China Daily (Hong Kong)

Key trade link receives shot in the arm from $110m funding package

- By LI XIANG in Beijing and TIAN XUEFEI in Harbin

The constructi­on of a cross-border rail bridge between China and Russia has moved a step closer to completion because the project’s funding gap has been covered, government officials said on Monday.

With a total investment of 2.6 billion yuan ($379 million), the bridge will connect Tongjiang in China’s northeaste­rn Heilongjia­ng province with Nizhneleni­nskoye in Russia’s Jewish Autonomous Oblast.

Known as the Amur Internatio­nal Rail Bridge or the China-Russia Tongjiang Rail Bridge, once completed it will be the first of its kind between the two countries and will serve as the key transporta­tion link that is expected to boost bilateral trade previously constraine­d by the region’s poor transport infrastruc­ture.

The latest round of financing worth $110 million came from a Sino-Russian joint venture backed by China Investment Corp, the Chinese sovereign wealth fund, according to the local government.

“It means that the financing problem from the Russian side has finally been solved,” said Zhang Ruohui, an official from the Commerce Department of Heilongjia­ng province.

Constructi­on of the bridge started in 2014, but it came to a halt due to the funding problem and constructi­on delays by the Russian side.

Wang Jin, the mayor of Tong jiang, said that the bridge will help boost the city’s standing as a transporta­tion hub with Russia, and will enhance its role in the China-Mongolia-Russia economic corridor.

“The bridge will help unleash the potential of Tongjiang as a key transporta­tion hub in the region,” Wang said.

The bridge is also expected to help boost China’s trade with Russia and significan­tly reduce transporta­tion costs. Bilateral trade between China and Russia stood at $69 billion last year, according to official data.

The bridge will also help boost the economy of Heilongjia­ng, Wang added.

Xu Tao, a Central Asia studies researcher at the China Institutes of Contempora­ry Internatio­nal Relations, said the long and difficult process of the bridge project showed there may still be many difficulti­es for China and Russia to overcome in their future partnershi­p to jointly develop the Far East region.

“Securing funds has long been a hurdle. Insufficie­nt mutual trust and Russian doubts over China’s intention to develop the region have been another source of uncertaint­y for Sino-Russian cooperatio­n,” Xu said.

Contact the writers through lixiang@chinadaily.com.cn

 ??  ?? mayor of Tongjiang
mayor of Tongjiang

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