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Peace is a Better Energy Policy
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Energy Policy: Instead of War, China Makes Friends

While the Bush administration relies on force as its energy policy, China is spending much less and getting better results by being respectful and friendly, especially in resource-rich Africa.

Here is a Reuters report circulated by Alternet.org.

by Lindsay Beck

China's foreign minister left on Wednesday on a tour of six African nations, underscoring Beijing's accelerating economic and diplomatic presence in a region whose energy and natural resources it covets.

Li Zhaoxing will also seek to shore up ties with countries that have in past had relations with its diplomatic rival, Taiwan, during his Jan. 11-19 tour that will take him to Cape Verde, Senegal, Mali, Liberia, Nigeria and Libya.

China already gets a third of its oil from Africa, and among his stops are Nigeria and Libya, energy-rich nations that China has been eyeing as it seeks new sources of imports to fuel its fast-growing economy.

"Right now Africa is very often mentioned by China's oil companies as an important place," said Kang Wu, a research fellow at the East-West Center in Hawaii.

China's top offshore oil producer, CNOOC Ltd., agreed last week to pay $2.3 billion for a stake in a Nigerian oil and gas field, its largest-ever overseas acquisition.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Kong Quan said in Nigeria Li would sign a memorandum of understanding that would pave the way for further economic cooperation, and shrugged off concerns about Nigeria's poor record on human rights and corruption.

"China has always been opposed to some countries, people and organisations labelling certain other countries in this or that way," he told a news conference.

Critics say China undermines efforts to build good governance by offering aid, trade and investment without demands for transparency or accountability.

SPHERE OF INFLUENCE

Africa has long been an important sphere of influence for China since the 1960s and 1970s when it offered its support to newly independent states and threw its weight behind independence movements.

It has also traditionally been the first destination of the year for Chinese foreign ministers, Kong said.

China is keen to maintain its friendships in Africa and use its influence to build on its desire to be a leader among developing nations.

In Liberia, which switched diplomatic recognition to China from Taiwan in 2003, Li will attend the inauguration ceremony for Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, who will be sworn in as Africa's first elected female president on Jan. 16.

He will also meet leaders in Senegal, which resumed diplomatic ties with China in October.

Beijing and Taipei have competed for diplomatic recognition since Mao Zedong's communists drove the Nationalists from the mainland when they swept to civil war victory in 1949 -- some say by using promises of soft loans and aid.

Analysts say Senegal offers China a cheap way to develop its infrastructure, and trade between the two hit $105 million in the first three quarters of last year, up by over a third on 2004.

But Chinese scholars rejected suggestions that Beijing was simply using the continent to mine its resources and absorb China's cash surplus.

"Western media says China is carrying out a so-called 'new colonialism' in Africa, but that is a deliberate distortion of mutually beneficial China-Africa cooperation," said CASS researcher He Wenping. "China has built large-scale industries and supplied badly needed technical skills and funds to African countries," she said in comments carried on the official Xinhua news agency.

Also see:

Rising U.S. & Chinese Oil Dependence: Time for Cooperation, Not Confrontation
http://www.progress.org/2005/fcnl04.htm

Chinese island tapping into wind power
http://www.progress.org/2005/energy47.htm

Why Do Republicans Hate Free Markets?
http://www.progress.org/2005/eland29.htm

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