How red-flagging coal can help align belt and road projects with China’s climate ambitions

  • More transparency in managing belt and road projects’ environmental risks could address concerns of China’s overseas presence in coal and other projects, laying the foundation for greener, more sustainable development

Labourers unload coal from a cargo ship in Gabtoli on the outskirts of Dhaka, Bangladesh, on November 6, 2019. Developing countries such as Bangladesh are reducing their dependence on coal, raising the importance of environmental considerations in infrastructure investment. Photo: AFP
In 2020, as most of the world’s economies have struggled with the impacts of the coronavirus pandemic, China’s investments into countries in the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) have grown in value by 30 per cent, according to Ministry of Commerce statistics. Investments include transport, health, mining and more.

In the five years since the initiative’s inception, one sector has remained steadfast in China’s ever-growing stream of outward investments: energy.

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