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China Calls for U.S. and European Companies to Join Belt and Road

Published 03/14/2019, 04:04 AM
Updated 03/14/2019, 04:30 AM
&copy Bloomberg. Shipping containers stand on wagons at the railway terminal railyard at Duisport shipping port in Duisburg, Germany, on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2018. The trade route known in Beijing as the Belt and Road Initiative is spurring $1 trillion of investment on rail, highways and ports linking Europe and Asia.

(Bloomberg) -- China pledged greater cooperation with American and European companies on Belt and Road ventures, in its latest bid to counter criticism that President Xi Jinping’s initiative is focused on projecting Beijing’s influence at the expense of host countries.

China wants to combine its manufacturing and construction know-how with the advanced technology of Western firms on the global trade-and-infrastructure program, said Zhou Xiaofei, deputy secretary general of the National Development and Reform Commission. Projects could also benefit from partnerships with U.S. and European enterprises on professional services, management and financing, Zhou said Thursday.

“The Belt and Road Initiative is not a private path of one party, but an avenue of sunshine for everyone to go forward hand in hand,” Zhou told a seminar in Zhengzhou, Henan, promoting international cooperation on the program. “China is not singing solo, but in a chorus of countries along the Belt and Road.”

The two-day event is part of a broader Chinese effort to soften the image of Xi’s main foreign policy program as host countries grow more cautious and the U.S. criticizes its loan-based funding model as “debt-trap diplomacy.” Accusations of corruption, influence-peddling and unfair contracts have dogged the initiative, and a potential agreement with Italy -- the first with a Group of Seven nation -- drew Deputy Premier Matteo Salvini’s warning that it risked “colonizing Italy.”

‘Mini-United Nations’

The Zhengzhou conference -- hosted by the Chinese government -- showcased several BRI projects, including a hydro-power station in Pakistan and the Mombasa-Nairobi Railway, about a month before Xi is expected to host the second Belt and Road forum in Beijing. Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said last week that this year’s forum would include attendees from more than 100 countries.

Officials and company executives played down China’s role in the projects, emphasizing the diversity of nations involved. Zhu Lintao -- a construction executive involved in the Yenbo fuel power station in Saudi Arabia -- called the project a “mini-United Nations” involving a Chinese contractor, German consulting firm, Spanish design company and General Electric (NYSE:GE) Co. equipment.

GE has cooperated with Chinese partners on 37 gigawatts of power generation projects since 2013, said Hu Jingmiao, commercial general manager of GE Power’s China EPC Steam Power Systems. Hu said the company has provided equipment for projects in places such as Brazil, Kenya and Pakistan, as well as Saudi Arabia.

Tweaking Plans

Chinese authorities have noted examples of misconduct and are reassessing and tweaking their global infrastructure plans, a senior official who asked not to be named told Bloomberg News in December. Authorities have stepped up scrutiny of BRI projects and investment and are deliberating possible regulations, the official said, adding that China is ready to take measures to clamp down on misconduct.

The public was still uncertain about what a Belt and Road project is even though it’s been a catchphrase for the past five years, said Liu Weidong, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Sciences who has focused on initiative. The selection of projects at Thursday’s seminar showed what is valued “from the government’s perspective,” he said.

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Dandan Li in Zhengzhou, Henan at dli395@bloomberg.net;Miao Han in Zhengzhou, Henan at mhan22@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Brendan Scott at bscott66@bloomberg.net, ;Jeffrey Black at jblack25@bloomberg.net, Sharon Chen

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.

© Bloomberg. Shipping containers stand on wagons at the railway terminal railyard at Duisport shipping port in Duisburg, Germany, on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2018. The trade route known in Beijing as the Belt and Road Initiative is spurring $1 trillion of investment on rail, highways and ports linking Europe and Asia. © Bloomberg. Shipping containers stand on wagons at the railway terminal railyard at Duisport shipping port in Duisburg, Germany, on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2018. The trade route known in Beijing as the Belt and Road Initiative is spurring $1 trillion of investment on rail, highways and ports linking Europe and Asia.

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