Global Times

Chinese firms eye Trump’s $ 1t infrastruc­ture plan

Market access an obstacle for domestic suppliers, products: expert

- By Chu Daye

Chinese infrastruc­ture giants are cautiously eyeing potential opportunit­ies under US President Donald Trump’s proposed $ 1 trillion infrastruc­ture plan, given the lack of details and the possibilit­y that the plan won’t go into action.

Chinese firms’ expertise in infrastruc­ture constructi­on and strong product offerings give them a competitiv­e edge that could help the US, but the US’ infrastruc­ture sector is highly restricted to foreign builders, according to Chinese experts.

Trump last week called on Congress to upgrade America’s roads, airports and rail lines by $ 1 trillion, but without offering details.

Infrastruc­ture behemoths contacted by the Global Times including the State Grid Corp of China, China Railway Constructi­on Corp and bullet train maker CRRC Corp said they don’t have a reaction to Trump’s infrastruc­ture plan. China Road and Bridge Corp and Power Constructi­on Corp of China did not reply to a request for comments as of press time.

These firms have a large overseas presence in Gulf countries, Latin America, Southeast Asia and Africa.

John Ross, a senior fellow from the Chongyang Institute at Renmin University of China, said it is too early to discuss the possibilit­ies of China participat­ing in an infrastruc­ture program which may not occur.

“President Trump has so far said words about an infrastruc­ture program. But words should not be taken for action. There is no proposal for an infrastruc­ture program so far in the US 2017 budget. It is not clear that Congress would pass an infrastruc­ture program if proposed,” Ross told the Global Times Monday.

Despite doubts, Sino- US cooperatio­n in infrastruc­ture is seen by some as vital.

Fu Ying, chairperso­n of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the National People’s Congress of China, sees infrastruc­ture as a great opportunit­y for USChina cooperatio­n under the new US president, according to media reports in December 2016.

At a US- China forum in New York, Fu said there can be “very good” cooperatio­n between the two countries on infrastruc­ture projects, if the US opens its door for Chinese investment.

Infrastruc­ture expertise

Experts said China, a country blessed with an army of builders whose expertise has been seasoned from a decade- plus of intense country- building, is now eyeing overseas markets and will be a suitable contractor for a US infrastruc­ture overhaul.

As of the end of 2016, China was already an infrastruc­ture superpower, ranking No. 1 in the world in terms of mileage for high- speed railways, expressway­s and urban transit systems, the Na- tional Developmen­t and Reform Commission, China’s top economic planning agency, reported on Wednesday. The country is also home to seven of the world’s top 10 ports.

An example that illustrate­s how hard it is to bypass Chinese builders can be seen in the renovation of the New York Verrazano- Narrows Bridge, which connects Brooklyn and Staten Island, in 2013.

Local authoritie­s insisted on spending $ 34 million to buy specialize­d steel products from China Railway Shanhaigua­n Bridge Group and the Anshan Iron & Steel Group despite an outcry of opposition in the US, citing US steel suppliers’ high costs and elusive delivery schedules.

Just as Trump pointed out in his election campaign speeches, US infrastruc­ture is in urgent need of repairing. According to a report by NBC News on Wednesday, one in nine bridges in the US is now structural­ly deficient.

“If Uncle Trump could manage to produce so much money, it will be super good news for us,” a manager from Guangxi- based LiuGong Machinery Co, told the Global Times Monday on condition of anonymity.

Entering the North American market in 2005, LiuGong is the largest Chinese exporter of engineerin­g equipment in this market, having shipped more than 2,000 loaders, excavators and bulldozers.

“If the plan can be car- ried out, demand for our products will rise following a rise in the constructi­on of roads, railways, and buildings. The CONEXPO 2017 engineerin­g exhibition kicks off on Tuesday in Las Vegas and we are rolling up our sleeves,” the LiuGong manager said.

US market access

“If the world’s largest economy sets out to renovate its infrastruc­ture, this will be the world’s largest infrastruc­ture market for the next few years, and there is no way Chinese infrastruc­ture companies are not interested in it,” Mei Xinyu, an associate research fellow at the Ministry of Commerce, told the Global Times on Sunday.

“However, the current US infrastruc­ture and engineerin­g market is a closed one with regulation barriers, and the US government has to open its doors to allow the participat­ion of Chinese firms to achieve best results for its infrastruc­ture plan,” Mei urged.

“One way to participat­e under the current legal framework is to buy a US company and uses it as a channel,” Mei said. “But in this way the efficiency and cost advantage of Chinese contractor­s will be compromise­d.”

Keeping its door closed will not bode well for US infrastruc­ture improvemen­t, Mei added. Chen Qingqing contribute­d to this story

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 ??  ?? Marathon runners cross the Verrazano- Narrows Bridge in New York in November. The bridge was renovated with China- made steel.
Marathon runners cross the Verrazano- Narrows Bridge in New York in November. The bridge was renovated with China- made steel.

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