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Belt and Road Initiative
EconomyChina Economy

China faces US$50 billion shortfall in Southeast Asia as belt and road funds miss their mark

  • A study by an Australian think tank has estimated a gap of over US$50 billion in China’s infrastructure pledges versus what has been built
  • Projects in Southeast Asia have been delayed over political upheaval and a moratorium on fossil fuel energy projects, among other factors

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Several of China’s planned infrastructure projects in Southeast Asia have yet to come to fruition, according to a recent study. Photo: Xinhua
Kandy Wong

A sizeable sum of infrastructure funding China has allocated to Southeast Asia has gone unfulfilled thanks to political instability in recipient countries, poor engagement with local stakeholders and a declining appetite for energy projects powered by fossil fuels, a new study from the Lowy Institute has found.

The gap between what Beijing has committed to and what it has delivered has raised “uncertainty” about the future of the China-led Belt and Road Initiative, where Southeast Asian nations are key participants, the Australian think tank said on Wednesday.

“This difference amounts to US$50 billion in unfulfilled project financing, with more than half allocated to projects that have been cancelled, downsized, or otherwise seem unlikely to proceed,” said Alexandre Dayant and Grace Stanhope, who co-wrote the report.

Large-scale infrastructure projects launched under the Chinese initiative are “a prominent feature of [the region’s] development landscape”, the authors wrote.

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Among the 34 commitments to megaprojects in Southeast Asia recorded by the think tank, were 24 from China, six from Japan, three from the Asian Development Bank and one from South Korea.

China’s 24 projects were worth a combined US$77 billion in financing commitments, but also represent more than US$52 billion in implementation shortfalls. The average completion rate was 33 per cent, with eight projects worth about US$16 billion finished and another eight “on track”, although two have been “substantially downsized”.

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China’s Belt and Road, 10 years on

China’s Belt and Road, 10 years on

“Five projects worth US$21 billion have been cancelled, while another three projects worth US$5 billion seem unlikely to proceed,” authors said.

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