Belt and Road Initiative in Europe: Between Shapes of Cooperation and Shades of Pressure - Finabel (2024)

20 July 2021

The Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) is a global infrastructure development strategy launched by the Chinese government in 2013 to invest in 70 countries (World Bank, 2018) to promote economic development and enhance connectivity between China and Central-East Asia, the Middle East, Europe, and Africa. Around 150 countries have joined BRI so far, including 18 EU members (BRI Center, 2021). What recently happened in Montenegro raised several concerns within the EU about Beijing’s approach, labelled by some observers as a sinocentric international trade network potentially harmful to the independence of some countries at the EU’s doorsteps. What then is the standpoint of both BRI and EU members? Can different attitudes towards the Chinese projects cause a fracture within an already diverse EU in terms of policies, paces to reach goals, and economic indicators? To what extent is BRI a tool in the hands of Beijing to leverage European countries by proposing offers of development that, at first glance, cannot be declined?

The role of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) in the international arena has profoundly changed since the end of the ‘90s, shifting from a regional power, seeking development to a great power aiming to set a global leadership that challenges the status quo established after the end of the Cold War. The Chinese foreign affairs discourse evolution from “keeping a low profile” to “striving for achievement” has effectively shaped PRC relations with third countries in favour of the Chinese interest (Yan, 2014, 158). This new discourse comes together with a more proactive foreign policy, where the PRC considers itself a “game maker” rather than just a “game player” (Qiu, 2015). So far, this is nothing particularly threatening: history has always witnessed rising and declining powers as well as the alternating of states as global leaders. What is alarming is that the PRC seems to use tools and approaches to exert pressure and influence, to an extent, an intensity and a long-term perspective different from the past.

The first decade of the new millennium not only marked the end of the US unipolar moment, the emergence of new powers, and the resurgence of old ones, but also highlighted a gradual turn to more purely economic power, rather than economic power to serve military purposes. In other words, geopolitics now proceed hand in hand with geo-economics, and the Cold War ‘hearts and minds’ strategies promoted by Washington seem to gradually give way to ‘hearts and wallets’ programs, of which Beijing is the soundest interpreter. Moreover, unlike other great powers which are not shy to affirm their role, even by the use of force, though willing to operate within a multi-polar context, PRC is pursuing a foreign policy equally aggressive but less blatant (as it does not include out-of-area military interventions), more hegemony-oriented, as well as ‘politically correct’, through the rhetoric of a ‘win-win cooperation’. As highlighted by the Spanish Lieutenant de Santallana, it is the first time in recent history that a non-Western country is effectively aiming to globalise its model (Cervera, 2019, 12). BRI is PRCs main instrument and aims to accomplish this through three dimensions related to the economic, political, and diplomatic fields of PRCs relationships with foreign countries.

As far as the first is concerned, energy provides a good example: the slow but inevitable phase-out of fossil fuels, strongly backed by the EU, will make the supply of critical raw materials and rare earth increasingly important. BRI claims to be a sustainable project (XinhuaNet, 2017). Consequently, PRCs global vision is raising stakes over access to critical minerals in its attempt to lead and dominate innovation, digitalisation, and green economy. Lighting, magnets, electronics, defence systems, wind turbines, hybrid and electric vehicles all contain rare earth. Although they exist in other countries outside the PRC (mostly in developing countries in Africa and South America), in most places, it is too capital-intensive to extract and process them. Therefore, 97% of these materials come from China (Kalantzakos, 2019, 3), boosting Beijing’s de-facto monopoly in such a strategic global competition paramount for the future.

Regarding the political dimension, the Chinese foreign posture is built upon three main aspects: parallel institutions, unconditional representation, and ad hoc bilateralism. Following the US post-World War II model, the developing countries were feeling underrepresented in Western-led Bretton Woods institutions such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. Since the 2001 Zedillo Report, which was highly critical of multilateral development banks (MDBs) arrangements due to their slowness of projects preparation and excessive burdens on borrowing countries (Dollar, 2015), the PRC has shown an increasing commitment in creating parallel multilateral institutions such as the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB). China’s 2013 initiative to create the AIIB was first and foremost a response to a vast infrastructure investment gap in Asia, estimated at $8 trillion from 2010 to 2020. Since established, MDBs with large bureaucracies struggled to narrow this gap, PRC set out to do a better job based on a lean business model and a ‘developing countries first’ agenda (Grieger, 2021, 2). By linking the AIIB’s creation to the launch of BRI, the PRC has developed a much broader geostrategic agenda, both in terms of tasks and narrative.

On the one hand, AIIB’s foundation was a response to the reluctance of advanced economies, notably the US and EU, to increase China’s voting rights in Western-dominated multilateral financial institutions; the AIIB has been framed as a paradigm of Beijing’s strategy to shape global norms and values in line with its national interests. On the other hand, by championing AIIB, the PRC has sought to portray itself as a responsible great power capable of providing development in its region and beyond with innovative approaches in line with the needs of developing countries. For instance, by rejecting political conditionality, the PRC has shown no concern involving undemocratic countries in BRI, or offering loans that Western countries would only grant if specific standards are respected. Finally, the bilateral nature of the Memoranda of Understandings between China and other countries to join BRI is a cunning move from Beijing as, particularly when dealing with EU member states, it reduces negotiation power as compared with that of the EU countries jointly negotiating under a common framework, contributing, therefore, to undermine a shared EU approach towards China.

The diplomatic dimension is perhaps the most comprehensive, as it encompasses political and economic issues. According to an IMF study, from 2013 to 2016, China’s contribution to the public debt of heavily indebted poor countries nearly doubled from 6.2 to 11.6% (Green, 2019), raising concerns that BRI is partly motivated by PRCs aim to stimulate its economy and turn its economic access into political and strategic influence in recipient nations. Numerous examples from all over the globe have prompted these concerns. Firstly, in 2017, Sri Lanka was unable to repay a loan used to build a new port in Hambantota. It was forced to sign control of the port over to Beijing in a 99-year lease. The PRC could potentially use the port as a strategic base for China’s navy. In Djibouti, the People’s Liberation Army’s first-ever permanent military base outside PRC territory has been established. The country, strategically located in the Horn of Africa, owes the PRC a debt equalling 80% of its GDP. In Turkmenistan, China has institutionalised a monopoly as the only buyer of Turkmen gas. Turkmen gas is paramount for PRC industrial development, but Beijing does not pay for it in cash. Instead, it is a deduction for loans granted to Turkmenistan for the projects to extract and transport the resource (Frappi, 2021, 90).

BRI is finding its footing on European soil, too. Montenegro borrowed $944 million to fund a 41km stretch of highway from the coastal city of Bar to Boljare at the Serbian border (Baczynska, 2021). Podgorica’s debt with the Export-Import Bank of China must be repaid from July 2021 onwards. However, the Balkan state cannot pay off its loans, as its main source of income, tourism, was cut off by COVID-19. The total government debt now equals 103% of economic output, of which 18% can be attributed to the Chinese loan – without considering the 2% interest rate (CEIC Data, 2020). Last April, the Minister of Finance Spajic unsuccessfully turned to the EU for financial help, highlighting that such a dependency on Beijing represents a “dramatic scenario from a geopolitical point of view” (Hopkins, 2021). First of all, Montenegro is a long-time candidate to join the EU and the Monetary Union. However, the Maastricht criteria require that the government debt-GDP ratio must not exceed 60% or at least approach the reference value at a satisfactory pace (Article 126/2). Secondly, the construction of several stretches of highway has been contracted out to PRC state-owned companies. These companies use Chinese workers, ensuring that Beijing maintains a network of physical and financial representatives on the territory, thus increasing the pressure on an already highly indebted country. Finally, Montenegro joined NATO in 2017.

Leaving Podgorica behind by offering no support could alienate other potential EU partners and allies, hereby slowing down EU enlargement and pushing economically struggling states into Beijing’s squeezing arms. It would also mean having the PRC at the EU doorstep, representing a further extension of the strategic hub that Beijing is building and branching out along the Eastern Mediterranean and Western Balkans (Fruscione, 2021).

China’s relationships with vulnerable states seem to follow a predatory logic-driven and expressed by the BRI initiative, resulting in a loss of strategic assets and, ultimately, in a potential loss of sovereignty for the lending states. As shown by the Montenegro case, European and EU countries are directly or indirectly involved in these dynamics. Although the international weight and capacities of the above-mentioned countries are not comparable to those of most EU members, the enlargement of the BRI initiative entails some risks for the EU. From the EU standpoint, the main dangers are to be cut off from its backyard and witness some of its members increasingly leaning towards Beijing. Beijing aims to take advantage of its divide et impera strategy and a lack of unity shown by Brussels on the BRI-issue.

On the one hand, China “has been filling any opening it felt it could. Local capitals were hungry for cash, particularly on big development issues like infrastructure – and the Chinese were willing to go places where Western institutions were not” (Birnbaum, 2021). Politically, this means diminishing leadership and influence in the region for the EU. Strategically, it means paving the way for an economic giant and geopolitical competitor to create networks, for instance, in the Mediterranean Basin and thus increasing its commercial role in the European supply chain. Financially, it makes Chinese economic power more diversified and solid, since investing in foreign projects as well as the institution of a multilateral bank focused on infrastructure (such as AIIB) allows Beijing to make better use of its massive foreign exchange reserves than by holding low-interest yielding US treasury bonds (Grieger, 2021).

On the other hand, the reason why the EU countries have not achieved a common approach is the differing interests among member states. While most of the EU countries were sceptical and cautious about BRI, the Central Eastern European and some of the Southern European countries have shown a clear interest in BRI since its launch. Greece and the Netherlands represent a good example of this dichotomy: intensively affected by the 2008 financial crisis and, consequently, more open to privatisation, Athens received important foreign investments in strategic sectors such as transportation, energy, and infrastructure. In 2017, the Chinese state-owned COSCO bought a 51% holding in Piraeus port authority (PPA) for €280 million, deciding to potentiate the harbour as part of the BRI and committing to a mandatory investment worth €300 million over five years to acquire an additional 16% (Koutantou, 2021). Since COSCO took over PPA container operations in 2009, it has spent €600 million in infrastructure. Piraeus has grown into a major transhipment hub for goods destined for Mediterranean and Black Sea ports, making it the fourth-busiest port in Europe. Moreover, COSCO recently stated that it wants to invest €200 million into a new container terminal, boosting the capacity to 11 million TEUs (twenty-foot equivalent unit) from 8 million this year and 1 million in 2009. This increased presence of the PRC in the Mediterranean alarms the Netherlands, which fears that Southern Europe terminal ports could become the official trade gateway of BRI, taking away Rotterdam’s transportation volume shares – a pillar of Dutch economy – and thus putting two EU and NATO members in opposing positions due to diverse national interests.

To conclude, by using Montenegro’s paradigm, although two US and a French bank have recently agreed to borrow the Balkan state $1 billion to pay off the Chinese loan (Reuters, 2021), the PRC debt trap is not fading away. To recover from the economic setbacks caused by the pandemic and stimulate growth, many countries, not just non-EU countries and those already vulnerable, will be tempted by BRI loans. Attracted by large, immediate, and low-interest Chinese investment flows, a BRI loan might seem like a convenient deal in the short term. However, its long-term consequences are potentially devastating, and could contribute to damaging the EU image, as well as its collective interests and security.

Written by Gabriele GHIO, Researcher at Finabel – European Army Interoperability Centre

Sources

Baczynska, Gabriela; Vasovic, Aleksandar. (2021) “Montenegro Counts on EU-Aid, Asset Sales to Ease Burden of China Debt.” Reuters. Available at: EXCLUSIVE Montenegro counts on EU aid, asset sales to ease burden of China debt -officials | Reuters.

Belt and Road Initiative Center. (2021) “Countries of the Belt and Road Initiative”. Available at: https://green-bri.org/countries-of-the-belt-and-road-initiative-bri/.

Birnbaum, Micheal. (2021) “ Montenegro Mortgaged itself to China. Now it Wants Europe’s Help to Cut it Free.” The Washington Post. Available at: Montenegro used a huge Chinese loan for a highway. Now it’s choking on the debt. – The Washington Post.

CEIC Data. (2020) “Montenegro Government Debt: % of GDP.” Global Economic Data, Indicators, Charts and Forecasts. Available at: https://www.ceicdata.com/en/indicator/montenegro/government-debt–of-nominal-gdp.

Cervera, Josep Lluìs. (2019) “The European Union Approach to the One Belt One Road Initiative.” Available at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/348393834_The_European_Union_approach_to_the_One_Belt_One_Road_initiative .

Dollar, David. (2015) “The AIIB and the ‘One Belt, One Road’”. Available at: The AIIB and the ‘One Belt, One Road’ (brookings.edu).

Frappi, Carlo. (2021) “Il Riavvicinamento tra Azerbaijan e Turkmenistan: Nuova Linfa ai Progetti Trans-Caspici Europei?.” ISPI- Focus su Sicurezza Energetica, pp. 88-94. Available at: https://www.ispionline.it/it/pubblicazione/focus-sicurezza-energetica-30833#:~:text=Il%20Focus%20Sicurezza%20Energetica%20guarda,per%20la%20tutela%20e%20la.

Fruscione, Giorgio. (2021) “Montenegro: L’insostenibile Leggerezza del Debito.” ISPI. Available at Montenegro: l’insostenibile leggerezza del debito (ispionline.it); (2021) “How Cina’s Influence in the Balkans is Growing.” ISPI. Available at: https://www.ispionline.it/it/pubblicazione/how-chinas-influence-balkans-growing-29148.

Green, Mark. (2019) “China’s Debt Diplomacy.” Foreign Policy. Available at: China’s Debt Diplomacy – Foreign Policy.

Grieger, Gisela. (2021) “Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank: How Lean, Clean and Green is the AIIB?.” European Parliament Research Service. Available at: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/RegData/etudes/BRIE/2021/679086/EPRS_BRI(2021)679086_EN.pdf.

Hopkins, Valerie (2021). “Montenegro Calls for EU Help over $1BN Chinese Highway Loan.” Financial Times. Available at: https://www.ft.com/content/3dd7a516-5352-4f48-bfac-236e43b2342d.

Kalantzakos, Sophia. (2019) “The Geopolitics of Critical Minerals.” IAI-ENI Strategic Partnership Working Papers. Available at: https://www.iai.it/en/pubblicazioni/geopolitics-critical-minerals.

Koutantou, Angeliki. (2021) “China’s COSCO Hopes for Greek Deal on Piraeus Despite Delay.” Reuters. Available at: China’s COSCO hopes for Greek deal on Piraeus despite delay -official | Reuters.

Qiu, Zhibo. (2015) “From ‘Game Player’ to ‘Game Maker’: News Features of China’s Foreign Policy.” China Brief Volume, XV, XIV.

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Belt and Road Initiative in Europe: Between Shapes of Cooperation and Shades of Pressure - Finabel (2024)

FAQs

What is the Belt and Road Initiative in simple terms? ›

China's Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) (一带一路) is a strategy initiated by the People's Republic of China that seeks to connect Asia with Africa and Europe via land and maritime networks with the aim of improving regional integration, increasing trade and stimulating economic growth.

What's the difference between the Belt and the Road in the Belt and Road Initiative? ›

"Belt" is short for the "Silk Road Economic Belt," referring to the proposed overland routes for road and rail transportation through landlocked Central Asia along the famed historical trade routes of the Western Regions; whereas "road" is short for the "21st Century Maritime Silk Road", referring to the Indo-Pacific ...

What are the five cooperation priorities the Belt and Road Initiative is based on? ›

What are the Belt and Road Initiative cooperation priorities? Policy coordination, connectivity of infrastructure, unimpeded trade, financial Integration and closer people-to-people ties are the priority areas of Belt and Road Initiative cooperation.

What is China's Belt and Road Initiative quizlet? ›

What is the Belt and Road initiative? Chinas plan to build infrastructure in other countries across the world.

What is the leading reason for the Belt and Road Initiative? ›

China's Belt and Road Initiative (also known as One Belt, One Road (OBOR)) is one of President Xi's most ambitious foreign and economic policies. It aims to strengthen Beijing's economic leadership through a vast program of infrastructure building throughout China's neighbouring regions.

What are three basic principles for the implementation of the BRI? ›

Thus, the less developed countries can obtain real benefits from participating in the joint initiative. Three aspects of joint efforts, namely extensive consultation, shared efforts, and shared benefits for all, are the fundamental principles of the BRI.

Does the US have a Belt and Road Initiative? ›

Economically, the US did not compete with the Belt and Road Initiative over scale and capital, but instead focused on three areas: digital economy, cybersecurity, and energy and infrastructure development.

What are the positive effects of the Belt and Road Initiative? ›

Growth-promoting: sharing China's development experience; linking up with other national economies; enhancing the long-term foundation for world development. Re-globalization: Rebalancing maritime and land globalization; rebuilding a more inclusive and equitable global economy; de-Westernization (de-centralizing).

What was the problem with the Belt and Road Initiative? ›

The real reason why the BRI has struggled to sustain itself is not due to debt traps or predatory lending, but something far more mundane: poor risk management and a lack of attention to detail and cohesion from the Chinese state-owned enterprises and banks, private companies, and local governments involved.

What are the characteristics of Belt and Road Initiative? ›

BRI primary agreements have the following unique characteristics: (i) minimal legalization, (ii) a coordinated, project-based nature, and (iii) a hub-and-spoke network structure.

Is the Belt and Road Initiative good for the environment? ›

While it may promote economic growth and infrastructure development in developing countries, the BRI ultimately pushes forward a trifecta of environmental devastation in the forms of coal, the Polar Silk Road, and biodiversity loss.

What are the 6 corridors of the Belt and Road Initiative? ›

The BRI has six main economic corridors: (1) the New Eurasian Land Bridge; (2) the China-Central Asia-West Asia Corridor; (3) the China-Pakistan Corridor; (4) the Bangladesh-China- Myanmar Corridor; (5) the China-Mongolia-Russia Corridor; (6) the China-Indochina Peninsula Corridor.

Does the Belt and Road Initiative stimulate Chinese exports? ›

Our empirical results show that on average Chinese firms' export activity is not significantly affected by BRI.

What has China's One Belt One Road Initiative included? ›

Purchase and construction of port facilities and associated economic zones in Australia, Malaysia, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Pakistan, Kenya, Tanzania, Oman and Djibouti are intended to provide China with maritime access and economic benefit across the Indian Ocean.

What is China's One Belt One Road Initiative towards mutual peace and development? ›

China's One Belt One Road Initiative is a global economic interconnectivity project that connects the countries through seaports, economic corridors, roads, railways, canals, bridges, gas and oil pipelines etc. In 2013, the initiative is firstly proposed by China's president Xi Jinping.

What are the disadvantages of BRI China? ›

However, projects under the BRI face certain drawbacks such as socio-environmental risks, financial risks, and governance and corruption challenges in partner states. Nevertheless, the BRI furthers Chinese lenders' and investors' outreach on a global scale and addresses host countries' developmental needs.

What country is behind the Belt and Road Initiative? ›

China's colossal infrastructure investments may usher in a new era of trade and growth for economies in Asia and beyond.

Which countries benefit from Belt and Road Initiative? ›

Asia
  • Central Asia. The five countries of Central Asia—Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan—are an important part of the land route of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). ...
  • Hong Kong. ...
  • Indonesia. ...
  • Laos. ...
  • Maldives. ...
  • Malaysia. ...
  • Pakistan. ...
  • Sri Lanka.

What are the benefits of the BRI? ›

The BRI vitalizes global development. According to a World Bank report, trade will grow from between 2.8 and 9.7 percent for economies along the Belt and Road and between 1.7 and 6.2 percent for the world. Increased trade is expected to expand global real income by 0.7 percent to 2.9 percent, the report said.

What are the benefits of BRI? ›

The BRI is an umbrella initiative spanning a multitude of projects designed to promote the flow of goods, investment, and people. The new connections fostered by the BRI could reconfigure relationships, reroute economic activity, and shift power within and between states.

How many countries are part of BRI? ›

The countries of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) are spread across all continents: 44 countries are in Sub-Saharan Africa. 35 BRI countries are in Europe & Central Asia. 25 BRI countries are in East Asia & Pacific (including China)

What does the US government think about BRI? ›

The Task Force finds that BRI presents significant risks for U.S. economic, political, climate change, security, and health interests. As it evaluated these implications, the Task Force also examined how the COVID-19 crisis, and the accompanying wave of economic distress, is reshaping BRI.

How will Belt Road Initiative affect the world? ›

If fully implemented, BRI transport projects could increase trade between 1.7 and 6.2 percent for the world, increasing global real income by 0.7 to 2.9 percent.

Does the Belt and Road Initiative cause more troubled Chinese overseas investments? ›

Highlights. We study the causal effect of the BRI on the probability of troubled Chinese overseas investments. The likelihood of Chinese overseas investments facing trouble increased after the announcement of the BRI. The causal effect of the BRI is strongest in European countries along the route.

Does the Belt and Road Initiative promote the economic growth of participating countries? ›

The Belt and Road Initiative has greatly promoted regional communication, economic and trade cooperation, as well as cultural and science and technology communication among countries along the route, which is a significant achievement (Kong et al., 2021).

Does China's overseas lending favor the one belt one road countries? ›

The One Belt One Road initiative is found to promote China's overseas lending in the belt road countries, especially for countries along the continental route. Such effect strengthens and persists for at least three years.

How is China funding the Belt and Road Initiative? ›

The Chinese state is the underwriter for the initiative, via its four state-owned banks lending to state owned enterprises.

How much does China spend on Belt and road? ›

China spent $240bn on belt and road bailouts from 2008 to 2021, study finds | Belt and road initiative | The Guardian.

How much has China invested in BRI? ›

Chinese engagement through financial investments and contractual cooperation for 2022 in the 147 countries of the Belt and Road Initiative was about USD67. 8 billion based on over 200 deals. This about equal to China's BRI engagement in 2021 at USD68. 7 billion.

What is relationship between Taiwan and China? ›

Since the democratization of Taiwan, the question regarding the political and legal status of Taiwan has shifted focus to the choice between political unification with mainland China or de jure Taiwanese independence. The PRC remains hostile to any formal declaration of independence and maintains its claim over Taiwan.

Is Italy intends to exit China Belt and Road Pact as relations sour? ›

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni reassured US House Speaker Kevin McCarthy during a meeting in Rome last week that while a final decision hasn't been taken, her government is favoring an exit from its role in China's massive Belt and Road Initiative, according to people present at the talks.

What is the downside of Belt and Road Initiative? ›

However, projects under the BRI face certain drawbacks such as socio-environmental risks, financial risks, and governance and corruption challenges in partner states.

Who benefits from Belt and Road Initiative? ›

Announced in 2013, the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI, also known as One Belt, One Road) aims to strengthen China's connectivity with the world. It combines new and old projects, covers an expansive geographic scope, and includes efforts to strengthen hard infrastructure, soft infrastructure, and cultural ties.

Is the Belt and Road Initiative bad for the environment? ›

In addition to the inimical implications of the Polar Silk Road, BRI projects often also involve cement production and sand dredging, which is terrible for the environment.

What are the advantages and disadvantages of belt drives? ›

Gear drive or belt drive?
Gear driveBelt drive
Requires less maintenance, but maintenance cost is relatively dearer and cumbersome.Requires high inspection and maintenance, but maintenance cost is relatively cheaper and convenient.
Much greater life expectancy than belt drives.Low life expectancy than gear drives.
6 more rows
Oct 31, 2019

What are the benefits of belt and road? ›

Belt and Road transport corridors have the potential to substantially improve trade, foreign investment, and living conditions for citizens in its participating countries—but only if China and corridor economies adopt deeper policy reforms that increase transparency, expand trade, improve debt sustainability, and ...

Is Belt and Road Initiative successful? ›

Since 2013, the Chinese leadership has successfully made a splash on the world stage by selling the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) as the “project of the century.” More than 150 countries joined the BRI, with hundreds of agreements signed.

Which country is leading the Belt and Road Initiative? ›

The Belt and Road Initiative is a massive China-led infrastructure project that aims to stretch around the globe. Some analysts see the project as a disturbing expansion of Chinese power, and the United States has struggled to offer a competing vision.

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