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Venezuelan president travels to China in search of fresh funds

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Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro is traveling to China to discuss economic agreements, as the crisis-struck Organisati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) nation seeks to convince its key Asian financier to disburse fresh loans.

“I am going with great expectatio­ns and we will see each other again in a few days with big achievemen­ts,” the leftist leader said on Wednesday in a state broadcast from the airport, without providing details.

Venezuela’s Informatio­n Ministry did not respond to a request for comment.

China’s Foreign Ministry, in a brief statement carried by the official Xinhua news agency, said Maduro would visit until tomorrow at the invitation of President Xi Jinping. It gave no other details.

Venezuelan Vice-President Delcy Rodriguez is currently in China and on Wednesday met with Chinese Vice President Wang Qishan, the Chinese Foreign Ministry said in a brief statement late on Wednesday.

The two countries have long had friendly ties and cooperatio­n has been “steadily pro- gressing” in all fields, the ministry cited Wang as telling Rodriguez.

On Tuesday, Rodriguez met with Zhang Jianhua, president of top state energy firm CNPC to discuss cooperatio­n, said a senior oil source briefed with the matter, without giving further details.

A CNPC spokesman did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

CNPC is a major investor in oil and gas exploratio­n in Venezuela and also a top lifter of Venezuelan oil under the government-to-government loans for oil deals.

Over a decade, China plowed more than US$50bil into Venezuela through oil-for-loan agreements that helped Beijing secure energy supplies for its fast-growing economy while bolstering an anti-Washington ally in Latin America.

The flow of cash halted nearly three years ago, however, when Venezuela asked for a change of payment terms amid falling oil prices and declining crude output that pushed its state-led economy into a hyperinfla­tionary collapse.

Venezuela’s finance ministry in July said it would receive US$250mil from the China Developmen­t Bank to boost oil production but offered no details. Venezuela previously accepted a US$5bil loan from China for its oil sector but has yet to receive the entire amount.

Local consultant Asdrubal Oliveros, who tracks Chinese loans closely, said on Wednesday Venezuela was close to clinching a fresh loan of US$5bil to finance oil projects. Beijing was waiting for Maduro to announce a series of economic measures, including a steep devaluatio­n and more flexible currency controls, before extending fresh funds, Oliveros said.

I am going with great expectatio­ns and we will see each other again in a few days with big achievemen­ts.

Nicolas Maduro

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