NICOSIA, Cyprus — A Chinese-led consortium on Thursday pulled out of its contract with Cyprus to build the island nation's first natural gas import terminal over what it says was the Cypriot government's failure to pay what it owed for work completed this year.
The CPP-Metron Consortium said in a statement that the Cypriot government failed to live up to its commitments to pay up, despite promises made during a March meeting chaired by President Nikos Christodoulides.
''No contractor can be expected to work indefinitely on credit,'' the consortium said. ''That was not the deal CMC signed up to.''
The Cyprus government has not yet commented on the development. But an official with deep knowledge of the issue said CPP-Metron was not able to complete the project because of its own cash flow problem and that both sides had mutually agreed to break the contract.
The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he's not permitted to speak publicly about the contract's details, said the consortium underbid competitors to win the contract for the terminal, but couldn't stay on budget because of a series of grave miscalculations on the project's cost that burgeoned following the COVID-19 pandemic and Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine.
According to the official, the cash-starved consortium's parent company wouldn't provide additional money and two key subcontractors were let go while work essentially came to a standstill.
Work on the 289 million euro ($319 million) terminal on the island's southern coast began in July 2020 and was scheduled to be completed two years later.
The European Union had pitched in a 101 million euro ($110 million) grant.