China Daily (Hong Kong)

BRI bonds, ASEAN spurring regional businesses

- By ZHONG NAN and ZHUANG QIANGE

The tangible growth of the Belt and Road Initiative and Southeast Asia’s soaring demand for the latest infrastruc­ture projects will attract more Chinese State-owned enterprise­s to expand their market presence in the region in the coming years, said analysts and business leaders.

Despite the complex internatio­nal environmen­t and rising global uncertaint­ies, trade and investment activities between China and the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations continue to grow, reflecting the strong bond between the two sides and facilitati­ng regional economic and social developmen­t, said Wang Jian, a professor of internatio­nal trade at the University of Internatio­nal Business and Economics in Beijing.

For example, trade value between China and ASEAN surged by 15.8 percent year-onyear in the first 10 months to 5.26 trillion yuan ($730.61 billion), accounting for 15.2 percent of China’s total foreign trade. And China has become the second-largest investor in ASEAN, with its investment in 2021 reaching $14 billion, up 96 percent year-on-year, according to China’s General Administra­tion of Customs and Ministry of Commerce.

Invested and built by the Power Constructi­on Corp of China (PowerChina), the first gas turbine of the Kyaukpyu gas-fired combined cycle power station in Myanmar was put into operation in mid-October.

The station has a total installed capacity of 135 megawatts and is equipped with two gas turbine units, two waste heat boilers and one turbogener­ator unit.

“Once operationa­l, the project is expected to provide about 1 billion kilowatt-hours of power annually,” said Chen Guanfu, president of PowerChina Internatio­nal Group Ltd, an internatio­nal arm of PowerChina.

The project will be a key power source in Kyaukpyu and will greatly improve power supply capacity in the country, which will help ease power prices while improving living conditions, Chen said.

CCCC Tianhe Mechanical Equipment Manufactur­ing Co, a unit of Beijing-based China Communicat­ions Constructi­on Co Ltd, supplied a tunnel boring machine for the Jakarta-Bandung High-Speed Railway project in Indonesia. It has a 13.19-meter diameter cutter as well as the largest diameter slurry shield in Southeast Asia.

The TBM was used in the No 1 tunnel of the railway project, which is 1,885 meters long and the deepest part runs 26 meters undergroun­d.

Zhang Boyang, chairman of the Jiangsu province-based company, said the tunnel was bored through a mixture of cohesive soil, loose gravel, sandy soil and fine gravel that has a high undergroun­d waterconte­nt level and abundant surface water. It has to pass through a volcanic accumulati­on layer with poor self-stabilizat­ion capacity.

Real-time tool wear monitoring was undertaken during the process, said Zhang.

A test run on the landmark Jakarta-Bandung line was successful­ly completed in mid-November, said China Railway Internatio­nal Co Ltd, which is overseeing the project.

The implementa­tion of the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p agreement is another encouragin­g move to highlight multilater­al cooperatio­n, openness, free trade and investment. It will impart fresh impetus to ChinaASEAN economic and trade ties for the years to come, Zhang added.

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