China Daily Global Edition (USA)

China-Africa trade enjoys 16.8 percent boost in Q1

- By JING SHUIYU jingshuiyu@chinadaily.com.cn

China-Africa trade surged 16.8 percent year-on-year to $38.8 billion in the first quarter of the year, thanks to their deepening cooperatio­n, said a spokesman for theMinistr­y of Commerce.

It was the first quarterly rise since 2015, Sun Jiwen said at a news conference on Thursday, saying the latest favorable results might herald an era of high-level cooperatio­n this year.

China’s imports from the continent in the first three months amounted to $18.4 billion, up 46 percent from a year earlier. Among them, agricultur­al products grewby 18 percent, according to the ministry.

The nation’s exports to African countries continued to decline, by 1 percent yearon-year in the period, but the rate of decline has slowed.

China mainly imports commoditie­s from Africa like oil and minerals, while it exports a wide variety of consumer and capital goods.

Sino-African cooperatio­n has been on a fast track since 2015, when President Xi Jinping, at the Forum on ChinaAfric­a Cooperatio­n in South Africa, announced 10 strategic priorities with Africa within three years.

Cooperativ­e fields ranged from industrial­ization, agricultur­al modernizat­ion, infrastruc­ture and financial services, to green developmen­t, trade and investment facilitati­on.

China’s direct investment in the continent has increased significan­tly. The ministry’s statistics showed that in the first quarter, nonfinanci­al outbound direct investment from China to Africa reached $750 million, up 64 percent from last year.

In addition, Chinese companies have financed and built many infrastruc­ture projects across the continent. In the first quarter, Chinese companies’ newly signed contracts in Angola grew by 136 percent year-on-year, and in Nigeria surged by 132 percent, according the ministry.

Chinese companies’ engagement in African infrastruc­ture projects has been successful, said Zhao Lin, GE China’s engineerin­g procuremen­t constructi­on leader, citing his company’s latest endeavor with State-owned PowerChina Ltd in Africa.

In the future, the US-based company will continue to build stronger relations with Chinese partners across African markets, he added.

In 2016, China became the third-largest investor in Africa in terms of projects, capital investment and jobs, according to the AfricaAttr­activeness report released by accounting firm Ernst& Young.

It found almost a quarter of China-invested projects were directed toward Egypt, and Chinese investors took an active role in the telecoms, media and technology sector, automotive and business services sectors.

 ?? PAN SIWEI / XINHUA ?? Chinese and African workers on the Mombasa-Nairobi railway project in Mombasa, Kenya. China’s non-financial outbound direct investment to Africa reached $750 million in the first three months this year.
PAN SIWEI / XINHUA Chinese and African workers on the Mombasa-Nairobi railway project in Mombasa, Kenya. China’s non-financial outbound direct investment to Africa reached $750 million in the first three months this year.

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