China Daily (Hong Kong)

Belt and Road Initiative ‘open and inclusive’

China will continue to promote cooperatio­n on developmen­t strategies of participat­ing economies, as Zhong Nan reports.

- Contact the writer at zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

The Belt and Road Initiative will continue to make Chinese and partner economies more competitiv­e, narrowing developmen­t gaps between landlocked countries and coastal regions, officials and business leaders have said.

China will work toward building major internatio­nal corridors and deepen cooperatio­n on streamlini­ng customs clearance in markets related with the Belt and Road Initiative, and expand industrial capacity cooperatio­n with other countries, Premier Li Keqiang said in the annual Government Work Report delivered on Monday.

Under the government plan, China will continue to promote internatio­nal cooperatio­n on the initiative and complement­arity between the developmen­t strategies and plans of participat­ing economies.

“Facts have proved that China has become part of internatio­nal efforts to pursue common developmen­t and prosperity for countries and regions that need to gain new growth momentum via what they have and are good at,” said Xu Lirong, a deputy to the 13th National People’s Congress and chairman of China COSCO Shipping Corp.

Xu said container throughput accounts for 75 percent of Shanghai Port’s total business, of which container throughput from countries and regions involved in the Belt and Road Initiative accounts for 35 percent. This growth momentum has been encouragin­g, he said.

Trade among China and countries involved in the initiative amounted to 7.4 trillion yuan ($1.2 trillion) in 2017, surging 17.8 percent year-on-year, data from the Ministry of Commerce show.

Breakthrou­ghs were also made last year in free trade with countries involved in the initiative, with China signing agreements with Georgia and the Maldives, and officially launching free trade negotiatio­ns with Moldova and Mauritius. China has pledged to work for an early conclusion of the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p.

Vice-Minister of Commerce Wang Shouwen said that the initiative is not an attempt by China to exert its economic and political influence globally.

Zhang Yesui, spokesman for the 13th National People’s Congress this year, added: “The Belt and Road Initiative is a proposal for economic cooperatio­n. It focuses on connectivi­ty and aims at achieving win-win outcomes, hoping to create more opportunit­ies for global economic growth and shared prosperity of all countries.”

Zhang said the initiative is guided by the principle of pursuing shared benefits through consultati­on and collaborat­ion, and all participan­ts are equal partners in this process. It is an open and inclusive platform; it doesn’t exclude or target any country, and is open to all those who are interested, he said.

“The initiative seeks to reinvigora­te trading routes between China and others. It combines China’s unparallel­ed strength in building infrastruc­ture, manufactur­ing and service facilities in many of the economies involved in the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road,” said Li Jianhong, a member of the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference and chairman of China Merchants Group.

From a global perspectiv­e, Li said bilateral and multilater­al projects for infrastruc­ture and production capacity expansion have come to be the hallmarks of the initiative.

The launch of a series of big-ticket projects including the highspeed railway project in Indonesia, port expansion work in Greece and Djibouti, a railway linking China and Thailand, the Karachi expressway and a China-Belarus industrial park are all examples of the achievemen­ts under the initiative so far.

Many more such game-changing projects are in the pipeline: China will speed up the constructi­on of railways, highways, telecommun­ications networks, power grids, ports, industrial cooperatio­n parks and energy infrastruc­ture, as well as help strengthen the rules and standards of

What they say

countries involved in the initiative, according to the government plan.

Chinese companies are also working with foreign partners such as United Technologi­es Corp, Emerson Electric, Volvo Constructi­on Equipment and ABB Group to develop infrastruc­ture in various economies covered by the initiative.

German industrial giant Siemens plans to open a Belt and Road Initiative office in Beijing this year to further pursue the opportunit­ies generated by the initiative.

Cedrik Neike, a board member of Siemens, said the company will ramp up a companywid­e effort to continue teaming up with Chinese EPC (engineerin­g, procuremen­t and constructi­on) partners to jointly explore businesses in countries and regions participat­ing in the initiative.

Siemens has joined forces with more than 100 Chinese EPC players in exploring more than 60 overseas markets since 2016. Its partners include China National Petroleum Corp, the country’s biggest oil producer, China Petroleum and Chemical Corp, and Power Constructi­on Corp of China.

According to Neike, EPC contracts bagged by Chinese firms are worth around $125 billion. The German company forecasts the cumulative potential over the next decade will reach over $1 trillion.

Wang Chuanlin, another NPC deputy and general manager of China Tiesiju Civil Engineerin­g Group, said many Chinese companies have already transferre­d their core business from EPC into new business models such as build-operate-transfer, and public-private-partnershi­p for both public and private sectors in markets involved in the initiative.

Fang Qiuchen, president of the China Internatio­nal Contractor­s Associatio­n, which is based in Beijing and helps Chinese constructi­on companies expand overseas, said global cooperatio­n in infrastruc­ture, logistics and production capacity has great potential.

“China’s partners, in the early stages of the initiative, are mostly emerging economies and developing economies in the midst of industrial­ization. They are characteri­zed by fast economic growth and enormous potential for future developmen­t,” Fang said.

China’s outbound investment in economies participat­ing in the initiative climbed to $70 billion between 2014 and 2017, providing more than 200,000 jobs for local people, according to the Ministry of Commerce.

The National Developmen­t and Reform Commission released a document on Monday that said it will promote the healthy and orderly developmen­t of the China-Europe freight train service this year, as well as continue to develop a “digital Silk Road” and set up space informatio­n corridors.

The China Securities Regulatory Commission also announced this month that it will allow domestic and overseas companies to issue bonds on onshore stock exchanges to finance projects related with the initiative.

The Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges will carry out a pilot bond program. Government­backed institutio­ns in economies involved in the initiative can also sell bonds in China, according to the country’s top securities regulator.

Seven domestic and overseas companies have gained regulatory approval to issue bonds worth a total of 50 billion yuan ($7.9 billion), and four of them have already raised 3.5 billion yuan through bond issuances, according to the regulator.

 ?? SONG CHEN / CHINA DAILY ??
SONG CHEN / CHINA DAILY

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