China’s Belt & Road Cut Funds for Foreign Coal Plants: Report
26 Jul 2022
The research
report said no new coal projects received backing from China after President Xi
Jinping told the UN General Assembly last September his country would end
support for overseas coal power plants. File photo: Coaltrans.
No new coal
projects received backing from China after
President Xi Jinping pledged to the United Nations General Assembly last
September that the country would put an end to overseas coal financing, a new
report by Chinese researchers says.
A Chinese
developer, however, won a bid in February to build a thermal power plant in
Indonesia, according to new research by
the Shanghai-based Green Finance and Development Centre (GFDC), which is
part of Shanghai’s Fudan University.
China’s investments in countries that are part of its Belt and
Road network saw a marginal decline in the six months to June, with Russia, Sri
Lanka and Egypt getting zero investments, the report found.
Funding and investments totalled $28.4 billion, down from $29.6
billion a year earlier, bringing the total cumulative Belt and Road spending
since 2013 – when it began – to $932 billion, GFDC said in the research report.
Saudi Arabia attracted the most funds as part of the project
during the period, with about $5.5 billion in investments, the report said.
The Belt and Road
Initiative that China launched in 2013 to “build a
broad community of shared interests” in 147 countries across Asia, Africa and
Latin America has come under scrutiny over the debt burden it places on
member-countries, plus environmental and other issues, such as a series of unfulfilled
pledges in the Philippines.