As China continues its impressive economic growth, access to
natural resources and raw materials is becoming increasingly vital,
and will feature more prominently on the policy agenda of the
decision makers in Beijing. If China seeks to maintain its economic
growth rate of 1985-2000, it will face a major raw materials
shortage and will be forced to focus on Eurasia as a source of
major energy resources, water and food. This is likely to lead to
growing economic and political involvement in Russia and Central
Asia. |
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IMPLICATIONS: Trade between China and its
Eurasian neighbors is developing at a high pace, primarily
involving Eurasian raw materials and Russian weapons in exchange
for Chinese low-quality consumer goods and food. Some aspects of
this trade are off the books and unregulated, as the illegal
cutting of forests in Siberia. It is energy resources, however,
which are going to dominate China's trade with Eurasia in the
foreseeable future. In May of last year, the Kazakhstani energy
company Kazmunaigas and CNPC have started to develop a gas pipeline
from Keniak to Atyrau, which may become a part of the future
Kazakhstan-China main gas export pipeline. China itself is
prospecting for oil and natural gas in the Tarim basin in Xinjiang,
and constructing a 2,600 mile long East-West oil and gas pipeline
which may cost as much as $18 billion. By 2005, these pipelines
will supply up to 25 million tons of oil and 25 billion cubic
meters of gas to Eastern China. Both the Tarim pipeline. A possible
Central Asian follow-up will contribute to the viability of the
gigantic project. CNPC has also acquired a 50-percent stake in the
Salyan Oil operating company in Azerbaijan, previously owned by
Delta-Hess company, which, in turn, was recently acquired by CNPC.
Salyan, which is 50 percent owned by the State Oil Co. of
Azerbaijan (SOCAR), is planning to invest $80 million into
rehabilitation of old oil wells in the Kursangi-Qarabagli field.
This is likely to be the first step in the expansion of Chinese oil
interests in the Caspian area. CNPC's plan of a major breakthrough
into the Russian oil sector was blocked, at least temporarily, on
December 28, 2002, when the Russian government declined a higher
Chinese bid for the state-owned Slavneft company in favor of
politically connected Sibneft. This appetite for natural resources
will open doors for major capital projects aimed at supplying
China, such as oil, gas and water pipelines. China and other
Pacific industrial powers such as Japan and Korea, form the largest
oil-consuming region in the world. It is likely to boost domestic
prospecting, develop its own (particularly offshore) reserves, but
will increasingly have to rely on imports. Chinese experts predict
that Russia will be able to export annually 25 to 30 billion cubic
meters of natural gas to China annually; 15 to 18 billion kilowatts
of electricity from hydroelectric power stations in Siberia, and 25
to 30 million tons of oil from the Kovykta oil field in Eastern
Siberia. In addition, Russia can pump oil produced in Kazakhstan to
Irkutsk and then supply it to China. Furthermore, Russia is willing
to build six nuclear reactors in China to generate up to 1.5
trillion kilowatts. In addition, there are numerous projects for
developing free economic zones along the Chinese-Russian border,
and an international port in the mouth of the Tuman river
(Tumangan), where the Russian, Chinese, and Korean borders meet.
That port has been on the drawing boards for 15 years, but renewed
tensions over the North Korean nuclear weapons program are likely
to delay it again.
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Originally appeared on the Central Asia-Caucasus Institute website