7/22/2014
Venezuela Confirms China as a Pillar of its Economy With a new portfolio of accords and almost $5.7 billion in loans, the Asian giant will provide support in many key areas to the South American country CARACAS – Venezuela confirmed on Monday that its relations with China have become a fundamental pillar for making progress in almost all sectors of its economy. With a new portfolio of accords and almost $5.7 billion in loans, the Asian giant will provide support in many key areas. Facing China’s Xi Jinping at the closing ceremony of the 13th bilateral Mixed Commission, President Nicolas Maduro told his Chinese counterpart that his visit of little more than 24 hours had “surpassed all expectations.” Maduro and Xi closed the meeting having added a number of new pacts to the more than 500 already accumulated in their bilateral relations. From agriculture and finance to telecommunications, infrastructure and trade, the two leaders agreed that the door opened by the late Hugo Chavez 15 years ago continues to be “a breath of fresh air” to the economy of the South American country. “The financing... doesn’t burden our country with unmanageable debt, it is financing backed by a formula of production and supply of barrels of oil that now amounts to some 524,000 barrels a year to China,” Maduro said. “That means it is an honorable formula that provides financing and development without creating burdensome debts as the old systems did,” he said. The “honorable formula” has put $45 billion from China into a joint fund to finance projects in Venezuela, a sum that with Venezuela’s contribution totals $56 billion in available money. “Venezuela has become one of the places most committed to investments from China, the biggest market for construction works, the seventh supplier of oil and China’s fourth largest trade partner in Latin America,” Xi said. In evaluating the details of the cooperation plan, Maduro said that the priority areas are led by the energy and natural resources sector, with investments in petroleum, the petrochemical industry and the generation of electricity. This sector is followed by infrastructure and agriculture – about which Maduro noted that only some 10 percent of Venezuela’s arable land is under cultivation – with manufacturing, technical innovation and computer technology completing the list. The Venezuelan also hailed the signing of an accord for the construction of a third satellite, a new contribution to “the aerospace race in which, with the aid of China, Venezuela modestly continues to make progress,” he said. |
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