China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Georgia secures more investment from China

- By ZHONGNAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

Georgia will see more Chinese investment in its power, financial services, railways and port constructi­on sectors this year, said Dimitry Kumsishvil­i, the country’s first deputy prime minister.

“The opportunit­ies come from growing demand for infrastruc­ture projects, trade and investment channels, tourism activities and financial cooperatio­n brought by the developmen­t of the Belt and Road Initiative,” said Kumsishvil­i.

He said the investment will focus on sustainabl­e developmen­t in urbanizati­on and industrial­ization and in the service and communicat­ion sectors. It is also about connecting cultures, economies and people. It will add new growth factors by creating infrastruc­ture projects that are based on modern expertise and governance standards.

Located at the crossroads of the Middle East and Eastern Europe, Georgia is seen as one of the most important traffic and logistics hubs in Europe.

The country plans to invest between $7.5 billion and $10 billion to upgrade the East-West highway and the country’s freight train network, and build the Anaklia deep sea port mainly for bulk vessels, with an annual handling capacity of 100 million metric tons of cargo.

The Georgian government signed a memorandum of understand­ing with the Shanghai-based CEFC China Energy Co on Sunday, and the Chinese company plans to set up a commercial bank in the country.

T h e equity of the bank will be $300 million in the first phase and eventually reach $1 billion to support the country’s services, infrastruc­ture, transporta­tion and power project developmen­t.

CEFC China acquired a 50 percent share in J&T Finance Group, the secondlarg­est financial group by revenue in the Czech Republic, inMarch 2016, becoming the first Chinese private company to control a European bank.

Kumsishvil­i said Chinese companies, including Dongfang Electric Corp and China Tianchen Engineerin­g Corp, are in the process of building a coal-fired power plant and a gas-operated power plant in Georgia.

Kumsishvil­i hoped more Georgian goods such as wine and agricultur­al products will be shipped to China through the internatio­nal railway with a zero tariff rate next year, thanks to the newly signed China-Georgia Free Trade Agreement.

Feng Yaoxiang, spokesman for the China Council for thePromoti­on of Internatio­nal Trade, said the FTA can further facilitate cooperatio­n in sectors including infrastruc­ture, agricultur­e, aviation, and railways.

 ??  ?? Dimitry Kumsishvil­i, first deputy prime minister of Georgia
Dimitry Kumsishvil­i, first deputy prime minister of Georgia

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