Solar Energy News  
Chinese Bid For Africa Could Have Substantial Trickle Down Effect

With its seemingly insatiable appetite for oil and other natural resources, China's stake in Africa is obvious: It needs the commodities that Africa can provide.
By Shihoko Goto
UPI Senior Correspondent
Washington DC (UPI) Jun 23, 2007
China's growing interest in Africa should not be seen as a threat, but rather as a major boost for international efforts to raise living standards on the continent. Yet there are also growing concerns that Chinese financial aid to struggling African nations may lower standards for environmental protection and human rights.

With its seemingly insatiable appetite for oil and other natural resources, China's stake in Africa is obvious: It needs the commodities that Africa can provide. What's more, it is happy to pay for them, largely by stepping up development assistance to resource-rich but cash-poor countries. As a result, the country has developed relations with several major countries with ample crude oil supplies that often have shaky governments, including Sudan, Chad, Nigeria and Angola, as well as Algeria, Gabon, Congo and Equatorial Guinea.

In fact, China's thirst for oil is such that according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, China accounted for 40 percent of total growth in world demand for petroleum over the past four years. Meanwhile, it is estimated that China spent nearly $200 million in African countries, largely for oil exploration projects and infrastructure. Yet China's attempts to expand its energy resources are not necessarily a bad thing, either for the Asian giant or for African countries.

China's incentive to invest in Africa for its natural resources is "obvious ... and welcomed," argued Callisto Madavo, an African studies professor at Georgetown University and a former vice president for the Africa region at the World Bank. He pointed out that as China is willing and able to provide more loans and grants to African countries in exchange for what the East Asian behemoth wants most, Africa benefits from having alternatives to securing financial aid just from Western countries.

"There is an alternative, with China as a partner, and its conditions (for making loans and grants) are softer than that required by the West," Madavo said, adding that China's active contribution as an aid donor "leveled the global terrain" in international development.

Another positive factor is that China as a donor can be more inspiring to African recipients as they seek to learn from China's success when planning their own economic future. Moreover, Madavo noted that Beijing often provided assistance to areas largely bypassed by other major donors, such as Sudan and Angola.

In the case of Angola, which is the second-largest oil producer in sub-Saharan African, it now exports about 25 percent of the 2 million barrels a day it produces to China. It is estimated that Angola has attracted more than $20 billion in foreign direct investment for its oil and gas industries since 2003, the bulk of it from China. Beijing in turn has provided more than $2 billion in loans and grants to the country including building roads, schools, hospitals and other facilities that Chinese state enterprises excel at constructing.

Still, the World Bank's China representative emphasized that having China as a major donor in Africa was beneficial not just for the Chinese and African governments, but for the international community at large.

Providing development assistance "is not a zero-sum game," said David Dollar, the World Bank's country director for China and Mongolia. He stressed that the ultimate objective in providing financial aid to the region was to lift as many people out of poverty as possible, which in turn would lead to greater global stability. As such, so long as poverty levels in Africa decrease as a result of Chinese aid, it is a positive development that the United States and other countries should not regard as a threat.

Still, there are risks for African countries relying too heavily on Chinese aid, especially for the poorest people of the continent, Dollar said. In particular, he pointed to the possibility of corruption between the Chinese government and their African counterparts, a concern echoed by Georgetown's Madavo.

"Governance matters in African development ... but China de-emphasizes that," Madavo cautioned. Given Beijing's tendency to give little weight to social justice, environmental protection, and other factors that are so heavily emphasized by multilateral agencies including the World Bank, along with China's willingness to pay bribes, there is always a real risk of the "African elites and the Chinese making deals of the poor," he added.

Source: RIA Novosti

Related Links
US Energy Information Administration
Africa News - Resources, Health, Food



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


UN Tackles Ailments Of Poor With New Strategy
United Nations (UPI) Jun 25, 2007
The World Health Organization says it has a new strategy to strengthen and expand the fight against diseases of poverty such as leprosy, onchocerciasis, Chagas disease, lymphatic filariasis and visceral leishmaniasis, all recently brought under control. Onchocerciasis is perhaps better known as river blindness, Chagas disease causes sleeping sickness, lymphatic filariasis can lead to elephantiasis and visceral leishmaniasis triggers fever, weight loss, and an enlarged spleen and liver. All are now targeted for eradication.







  • Mitsubishi And Areva To Bid For US Nuclear Power Plant
  • Bangladesh To Build Nuclear Power Plant
  • Singapore Sees Myanmar Nuclear Program As Unlikely
  • Russia Hopes To Sign Belene NPP Contract This Year

  • Dutch Data Shows China Surpassed The US In 2006 Carbon-Dioxide Emissions
  • Climate Models Consistent With Ocean Warming Observations
  • UN Secretary General Points To Climate Change As Partly Behind Darfur Disaster
  • World Desertification Day Puts Spotlight On Neglected Crisis

  • Wines Knocked Into Carbon Reduction
  • Banned Chinese GM Rice Protein Found In Dutch Shipment To Cyprus
  • Down On The Virtual Farm With GrassGro 3
  • Annan Leads Drive To Reverse African Farming Decline

  • Explorers To Use Robotic Vehicles To Hunt for Life And Vents On Arctic Seafloor
  • Ancient DNA Traces The Woolly Mammoth Disappearance
  • Book Makes Case For Using Evolution In Everyday Life
  • Study Shows Lizard Moms Dress Their Children For Success

  • Air Force Continues Northrop Grumman Contract For Upper Stage Engine Program
  • World's Largest Vacuum Chamber To Test Orion
  • China To Increase Payload Capacity Of Carrier Rockets
  • SpaceDev, SpaceHab And Constellation Services Sign NASA Space Act Agreements



  • QuikSCAT Marks Eight Years On-Orbit Watching Planet Earth
  • Ukraine To Launch Earth Observation Satellite In 2008
  • NASA Satellites Watch as China Constructs Giant Dam
  • Kalam Calls For Development Of Satellite Systems For Entire Humanity

  • Boeing Orbital Express Achieves Another First In Space
  • SpaceDev To Develop Deployable Structures Technology For AFRL
  • Scientists Demonstrate High-Performing Room-Temperature Nanolaser
  • ESA And Inmarsat Prepare For Alphasat

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement