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Bridging careers and hearts

VIENTIANE (XINHUA) – Finding a life partner while chasing career dreams is not easy, but a young couple in northern Laos luckily got both when working for the Power Construction Corporation of China (PowerChina).

Since the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) was proposed by China in 2013, lots of Lao youths have achieved their careers and fulfilled their life dreams by joining the construction and operation of China-Laos cooperation projects over the last decade.

Phavady Nalathone, a 22-year-old woman from Xieng Khuang of northern Laos, has been working at the Nam Ou 1 hydropower plant of the Nam Ou River Cascade Hydropower Project, which supplies electricity to the China-Laos Railway, in Luang Prabang province since 2020.

Nouphet Thongsakda and Phavady Nalathone. PHOTO: XINHUA

Phavady told Xinhua that this has been her dream job since she was a kid because she had a childhood memory with a dam and she took her father as a role model.

“My father has been working at the Nam Ngum hydropower five plant for over 10 years. I lived and grew up there. I learned and was absorbed about working on the project from real experience while I was staying with my father. Then my family sent me to China to study, and after I came back, my father encouraged me to work with PowerChina,” she said.

Phavady went to China to study business and trade for three years, and after graduation she applied to work with PowerChina, which developed Nam Ou cascade and Nam Ngum 5 projects on respective tributaries of the Mekong River.

The Nam Ou River cascade hydropower project, built under the framework of the BRI, is highly valued by Chinese and Lao governments and on people.

The project includes seven cascade hydropower plants along the Nam Ou river, the largest tributary of the Mekong river in Laos. The project, put into full operation in September 2021, has a total installed capacity of 1.272 million kilowatts and an average annual generating capacity of 5 billion kilowatt-hour (kWh).

“Now I can make a living and support my family. In addition, working with Chinese colleagues helps me improve my Chinese so well,” Phavady said.

The couple sharing a view at PowerChina hydropower plant. PHOTO: XINHUA

“I first met him (her husband) when I came to work here. At that time, I had just graduated and my Chinese was more fluent than his. So, whenever we were free we would meet and I’ve been teaching him Chinese,” she said of her love story.

“My friends told me about the project. I heard that the successful applicants will be sent for professional training in China. So, I decided to apply,” Nouphet Thongsakda, the 31-year-old husband from Savannakhet province of southern Laos, told Xinhua.

“This opportunity means a lot to me, because I was unemployed and didn’t have an income for half of the year then. I was very happy to be selected,” he said.

Nouphet was assigned to work in an electrical control room after finishing the training, but he faced communication problems at first. “Because we have to work closely with Chinese colleagues and I couldn’t speak Chinese fluently, it was difficult and challenging. I learned hard until we could communicate better,” he said.

“I met her in the office. Her Chinese was better than mine, so I asked her to teach me Chinese and took this chance to know of her. And now we have a cute little baby,” he said.

“He is a very good person. He’s always kind and ready to learn, and we always support each other,” Phavady said.

They told Xinhua that working in the same place gives them the opportunity to be around each other throughout the day, both at home as well as in the office. As a result, they are able to help each other both in work and personal life.

The Nam Ou river cascade hydropower project has generated over 13.3 billion kWh of electricity as of June 2023.

The energy and mining sector plays an important role in economic growth. It has delivered numerous benefits in terms of job creation and the construction of roads, schools, hospitals, markets and clean water supplies. The sale of electricity to neighbouring countries and profit yielded from extraction of minerals have earned sizeable amounts of foreign exchange for Laos, which continues to increase.

Electricity represented the largest share of Laos’ total exports. For example, in 2022 Laos’ exports were valued at USD8.19 billion, with electricity export amounting to USD2.35 billion, up 7.5 per cent from 2021.

“First of all, I would like to thank PowerChina for giving me a chance to work here. PowerChina has changed a normal girl like for me ever. I have a stable job with a steady income, and found a stable relationship while working here,” said Phavady.

“Because of cooperation between Laos and China, we met and fell in love and now we have a lovely daughter as a
witness to our love. I would like to express my heartfelt gratitude for all cooperation projects between China and Laos, which allow us to have a better life and become a married couple.”

Phavady said the BRI is really a good proposition, especially the China-Laos Railway, to which the Nam Ou project supplies electricity, because Laos is a landlocked country. Since the China-Laos Railway put into operation in December 2021, it makes travelling to neighbouring countries more convenient.

“I would like to invite fresh graduates from abroad or Laos to come and apply for a job with PowerChina and the China-Laos Railway company as well,” said Nouphet.

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