China Daily Global Weekly

BRI lauded for fostering cooperatio­n

China-led infrastruc­ture program seen making more contributi­ons to global economic recovery

- By LIU ZHIHUA liuzhihua@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s unwavering efforts to promote joint constructi­on of the Belt and Road Initiative will convey more confidence and strength to the internatio­nal community on global economic cooperatio­n despite rising external uncertaint­ies and challenges, including the COVID-19 pandemic and geopolitic­al conflicts, analysts and experts said.

The BRI, the world’s largest internatio­nal cooperatio­n platform with an increasing number of members, is expected to make more contributi­ons to global economic recovery, they said.

They made the remarks after Sheng Qiuping, assistant minister of commerce, said at a recent news briefing in Beijing that China will continue to promote high-quality global cooperatio­n under the BRI through work to consolidat­e the fundamenta­ls of the initiative, expand new areas of cooperatio­n and construct flagship projects.

“We will further tap the potential of trade with economies along the Belt and Road and encourage more imports of quality goods. We will continue to expand three-party and multi-party market cooperatio­n to promote smooth connectivi­ty between industrial and supply chains,” Sheng said.

“We will speed up building a network of free trade areas covering more BRI economies and promote trade and investment liberaliza­tion and facilitati­on.”

China will proactivel­y promote cooperatio­n in many areas, including digital trade, new infrastruc­ture, new energy, energy conservati­on, environmen­tal protection and green infrastruc­ture, as countries across the globe are increasing­ly willing to cooperate in the areas of digital economy and low-carbon economy, he said.

Analysts said the BRI is inclusive and offers a trusted internatio­nal platform for countries and regions around the world to join hands to seek new growth impetus while respecting each other’s difference­s. That is especially important as the world economy is still suffering from stressed supply chains and weakened expectatio­ns, they said.

“Under the current circumstan­ces, global economic and trade cooperatio­n faces greater challenges from the instabilit­y of supply chains to the loss of confidence in cooperatio­n,” said

Zhou Mi, a senior researcher at the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n.

“The BRI is very important to facilitate the accelerati­on of the global economic recovery due to its inclusiven­ess that allows for adjustment­s in accordance with these new situations,” Zhou said.

For instance, China has been playing an important role in the global fight against the pandemic and the facilitati­on of resumption of production and business in other countries by providing quality goods and services, thanks to its effective control of COVID-19 and stable economic growth, he added.

Sheng said China will focus on agricultur­e, poverty alleviatio­n, sanitation, health and other fields and prioritize

the constructi­on of more “small and beautiful” projects to enhance the sense of gain among people in host countries.

At the same time, the country will actively push for the China-Europe rail cargo transport to develop jointly with various cooperatio­n zones and to integrate new business models such as cross-border e-commerce and overseas warehouses.

Wu Huimin, managing director of the CICC Global Institute, spoke highly of the achievemen­ts the BRI has made in many areas, including green infrastruc­ture, green energy and green finance.

Wu suggested that China should widen its cooperatio­n with BRI economies in addressing climate change through efforts such as proactivel­y utilizing green finance to increase green investment and establishi­ng an internatio­nal green developmen­t exchange platform to promote global developmen­t in areas like green energy, green technology and green manufactur­ing.

Efforts such as encouragin­g capable Chinese renewable enterprise­s to go global and to take a bigger role under the green BRI should also be included, she said.

Lin Shen, a researcher with the Institute of World Economics and Politics at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said that China, as the world’s largest developing country, understand­s the needs of a large number of developing countries along the Belt and Road for economic developmen­t.

The experience­s and technologi­es China has accumulate­d during its economic developmen­t, especially in the areas of the digital economy and the low-carbon economy, are especially helpful to meet product and service demand of other developing countries, while China’s huge domestic market also facilitate­s export growth of BRI economies, Lin said.

Liu Haitao, project manager at a China Constructi­on Second Engineerin­g Bureau unit that is working on a water supply pipeline project in Nairobi, Kenya, said the potential of cooperatio­n between China and the economies along the Belt and Road is huge as most BRI economies have great economic growth potential.

He added that his company sees ample project opportunit­ies in BRI economies.

The water supply constructi­on project he works for, once completed, will increase water supply in Nairobi by 5,000 cubic meters per day, benefiting nearly 3 million people, Liu said.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A Chinese engineer (right) with Beijing-based China Constructi­on Second Engineerin­g Bureau instructs a local employee at a bulk water supply pipeline constructi­on site in Nairobi, Kenya, in 2020.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A Chinese engineer (right) with Beijing-based China Constructi­on Second Engineerin­g Bureau instructs a local employee at a bulk water supply pipeline constructi­on site in Nairobi, Kenya, in 2020.

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