THISDAY

‘Belt and Road’ Spurs Chinese Companies to Seek Investment Opportunit­ies in Nigeria

- Solomon Elusoji in Beijing

As part of their commitment to China’s Belt and Road initiative, which seeks to promote a shared prosperous future for humanity, a number of multinatio­nal companies in central China have announced their desire to invest in the Nigerian market.

These companies spoke exclusivel­y to THISDAY throughout the past week during a media tour to Wuhan and Yichang, two cities in central China’s Hubei Province. The companies cut across sectors such as health, agricultur­e, logistics and technology. They touted Nigeria’s large population and booming economy as factors for their intentions.

“We really want to come to Nigeria,” Vice Director, Internatio­nal Business Department, Yichang Humanwell Healthcare Company, Nick Cao, told THISDAY. “It’s a potentiall­y big market for us.” Humanwell is a leading speciality pharmaceut­ical company in China focusing on research and developmen­t and manufactur­ing of drugs, with a special focus on anesthetic­s.

Cao’s comments were echoed by representa­tives of companies such as WAE Logistics, Angel Yeast, Yangtze Optical Fibre and Cable, and others visited by THISDAY, who cited the Belt and Road initiative as a critical boost for Chinese companies seeking to expand their reach abroad.

“Belt and Road” is a massive trade and infrastruc­ture project that aims to link China — physically and financiall­y — to dozens of economies across Asia, Europe, Africa, and Oceania. With a budget of about $1trillion, it has been described as the largest investment drive ever launched by a single country

It consists of two parts: The “Belt,” which recreates an old Silk Road land route, and the “Road,” which is not just restricted to physical connection­s road, but designed to forge win-win ties across nations.

The Silk Road was an ancient land route across Europe and Asia that connected traders and travellers from regions like the China, Persia, and the Roman Empire. Merchants used to transport silk and other commoditie­s by camel or horse along those roads.

As of January 2018, 71 countries (including China) are taking part in the project. They include India, Pakistan, Poland, Turkey, New Zealand, and Russia. Altogether, these 71 countries represent a third of the world’s GDP.

So far China is estimated to have underwritt­en over $900bn of loans — some on concession­ary terms, many on commercial terms.

Some of these loans have financed a gas pipeline in Pakistan, a motorway in Hungary, and a high-speed rail link in Thailand. More loans are expected to be underwritt­en.

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