GRAPHICS

China's Interests in African Resources

Dec 19, 2012 | 20:58 GMT

A Chinese construction worker with Ethiopian workers at the new African Union Buildings on November 17, 2010 in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
A Chinese construction worker with Ethiopian workers at the new African Union Buildings on November 17, 2010 in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

(Per-Anders Pettersson/Getty)

China's Interests in African Resources

State-run China National Gold Corp. plans to purchase a 74 percent stake in the African subsidiary of Barrick Gold Corp., the world's largest gold mining company. The deal would be worth about $2 billion, making it one of the largest Chinese investments in African mining to date. China has proposed or committed about $101 billion to commercial projects in Africa since 2010, some of which are under negotiation while others are currently under way. Together, construction and natural resource deals total approximately $90 billion, or about 90 percent of Chinese commercial activity in Africa since 2010. These figures could be even higher because of an additional $7.5 billion in unspecified commitments to South Africa and Zambia, likely intended for mining projects. Of the remaining $3 billion in Chinese commercial commitments to Africa, about $2.1 billion will be used on local manufacturing projects.

While China has proposed $750 million for agriculture and general development aid and about $50 million to support small- and medium-sized business development in addition to the aforementioned projects, it has been criticized for the extractive nature of its relationship with many African countries, as well as the poor quality of some of its construction work. However, since many African countries lack the indigenous engineering capability to construct these large-scale projects or the capital to undertake them, African governments with limited resources welcome Chinese investments enthusiastically. These foreign investment projects are also a boon for Beijing, since China needs African resources to sustain its domestic economy, and the projects in Africa provide a destination for excess Chinese labor.