Bangkok Post

WORLD Xi in Portugal amid EU investment fear

Concerns raised over China’s growing clout

-

LISBON: Chinese President Xi Jinping arrived in Portugal yesterday for a twoday visit to strengthen ties, amid concern in some EU capitals over China’s growing influence on the continent.

Fresh from a visit to Spain last week, his two-day stay in Portugal includes a meeting with President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa and the signing of cooperatio­n agreements.

One of them will bring the Portuguese port of Sines, in the southwest, into what China calls the “new Silk Road”, an initiative that offers loans to build railways, roads and ports across Asia, Europe and Africa.

In an op-ed published on Sunday in Portuguese newspapers, President Xi stressed the importance of China’s relationsh­ip with Portugal as part of a broader network of trade links.

But China’s growing i nfluence i n Europe, welcomed by Greece and several eastern European countries, is viewed warily by others on the continent.

At the initiative of France and Germany, EU countries last week agreed a framework regulating foreign investment, particular­ly from China.

Portuguese Prime Minister Antonio Costa said on Friday that Lisbon did not back the idea and was relieved that the final accord provided for only an advisory role on the part of the European Commission.

Foreign investment does not worry Portugal, and the EU should not “take the path of protection­ism” in the face of globalisat­ion, he said.

Portugal, one of western Europe’s poorest countries, was open to Chinese investment after being hit hard by the 2008 global financial crisis.

Its 78 billion euro (2.9 trillion baht) EU-IMF rescue package in 2011 came with required austerity policies — and a wide-ranging privatisat­ion programme that opened the doors to Chinese investment.

Chinese investment accounted for 3.6% of Portugal’s GDP between 2010 and 2016, according to figures from Spain’s ESADE business school.

China now owns a 28% stake in Portuguese energy utility EDP, the country’s largest firm, via China Three Gorges and China’s state-owned internatio­nal investment company CNIC.

It also has a stake in Portugal’s biggest private bank, BCP, and its leading insurance company, Fidelidade.

Perhaps the most contentiou­s issue is China Three Gorges’ bid to take a controllin­g stake in EDP, of which it is already the main stakeholde­r. The operation, launched in May, involves some nine billion euros (335 billion baht).

But while it has been welcomed by the Portuguese government it still risks running foul of barriers imposed by regulators in around 15 countries where EDP operates — including the United States.

Luis Castro Henriques, head of Portugal’s trade and investment agency AICEP, says Chinese investment in Portugal has been good for the country.

China has risen to Portugal’s 11th-largest trade partner in the decade since 2008, when it was 28th on the list.

“We want now to attract large-scale industrial investment, notably in the automobile and agro-food sectors,” he said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? President Xi Jinping and his wife Peng Liyuan arrive for their first state visit to Panama on Sunday, which is followed by a two-day visit to Lisbon.
REUTERS President Xi Jinping and his wife Peng Liyuan arrive for their first state visit to Panama on Sunday, which is followed by a two-day visit to Lisbon.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand