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Unveiled in 2013, China's Belt and Road Initiative is a massive stimulus for infrastructure development across over 60 countries.

In this article, Hilary Lau, Monica Sun and Jie Li from our Greater China offices provide an overview of the initiative to date.

What is Belt and Road?

The Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st-century Maritime Silk Road, also known as The Belt and Road, is a development strategy and framework, proposed by Chinese President Xi Jinping. It focuses on connectivity and cooperation among countries, primarily between China and the rest of Eurasia.

It consists of two main components, the land-based "Silk Road Economic Belt" and oceangoing "Maritime Silk Road".

In 2015, China's National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA), and Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM) published the Vision and Actions on Jointly Building Silk Road Economic Belt and 21st-Century Maritime Silk Road, which sets out Belt and Road's five major goals:

  • policy co-ordination;
  • connectivity of facilities;
  • unimpeded trade;
  • financial integration; and
  • people-to-people bonding.

Belt and Road can be thought of as an “umbrella” that catches outbound investments and development of infrastructure, such as roads, bridges, pipelines, ports, railways and power plants, in countries along the BRI.

Chinese government statistics show that trade volume between China and the countries along the Belt and Road routes reached US$983 billion in the first 11 months of 2017, up 15.4% year on year.  In addition, China signed four new free trade agreements last year, taking the total number of agreements to 16, benefiting 24 countries and regions.

Taken together, China and the Belt and Road countries identified in the table below account for 62% of the world's population. Separately, the total infrastructure investment needed in these countries is estimated at around US$5 trillion.*

Countries along the BRI

Southeast Asia Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanamr, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Timor-Leste, Vietnam
East Asia Mongolia
Central Asia Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan
MENA Bahrain, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Palestine, Syria, United Arab Emirates, Yemen
South Asia Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka
Europe Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Estonia, Georgia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, Moldova, Montenegro, Poland, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Turkey, Ukraine

Investors in Belt and Road projects

The leading investors in Belt and Road include:

  • Chinese policy banks, such as China Development Bank (CDB) and Export-Import Bank of China (CEXIM);
  • state-owned enterprise (SOE) banks, such as China Construction Bank and Bank of China;
  • Chinese SOEs in the energy and infrastructure sectors; and
  • large financial institutions, including Asia Infrastructure Investment Bank, the New Development Bank and Asian Development Bank.

By the end of 2016, CDB and CEXIM had provided US$200 billion in loans to Belt and Road projects. The three biggest state-owned banks – Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, Bank of China and China Construction Bank – had provided a total of US$225.4 billion in funding.

State-owned investment fund Silk Road Fund was launched at the end of 2014 to foster investment in the Belt and Road. It is funded by China's State Administration of Foreign Exchange, China Investment Corporation, CDB and CEXIM with a total capital of US$40 billion. As of March 2017, Silk Road Fund had invested US$6 billion via equity and loans in more than 15 projects, including the Yamal LNG project in Russia (on which Herbert Smith Freehills advised Silk Road Fund).

Multilateral institutions led by China, such as the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and the

New Development Bank, are also major Belt and Road financiers.

SOEs move from contractors to investors

Many Chinese SOEs that are the traditional EPC contractors for energy and infrastructure projects are now also taking an equity interest in the projects, as project sponsors. The funding for these projects is supported by the Chinese policy banks, SOE banks and other Chinese financial institutions identified above.

Some examples of Belt and Road projects in which Chinese SOEs are involved in this way include:

  • China Petroleum Engineering & Construction Corporation's construction of US$2.52 billion of the Amur gas processing plant;
  • China National Petroleum Corporation’s acquisition of an 8% stake in Abu Dhabi National Oil Company; and
  • China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation’s upgrade of the railway system in Belgrade, the capital of Serbia.

Belt and Road bucks the trend in China's outbound investment

China has taken various measures to tighten its control of capital outflows since the end of 2016, including increased regulatory scrutiny of outbound M&A deals and significant foreign exchange transactions.

While this has created uncertainties and challenges for some outbound investments, Belt and Road-related projects seem unaffected by such measures.

In August 2017, NDRC, MFA, MOFCOM and People's Bank of China jointly issued a clarification on outbound investment related to Belt and Road projects.  In that clarification, infrastructure investment and construction in countries along the Belt and Road are expressly specified as “encouraged” projects, which are not subject to the tightened controls.

Issues ahead

As with most outbound investments, country and project risks are still the major concerns for Chinese investors in Belt and Road projects.

As Chinese construction companies, other SOEs and financial institutions evolve from traditional “pure” EPC contractors to project sponsors, there is a concern that country and project specific risks may be underestimated.

Commercial drivers

The commercial driver for many of these projects is often the EPC aspect - that is, the ability of Chinese SOEs to provide the EPC component of the project, rather than the overall return on investment for the project. However, the Chinese construction SOE tends to take a minority equity stake in the project alongside acting as an EPC contractor. This ensures control over the EPC aspects with minimum capital risk in the project.

Sufficient planning

As many of these projects are greenfield projects, a longer lead time will usually be required for legal matters such as due diligence, structuring the project or transaction and government consents. Therefore, it is important to allow for sufficient time to complete these legal matters. Many Chinese SOEs have already learned this lesson – especially the time needed to deal with local authorities and partners.

Project finance

Project finance is widely used in international energy and infrastructure projects. For many Chinese banks, this is still a relatively new concept and they are more accustomed to simple financing structures.

However, in the near future there will be more roles for non-Chinese banks to play in these projects (including for project financing). The Chinese banks' appetite for project financing Belt and Road projects remains to be seen.

Identifying Belt and Road projects

There is no official list of Belt and Road projects, participants or countries, making it hard for investors to identify these projects.

However, many projects are being driven by the participants, especially the Chinese development banks. For those investors interested in Belt and Road projects, we recommend regular communication with these participants to ensure you are up to date on potential opportunities to participate in these projects.

What's next?

Belt and Road is one of the most significant global infrastructure initiatives of recent times. However, many of its projects are still at an early stage, and so many key questions around precisely how it will work, and which projects it will include, remain unanswered.

Answers to these questions will come with time. It is essential for potential investors and contractors to remain close to participants, funders and advisers already involved in Belt and
Road projects.

Where governmental agreements or trade treaties exist for Belt and Road, home government bodies can also assist international companies to build relationships.

By Hilary Lau, Monica Sun and Jie Li

Belt and Road hub

 


 

*China’s new silk route: The long and winding road, PwC, February 2016 

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Hilary Lau

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