisite for success. Secondly, there will be a need to bridge the divide between urban and rural, as well as underserved, communities. Lastly, maintaining foreign alliances alongside local innovation to prevent mono-partnership dependence will also be necessary.
Resolution of these challenges will be crucial in seeing that the digital corridor reaches all Pakistanis and is an equitable and shared resource.
The Digital Silk Road presents Pakistan with a once-in-a-lifetime chance to bypass industrial-era limitations and emerge as an integral part of international digital networks. From fibre cables across Gilgit-Baltistan’s mountains to smart ports at Gwadar, from data centres in Karachi to IoT grids at Lahore, the pieces of a digital puzzle fall into place.
However, technology isn’t destiny. The true test of success will be how that digital revolution is converted into shared economic growth, robust institutions, and enhanced quality of life. That is, the Digital Silk Road has to be a road where all Pakistanis can tread and gain from it; not merely a high-speed track for a privileged few.