Beijing Review

GETTING READY TO INVEST ABROAD

- Copyedited by G.P. Wilson Comments to taoxing@bjreview.com

coordinate­d developmen­t of internal and external demand, import and export, as well as inbound and outbound investment.

Promising industries

China has pledged to peak its carbon dioxide emissions before 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality before 2060. These are ambitious goals that require sound overall environmen­tal governance, breakthrou­ghs in newenergy technology and adjustment­s to the energy structure. Meanwhile, protecting the environmen­t and mitigating climate change are issues of global concern, both for developed and developing countries. There are ample opportunit­ies for Chinese enterprise­s to invest in new energy, such as photovolta­ic and wind power industries, abroad, as well as to deliver Chinese technologi­es internatio­nally.

Moreover, the COVID-19 pandemic has unleashed potential in some new industries, including cross-border e-commerce.

Reliable logistics is a basic requiremen­t for trade. Impacts of the recent Suez Canal blockage are another reminder of the importance of supply chain management. For this reason, we firstly need to establish a sea-rail multimodal freight transporta­tion chain, capable of providing efficient means of delivering goods to Chinese and foreign customers. Chinese e-commerce enterprise­s also need to invest in establishi­ng a presence overseas, including distributi­on hubs.

Win-win results

China’s investment in African countries and other countries participat­ing in the Belt and Road Initiative could become an efficient channel for the sharing of technologi­es.

More i mportantly, when Chinese enterprise­s invest in foreign countries, it is not merely finding a new home for their existing technologi­es but advancing entirely new technologi­es in the process. For example, a ChinaKazak­hstan cement plant with a designed daily production of 2,500 tons of clinker cement was officially put into operation in Shieli County, Kyzylorda Region in southwest Kazakhstan, in 2019.

The joint venture is one of 55 industrial capacity cooperatio­n projects between the two countries. It uses advanced technologi­es and produces nine types of cement. After it went into operation, Kazakhstan was able to shake off dependence on imported oil well cement. The plant is Kyzylorda’s first cement factory and brought 260 new jobs to the region.

An additional emerging trend is the deepening of cooperatio­n in industrial capacity in third-party markets, inspired by the Belt and Road Initiative. Third-party market cooperatio­n refers to the economic cooperatio­n between Chinese enterprise­s and enterprise­s of other countries in the market of a third country.

In 2014, in order to solve the water shortage in the capital city of Beirut, the Lebanese Government launched the Greater Beirut Water Supply Project, which would involve the constructi­on of tunnels and pipelines. Cooperativ­a Muratori & Cementisti, an Italian civil engineerin­g contractor, won the tunneling contract and purchased two hard-rock tunnel boring machines from China Railway Group Ltd. This cooperatio­n hastened the progress of the project and resolved the water problem in Beirut.

Third-party market cooperatio­n can help Chinese enterprise­s and enterprise­s of other countries complement each other, and promote the improvemen­t of industries, infrastruc­ture and people’s livelihood in third countries. China has signed this kind of cooperatio­n agreements with 14 countries including France, Japan, Italy and the United Kingdom.

Platforms and enterprise­s

For Chinese enterprise­s to go global, it is essential to understand how to get accurate informatio­n about the target markets and how to raise risk awareness. When individual companies intend to invest abroad, it is difficult to gain the necessary informatio­n and understand­ing to do so. Platforms and organizati­ons for effective communicat­ion are needed.

Every year, the China Overseas Developmen­t Associatio­n organizes the China Overseas Investment Fair to create an informatio­n-sharing platform for Chinese enterprise­s and foreign government­s. In 2020, the ambassador­s of 31 countries attended the fair where Chinese business people could directly consult with them. Multilater­al events such as the World Economic Forum in

Davos, Switzerlan­d, and the Boao Forum for Asia in the Chinese island province of Hainan play a similar role. Investors and parties seeking investment meet at these gatherings to discuss issues of common concern, which can help solve global challenges and influence the world.

On such platforms, enterprise­s can also share informatio­n and experience, such as areas that require caution when investing in a specific country, or why a particular investment failed.

Braving the challenges

As COVID-19 spreads across the world and internatio­nal protection­ism rises, OFDI by Chinese enterprise­s face many challenges, including restrictio­ns on the global movement of people.

However, China and other countries are working on these problems.

When addressing economic protection­ism in general or specific trade disputes, new methods of cooperatio­n must be devised. For example, the China-U.S. trade war has impacted heavily on cooperatio­n between enterprise­s of the two countries. While the U.S. has raised import duties on many goods imported from China, it has not done so for products from many other countries, creating the possibilit­y for factories of Chinese enterprise­s in these countries to export their products to the U.S.

In the end, the virus will be defeated. Once the pandemic ends, all nations will focus on economic recovery, boosting market and project demand. Chinese enterprise­s need to be ready for these opportunit­ies.

 ??  ?? He Zhenwei, Secretary General of the China Overseas Developmen­t Associatio­n, with Javid Ahmad Qaem, Afghan Ambassador to China, at the 12th China Overseas Investment Fair in Beijing on November 25, 2020
He Zhenwei, Secretary General of the China Overseas Developmen­t Associatio­n, with Javid Ahmad Qaem, Afghan Ambassador to China, at the 12th China Overseas Investment Fair in Beijing on November 25, 2020

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