China is going on a spending spree. They are one of the few countries in the world with that luxury, and the only one large enough to make a real difference in the world economy. Thankfully for us, China is spending on things which could have a double benefit for the West if we seize the opportunity.
China’s new investments are focused on oil; $41 billion this week alone to Brazil, Russia, and Venezuela to support their state oil companies. While I am usually happy with the fact that little investment is happening, and that a massive spike in prices is likely when the world economy starts growing again, China’s investment could be doubly good news for the West. If it is China instead of us that is investing to squeeze the last drops out of a soon to be outdated energy infrastructure, so be it. It will help to cushion the blow for everyone when economic activity picks up, and commodity prices rise again. The entire world will benefit from China’s investment through greater available supply. What the West (here I’m thinking of Japan, the US, and the EU separately) needs to do, is commit to spend as much on renewable energy as China spends on investing in fossil fuel energy. China will blunt the rise in oil price, at the same time as the West will have a lesser reliance on it. China will own stakes in increasingly irrelevant assets, and the West will own the technology of the future.
A couple final points. First, will Chinese investment be more secure than that of Western oil companies in places like Russia and Venezuela? Sure their leaders are more or less on the same page now, but how will populist leaders respond if they start to see an increasing share of their national wealth transferred to China? I can see opinions shifting very quickly especially once oil is back above $100 a barrel.
Second, what sort of labour, environmental, and management practices come along with increasing shares of Chinese ownership. This might not be a big deal in place like Russia and Venezuela where the government’s dictates are generally followed, but what about Brazil? Could there be positive feedback of processes to China. Yet another unknown in a world increasingly connected with China.
Friday, February 20, 2009
Riposte!
Labels:
China,
Clean Energy,
European Union,
Fossil Fuels,
Global Economy,
News,
United States
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