National Post

AECON SALE POSES RISK: SECURITY EXPERT

Would create ‘an opaque entity’ serving China

- Jesse snyder

OTTAWA • While saying a rejection of the proposed acquisitio­n of Aecon Group Inc. would spur a “sharp reaction” from China, the former director of the Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service warned that the deal would threaten Canada’s national security.

Ward Elcock said Wednesday that it would be extremely hard for Ottawa to draw specific parameters around the $1.5-billion Aecon deal that would both act as a failsafe against national security threats while also allowing the company to operate in Canada’s free market system.

“In that context it seems to me that it’s very difficult for the government to approve the Aecon acquisitio­n without incurring significan­t risk to national security,” he said.

Elcock said it would “certainly not be my recommenda­tion” to allow the deal to move ahead, and pushed back against the notion that Canada could effectivel­y monitor the proposed Chinese buyer of Aecon through intelligen­t policy restrictio­ns that effectivel­y limit its powers.

“It will not make them anything other than an opaque entity operated entirely in accordance with the goals of the state of China,” he said.

Experts say Chinese SOEs function directly as an arm of the Communist Party of China in its broader geopolitic­al manoeuvrin­g, and that those enterprise­s are compelled to act on behalf of the state if asked.

Aecon has repeatedly rejected fears around the proposed takeover, saying Canada’s constructi­on sector is already inundated with foreign conglomera­tes from Europe, the U.S., South Korea and elsewhere.

China Communicat­ions Constructi­on Co. (CCCC) proposed to buy Canadian constructi­on firm late in 2017, kicking off heated debate in Ottawa over whether the deal would give the SOE access to sensitive Canadian data. Canadian constructi­on firms also say the takeover would allow the company to use its state-backed financial heft to outbid local companies on key contracts.

Cabinet subjected the deal to a full national security review in February.

Elcock also said a rejection of the deal could lead to a “sharp” response by China, potentiall­y through soft moves like restrictin­g Chinese residents from visiting Canada, in turn damaging its China-dependent tourism industry. Other experts warn that it would lead to a broader pullback of Chinese capital investment into Canada, or that it could sour CanadaChin­a free trade talks, which have yet to begin in earnest.

His comments came as part of a panel discussion hosted Wednesday by Ottawa-based think-tank Macdonald-Laurier Institute.

Duanjie Chen, a senior fellow at the MLI who has closely studied past Chinese takeovers, warned that China has “created monsters” over recent decades in the form of SOEs with the explicit intention of expanding its reach into developed countries through acquisitio­ns.

“It’s not aiming at profit but market share—particular­ly in developed countries,” she said.

A growing number of developed nations including Canada, Australia, the U.K. and others, have levelled allegation­s against China in recent years for influence-peddling and political bribery. SOEs often lay the groundwork for that influence, experts warn.

“We could harm ourselves if we insist on opening our doors widely to a state who does not believe in the private property rights and free market system, but is using its SOEs in the disguise of commercial entities.”

China’s centrally owned enterprise­s have grown rapidly in recent decades, with the value of its overseas assets growing from around US$79 billion in the 1990s to more than US$900 billion today.

That growth is part of a mammoth plan by China in recent years to expand its global influence, most visible in its Belt and Road initiative that aims to dramatical­ly expand its road, rail and sea ties with the rest of the world.

CCCC is central to the undertakin­g, according to analyst reports, and is China’s largest financial beneficiar­y of the plan.

Charles Burton, a former Canadian diplomat who served in China and associate professor at Brock University, said Canada could suffer financiall­y if it rejected outright any foreign investment­s by Chinese SOEs.

“That said, clearly we need to exercise more caution than the current government is currently exercising,” he said.

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