21.03.2017 Author: F. William Engdahl
Strategic China Russia Arctic Cooperation
Column: Economics
Region: Russia in the World
Cooperation in building modern railway links, deep
water ports and mining infrastructure in Russia’s Arctic and Murmansk Peninsula
in the far north is becoming a strategic new element binding China and Russia.
Its implications are worth a closer look.
On March 29 a high-level delegation from the Chinese
Government and private companies will meet with their Russian government
counterparts in the ancient seacoast city of Arkhangelsk on the White Sea at
the mouth of the Northern Dvina River. The city is strategic as it is now
navigable by ship year-around owing to technology improvements in Russian
icebreakers. The occasion of the March 29 gathering is the fourth meeting of
The Arctic: Territory of Dialogue forum since its creation by Russia in 2010.
Among the agenda topics will be China-Russia cooperation in development of
projects including the Belkomur railway and the Arkhangelsk deepwater port.
China’s delegation, seventy participants, will be
headed by Vice Premier of the State Council Wang Yang, a Politburo member and
leading Chinese political figure. Russia’s delegation will be led by Deputy
Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin. Rogozin is not only head of Russia’s Arctic
Commission. For the past six years he has held the key post as Deputy Prime
Minister responsible for the Russian defense and space industry. He is directly
in charge of the Russian Foundation for Advanced Research Projects in the
Defense Industry, Russia’s version of the US Pentagon DARPA.
Arctic Link to One Belt, One Road?
Though it’s not now being called such, the cooperation
could conceivably become integrated into the vast China One Belt, One Road
high-speed rail infrastructure and deep-water ports great project. That OBOR,
as the Chinese call it, is rapidly developing into what will be a
multi-trillion dollar development of the vast Eurasian land space with its
enormous reserves of untapped raw materials–oil, gas, uranium, rare earth
metals, gold and most every raw material needed by man.
For more than two centuries since the Napolean
invasion of Czarist Russia in 1812, European and later USA geopolitical
strategy has been to either attempt to conquer Eurasia, as with the
Anglo-American China Opium Wars after 1840, or to destroy the development
potentials, as with the London and Wall Street-financed 1917 Bolshevik putsch
known in history as the Russian Revolution. Currently, NATO is pursuing the
same geopolitical agenda of creating chaos in what Sir Halford Mackinder, the father
of British geopolitics, called the Heartland–Russia and also China, as he
described it in his later writings.
That is the real significance of the February 2014 US
coup d’ etat in Ukraine led by Victoria Nuland Kagan and John McCain. It’s the
real significance of the current US-backed escalation of tensions and
sabre-rattling in the Korean Peninsula and South China Sea.
Viewed against that backdrop, the Sino-Russian
developing cooperation in the Arctic have huge strategic implications, both
economic, geopolitical and military.
Regaining Arctic Presence
For Russia, development of the infrastructure around
Archangelsk and Murmansk has assumed strategic priority since the early years
of this Century as NATO intentions towards Russia became more clear with the
NATO eastward expansion, the 2004 US Color Revolutions in Ukraine and Georgia
and the placement of hostile US missile defense installations on Russia’s
perimeter.
The increasing strategic cooperation with China in
development of Russia’s Arctic region brings new possibilities to undercut NATO
economic sanctions imposed on Russia in 2014.
A good part of those sanctions targeted five Russian
energy companies exploring the Russian Arctic shelf for oil and gas. Those were
Gazprom, Gazprom Neft, Sourgoutneftegaz, Lukoil and Rosneft.
The Western sanctions slowed economic development of
Russia’s Arctic dramatically as Western joint venture partners such as Rex
Tillerson’s ExxonMobil were forced in September 2014 by the US Treasury
sanctions unit to withdraw from major joint ventures with Russian oil company,
Rosneft to develop the estimated vast energy resources of the Russian Arctic.
Before US sanctions, ExxonMobil CEO Tillerson had signed a joint $500 billion
Arctic energy development agreement with Russia’s state-owned Rosneft.
With China’s growing interest in cooperation with
Russia in development of the infrastructure of the Russian Arctic territorial
waters, Russia has a significant alternative to the Western oil companies to
share considerable oil and gas development costs in the Arctic. China’s large
state-owned China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) has been in
negotiations with Russian Rosneft for joint exploration of the offshore regions
in the Russian Arctic of the Barents and Pechora Seas’ shelves.
In November 2014, just as US sanctions cut ExxonMobil
participation, Russia’s Gazprom discussed joint development on the Russian
Arctic shelf with China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOP).
Now the upcoming meeting between Chinese and Russian
industry and government participants will significantly advance Sino-Russian
economic cooperation in the Russian Arctic. In late 2015 during President
Vladimir Putin’s visit to China, the large Chinese state conglomerate, Poly
Technologies agreed to be the main partner in financing, planning and
construction of 712 kilometers of new railroad and modernization of 449
kilometers of railroad that already exists. Since 2012 the Chinese state-owned
China Civil Engineering Construction Company had been involved in construction
of the other sections of what is known as the Belkomur rail link.
Belkomur Rail Link strategic
This 1161 kilometer $15 billion Belkomur rail line,
one of the largest infrastructure investments for northwest Russia, will pass
from the White Sea to the Urals through Komi, and will connect the mining and
industrial areas in Perm in the South-Urals to the port of Arkhangelsk via
Syktyvkar in the Russian Komi Republic, enabling a much shorter connection
between the Urals and the North-West of Russia, creating a major new route for
trans-Siberian cargo. The transportation distance from the Urals to the
North-West of Russia will be reduced by 800 km and costs by 40% less. The total
cargo traffic of Belkomur is estimated to run at 24 million tons per year.
Principal cargoes will be coal, bauxites, alumina and potassium chloride.
The Komi Republic holds vast resources of coal in the
Pechora coal basin, oil and natural gas in Timan-Pechora oil and gas province,
bauxite, gold, diamonds, titanium, sulfur. Almost two-thirds of the area is
rich forest land and reindeer husbandry is a major agricultural sector.
The Russian decision to open up more comprehensive
development jointly to Chinese companies in the resource-rich Russian North is
a direct consequence of the foolish US and EU sanctions since 2014.
Archangelsk Deep Water Port
The Belkomur rail line is integrally linked to
building of a new deep-water port at Archangelsk. Here, the Chinese are also
involved in a critical way. Poly International Holding Co., a major Chinese
state-owned enterprise active in international trade and coal-mining, iron ore
and crude oil exploration investment, together with Russia’s Arctic Transport
and Industrial Centre Arkhangelsk, signed an Agreement of Intent in October,
2016 for construction of a new deep-water port 55 kilometers north of the City
of Arkhangelsk. It will have an annual capacity of up to 45 million tons
and will be able to handle ships with a deadweight to 100,000 tons.
The new rail link coupled with the new Russian deep
water port will enable economic infrastructure linking Archangelsk, Komi
Republic, Sverdlovsk and Perm regions. Perm, near the Ural Mountains on the
Kama River, one of Russia’s deepest rivers, is a major junction on the
Trans-Siberian Railway with lines to Central Russia, northern Urals, and the
far east of Russia. Perm has two big railway stations – historical Perm-I and
modern Perm-II. The Kama River is an important link in the unifyinga key part
of the deep-water system of Russia, connecting with European waterways. From
the Kama river area it is possible to ship cargo to sea ports of the White,
Baltic, Azov, Black, and Caspian seas without reloading.
On March 14, a Chinese delegation from Poly
International was also in Mormansk, a port city on the Kola Bay, an inlet of
the Barents Sea, where they reportedly plan to invest $300 million in enlarging
the port for a coal shipping terminal. A new railway line a railway line is
under construction along the western shore of the Kola Bay that will connect
the coal terminal with the Russian national rail grid.
Now with completion of the Sino-Russian railway and
port links, major new economic gains for the entire vast resources-rich part of
northern Russia will open. The Eurasian land mass, despite, or actually because
of, the foolish Western economic sanctions, is becoming one of the most
beautiful economicn development areas of our poor planet. It is a model the
warring West might consider as alternative to their many wars.
F. William Engdahl is strategic risk consultant and
lecturer, he holds a degree in politics from Princeton University
and is a best-selling author on oil and geopolitics, exclusively for the
online magazine “New Eastern Outlook.”
http://journal-neo.org/2017/03/21/strategic-china-russia-arctic-cooperation/
http://journal-neo.org/2017/03/21/strategic-china-russia-arctic-cooperation/
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