China’s overseas metals and mining investment to hit record in 2023, says report

The Basamuk processing plant, part of Metallurgical Corp. of China’s majority-owned Ramu nickel-nobalt mine in Papua New Guinea, where Cobalt27 holds a cobalt stream on the project. Credit: Highlands Pacific.The Basamuk processing plant, part of Metallurgical Corp. of China’s majority-owned Ramu nickel-nobalt mine in Papua New Guinea, where Cobalt27 holds a cobalt stream on the project. Credit: Highlands Pacific

New research data shows that China’s metals and mining investments overseas are on track to hit record levels this year, as the country locks in its position as the dominant force in the critical minerals supply chain.

According to a report published by the Green Finance & Development Centre at Fudan University in Shanghai and reviewed by the Financial Times, Chinese investments and new contracts in the metals and mining sector topped US$10 billion ($13.2 billion) during the first half of 2023, representing 131% of year-on-year growth.

The figure is also higher than the full-year total for 2022, and at the current pace of investment, it could well eclipse the previous record of US$17 billion set in 2018, the report finds.

The Fudan report is designed to explore China’s investment in the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), an extensive set of infrastructure projects launched by the Chinese government in 2013 that seeks to connect China with Europe, Asia and the rest of the world.

It reflects President Xi Jinping’s strategy of fortifying China’s sphere of influence by offering countries an alternative to Western-led financing for infrastructure projects like roads, railways, bridges, ports and airports.

Mineral resources, especially those relevant to the energy transition, play a key part in this ambitious project. China is currently the world’s biggest producer of electric vehicles, batteries, solar panels and wind turbines.

Battery metals led by lithium are of particular interest to Chinese investors, the report finds. Huayou Cobalt and battery giant CATL have both been key investors throughout the year. Uranium, steel, copper and iron have also seen large investments.

According to the Fudan University data, in the first half of 2023, investments as a share of BRI engagement reached a record 61%, marking the first six-month period when construction contracts accounted for less than half the value of new BRI financing.

“Major growth countries of Chinese engagement were Bolivia, Namibia, Eritrea, and Tanzania,” the report states. Additionally, 26 countries including Turkey, Poland and Kenya saw a 100% drop in BRI engagement.

“Overall, China’s BRI engagement seems to become more strategic, in regard to both economic and industrial aspects: more bankable projects relevant for China’s and the host countries’ industrial development,” said Christoph Nedopil, director of the centre at Fudan University.

In total, the BRI drew in 148 countries and surpassed $1 trillion (7.1 trillion yuan) in cumulative investments, the report calculates.

China’s energy sector saw the majority of BRI investment, said the report, which also tracked energy investment in the Asian superpower over the past six months. Around 41% of energy engagement went into solar and wind, plus an additional 14% into hydropower.

At the moment, China is on track to double its utility-scale solar and wind power capacity between now and the end of the decade, it says.

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