President Vladimir Putin's visit to China produced a clutch of new
deals on Thursday, but failed to secure funding for vital infrastructure
projects, underscoring the limits to a relationship Moscow casts as a
counterweight to the West.
Increasingly isolated because of its actions in Ukraine, the Kremlin
has talked up ties with China, where it hopes to access capital denied
to it elsewhere at a time when its economy and currency are being
battered by low oil prices.
Putin, accompanied by a high-level delegation, watched China stage a
huge military parade in Beijing to mark victory over Japan in World War
II. He also held meetings with the Chinese prime minister and president.
His visit resulted in a flurry of new agreements in sectors from
banking to telecoms. Igor Sechin, one of Putin's close allies, said the
deals had a combined investment potential of around $30 billion.
But with joint Russia-China projects worth around $113 billion stalled or delayed it was what was not agreed that stood out.
Novatek, Russia's biggest independent producer of natural gas, did
not secure Chinese financing to help it build the $27 billion Yamal LNG
project, something it is working on with France's Total and China's
CNPC.
Co-owned by billionaire Gennady Timchenko, one of Putin's closest
friends, Novatek was shut out from Western financing when the United
States imposed sanctions on Timchenko.
Timchenko has previously said China would lend up to $20 billion to
the project. But the money has yet to be disbursed, while the sum in
question has shrunk to $15 billion.
There was no breakthrough either for energy behemoth Gazprom, which
has been reported to be seeking Chinese funding for a gas pipeline to
China via Russia's Altai region.
All Alexei Miller, Gazprom's chief executive, said on Thursday was
that he expected to sign a deal on the project in spring 2016.
Industry sources and analysts have told Reuters they believe falling
oil prices and Russia's collapsing currency coupled with China's own
economic problems and a corruption clampdown there mean some projects
may be delayed indefinitely.
Russian news agencies quoted the director of the Department of
Eurasian Affairs at the Chinese Ministry of Commerce, Ling Ji, as saying
in August that weak oil prices had complicated talks over the Altai gas
project and that the ruble's volatility was generally bringing extra
risks to Russia-China cooperation
Friday, 4 September 2015
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