China Daily (Hong Kong)

Recovering Caterpilla­r set to fly with its Chinese partners

- By JING SHUIYU

Caterpilla­r Inc will continue to facilitate Chinese indigenous partners on projects along the Belt and Road economies, said one of its top executives.

The US’ largest machinery manufactur­er is planning to organize a group of Chinese large contractor­s to go on an inspection tour of Africa and the Middle East later this month, where Caterpilla­r owns mature dealership networks and rich resources, according to Chen Qihua, its vice-president.

Chen said the initiative will benefit the company’s efforts to promote interactio­ns between Chinese contractor­s seeking overseas opportunit­ies and service providers along the ancient trading routes.

“The core of the Belt and Road Initiative lies in bringing interconne­ctivity to the ancient trade routes through infrastruc­ture constructi­on. That’s exactly what Caterpilla­r is delivering on all fronts,” Chen said in an interview with China Daily in Beijing.

With a presence in over 180 countries and regions, Caterpilla­r has 172 dealers worldwide, as well as longstandi­ng manufactur­ing bases and service stations. Markets outside the United States roughly generate 59 percent of its revenue.

In the past three years, China has forged about 50 government-level cooperatio­n agreements in the Belt and Road countries and regions, according to the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, the country’s top economic planner.

Outbound investment­s in these economies are worth over $50 billion and have resulted in betterthan-expected achievemen­ts, He Lifeng, NDRC minister, told a news conference in March.

Caterpilla­r can take some credit for that. The leading manufactur­er of constructi­on and mining equipment accelerate­d its pace of assisting Chinese partners in the Belt and Road economies since last Novem- ber, when it proposed in a white paper diverse models of cooperatio­n, including dealership networks and financial services.

Among the landmark projects was China Road and Bridge Corporatio­n’s reconstruc­tion of the M5 highway (Zhrobin-Gomel section) in Belarus in 2015.

The 86-kilometer highway innovation was CRBC’s first project in the country, and Caterpilla­r offered machinery, training and maintenanc­e services for it.

Chen said the company is pinning its hopes on the Chinese market this year, as the country’s improving infrastruc­ture and mining sector increase demand.

In its latest financial report, Caterpilla­r predicted a “modest recovery” in several of its businesses in 2017. The report said its constructi­on industries will be fuelled by sales in China, which began recovering last year.

The constructi­on industry’s sales in the Asia-Pacific region outperform­ed other areas in the fourth quarter of 2016, thanks to rising end-user demand, primarily in China, driven by increased government support to infrastruc­ture and residentia­l investment, the report said.

Overall, sales in this business segment declined 8 percent year-onyear to $3.589 billion in the fourth quarter of 2016.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Employees assemble a heavy machine at a Caterpilla­r production plant at Desford in the United Kingdom.
BLOOMBERG Employees assemble a heavy machine at a Caterpilla­r production plant at Desford in the United Kingdom.

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