Global Times

China, Russia eye cooperatio­n

Work in complement­ary sectors can augment trade

- By Chen Qingqing

China and Russia are looking into closer industrial cooperatio­n, which could generate more value than bilateral trade, but nuclear cooperatio­n is seen as unlikely as the two countries have been competing with each other in this sector.

After Chinese President Xi Jinping and his Russian counterpar­t Vladimir Putin agreed to strengthen comprehens­ive strategic coordinati­on on Sunday during the ninth BRICS Summit, Chinese Vice Premier Wang Yang arrived in Volgograd in southwest Russia to meet Russian Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin on Monday. Wang will also attend intergover­nmental negotiatio­ns and the Eastern Economic Forum, which runs from Wednesday to Thursday in Vladivosto­k, a city in Russia’s Far East.

“The agenda is cooperatio­n in the nuclear, space and aircraft industries,” Rogozin said in a Tweet posted on Saturday.

The two countries have come to a new period of cooperatio­n, as the bilateral trade volume cannot fully represent the potential of China-Russia ties, Ma Youjun, director of the Russia Institute at Heilongjia­ng Provincial Academy of Social Sciences, told the Global Times on Tuesday. Northeast China’s Heilongjia­ng Province accounted for about 13.2 percent of the country’s total trade volume with Russia in 2016.

The China-Russia trade volume has been lagging behind the trade between China and the US, and also behind China-Japan trade, but the cooperatio­n with Russia could extend into more sectors than trade, Ma noted.

The bilateral trade between China and Russia reached $69.5 billion in 2016, up 2.2. percent year-on-year, according to the Chinese Ministry of Commerce. The China-US trade volume was seven times larger.

“[The trade volume] has not met the expectatio­ns of the two leaders, and we have come to a turning point in terms of enhancing the two countries’ economic ties,” Ma said.

Some Chinese provinces have been actively pushing forward industrial cooperatio­n with Russia in recent years, including Heilongjia­ng. As of the end of 2016, the total investment from the province in Russia reached $10.61 billion, covering various industries such as mining, agricultur­e and forestry, according to a document the provincial department of commerce sent to the Global Times last month.

China and Russia are also working to develop cross-border industrial parks.

More complement­ary sectors

During Vice Premier Wang’s visit to Russia, more deals are expected to be inked in the energy, space and aircraft sectors, media reports said Tuesday.

The two countries are due to sign a mutual agreement on space exploratio­n from 2018 to 2022, a spokespers­on for Russia’s official space agency was quoted as saying in a report by Russia Today on August 30.

The cooperatio­n in high-tech sectors will also generate more value for both sides, and some Russian companies have recently expressed their interest in enhancing business ties with their Chinese counterpar­ts.

For instance, Russia’s high-tech conglomera­te Rostec Corp is expected to ink a contract with Aviation Industry Corporatio­n of China’s Avicopter unit by the end of 2017 to jointly develop a civilian heavy lift helicopter, Xinhua reported on August 29. Also, both sides are working on a wide-body long-range aircraft and Rostec said the testing of its engine is scheduled for 2022 and its certificat­ion for 2025.

In addition, nuclear cooperatio­n is also possible, Shanghai-based news site thepaper.cn reported on Tuesday.

Though Russia has been in a leading position in space and aircraft technologi­es for decades, China has been seen as a competitor in nuclear program developmen­t, Lin Boqiang, director of the China Center for Energy Economics Research at Xiamen University, told the Global Times on Tuesday.

“There has been no project in a third country that has been jointly developed by China and Russia. We have been relying on EU and US technologi­es in building nuclear power plants,” Lin said.

“China and Russia should look into industries that are complement­ary. Russia has abundant resources and China has a huge market; that’s how deals can be made,” he noted.

Russia and China have developed some major oil and natural gas projects in recent years. Chinese Vice Premier Zhang Gaoli also called for further research into the western route gas pipeline and the Far East gas supply projects in February, the Xinhua News Agency reported.

“China and Russia should look into industries that are complement­ary. Russia has abundant resources and China has a huge market; that’s how deals can be made.” Lin Boqiang Director of the China Center for Energy Economics Research at Xiamen University

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 ?? Photo: IC ?? Workers transport tubes at the TongjiangN­izhnelenin­skoye Railway Bridge crossing over the Heilongjia­ng River (the Amur River) at Tongjiang, Northeast China’s Heilongjia­ng Province in June.
Photo: IC Workers transport tubes at the TongjiangN­izhnelenin­skoye Railway Bridge crossing over the Heilongjia­ng River (the Amur River) at Tongjiang, Northeast China’s Heilongjia­ng Province in June.
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