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WSWS : News
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China and India manoeuvre to secure energy supplies
By Parwini Zora and Niall Green
31 January 2006
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We look on China not as a strategic competitor but as
a strategic partner, said the Indian Petroleum Minister
Mani Shankar Aiyar during his January 10-13 visit to Beijing.
While in China, Aiyer, who was accompanied by representatives
of major Indian petroleum firms, signed five memoranda on energy
cooperation with the Chinese National Development and Reform Commission.
And on January 12, the Indian delegation met with top officials
from Chinas main energy companies, including the China National
Petroleum Corporation (CNPC), China Petrochemical Corporation,
and China National Offshore Oil Corporation.
In his public appearances while in China, Aiyar repeatedly
argued that China and India, both of which have a burgeoning need
for oil and natural gas imports, have a common interest in seeking
to lessen competition for energy supplies and in working together
to discover and develop new energy supplies.
Aiyer observed that China and India are in a similar position
in the energy sectorboth have substantial coal resources
but are highly dependent on imported oil and gasand urged
co-operation between them in bidding for oil resources in third
countries.
India is currently pursuing energy production and exploration
projects in more than 50 countries, often in competition with
Beijing.
On several occasions in the past two years India has lost significant
bids to China, including in Angola, Kazakhstan, Ecuador and Burma.
Chinese oil firms, meanwhile, are reputed to have made several
deals in which they overpaid for energy assets. Last August, CNPC
paid $4.18 billion to acquire Canadian oil company PetroKazakhstan.
Indias Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC) had bid $3.9
billion.
The Chinese have learned, said Aiyer, that
if we constantly compete, they [often] have to pay more than a
billion dollars over [the] ideal price. As it is, the assets they
acquire are often of uncertain value in risky countries.
Aiyar also warned that competition for energy resources, if
not checked, could enflame relations between Asias two rising
powers. It is clear to me, said Aiyar, that
any imitation of the Great Game between India and
China is a danger to peace. We cannot endanger each others
security in our quest for energy security.
Aiyars call for cooperation between India and China in
the energy field was seconded by the director of the China Energy
Strategy Centre, a government think-tank. Unbridled competition
between India and China for oil and natural gas will be
harmful to all concerned, said Xia Yisehn, and so
the necessity of co-operating to share risks and reduce costs
in a multilateral way is gaining currency here
State-owned Chinese and Indian energy companies have already
launched several joint exploration ventures, including in Russia,
Iran and Sudan, with China generally taking the larger stake.
In December, a further step toward Sino-Indian energy cooperation
was taken when Chinas CNPC and Indias ONGC, respectively
their countries largest state-owned oil companies, mounted a successful
$573 million joint bid to acquire Petro-Canadas 37 percent
stake in the al-Furat oil and gas fields in Syria.
The India-Chinese energy talks complement Indias efforts
to develop an Asian oil and gas grid. The grid, which is intended
to ensure reliable delivery networks and energy security
for Asia, was formally inaugurated at a conference held in New
Delhi last November that brought together ministerial representatives
of the North and Central Asian energy producing countries, including
Russia, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan, and their counterparts
from the principal Asian consumer nationsChina, Japan, South
Korea and India.
The era when our [energy] production was controlled by
others is now behind us, the era when the bulk of consumers lived
in other continents is also over, Aiyar told the November
conference.
The thawing of Sino-Indian relations and the
role of the US
The current co-operation on energy matters between China and
India arises out of a recent thawing of relations between the
two countries. (During the latter decades of the Cold War, China
was allied with the US and Pakistan, while India enjoyed close
military, geopolitical and economic relations with the USSR.)
Shortly after the 2003 US invasion of Iraq, Indias National
Democratic Alliance government, led by the strongly pro-US Hindu
supremacist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), launched a concerted
drive to repair relations with China. The first-ever Sino-Indian
Strategic Dialogue was held in January 2005 to deal with common
issues regarding globalization, energy security and the
democratization of international relations.
In April 2005, the Chinese premier Wen Jaibao visited India
and the two countries announced a strategic partnership
to make advances in economic cooperation and trade issues. This
also agreed to strive for closer political initiatives and
to engage in joint exploration for oil and gas in other countries.
The same month the first China-India Business Cooperation Conference
was held to expand the current bilateral trade of $US14 billion
per year. (China is already Indias second-largest trading
partner.)
To further the cooperation between the two countries, their
governments recently designated 2006 as India-China friendship
year. Just days before Aiyars visit to China, Indian
foreign secretary Shyam Saran was in Beijing to conduct the second
round of strategic dialogue after the upgrading of bilateral ties
to a strategic and cooperative level.
The Indian foreign secretary focussed his discussions on gaining
Chinese backing for Indias bid for a permanent seat on the
United Nations Security Council and the resolution of the longstanding
border dispute. India is also taking steps to join the Chinese
and Russian-led Shanghai Cooperation Organization, through which
Moscow and Beijing are seeking to counter US influence in Asia,
especially in Central Asia.
Behind these moves lies the common concern of the Indian and
Chinese regimes over the Bush administrations military interventions
in Iraq and Afghanistan and Washingtons attempt to gain
a strategic stranglehold over the oil-rich regions of the Middle
East and Central Asia. Recent US statements threatening Iran and
Syria have only further fuelled these concerns.
While pursuing closer ties with China, Indias United
Progressive Alliance has also sought to enter into a strategic
partnership with the US, including accepting a US offer
of assistance in helping India to become a great power.
The Indian elite is acutely aware of the fact that Washington
has identified India as a potential counter-weight to China, and
is hoping to benefit from the readiness of the US to provide it
with support. It calculates, however, that it can do so, without
becoming dependent on or subordinate to the US.
While in Beijing Indias foreign secretary Shayam Saran
made direct reference to the geopolitical manoeuvring, declaring
that China and India are too big to contain each other or
be contained by any other country and that the perception
that the two countries might be seeking the containment of each
other is outdated. India would be happy to work closely
with China towards the progressive realisation of an East Asian
Community and, eventually, a larger Asian Economic Community.
The US is not prepared, however, to sit idly by while China
and India seek to develop a modus vivendi for cooperation
in the energy sector.
The Bush administration, which is already exerting strong pressure
on India to abandon plans to jointly develop a pipeline with Pakistan
to bring Iranian natural gas to South Asia, sent a demarche to
New Delhi this month demanding that it reconsider
ONCGs Syrian investment. It justified this action on the
grounds the Indias purchase of the oil and gas property
will undermine the United Nationsread US and European
Unionefforts to isolate the Syrian regime.
The Hindu quotes a senior Indian official as expressing
outrage over the US move: Today, it is Iran and Syria, tomorrow
it may be Sudan or Myanmar or Venezuela or someplace else. At
stake is not just our energy security but also our right to take
decisions by ourselves.
* * *
In a cabinet shuffle last weekend, Shankar Aiyar was replaced
as Petroleum Minister and given the portfolio of Youth Affairs
and Sports. The Indian press is all but unanimous in terming this
a demotion and linking it to Aiyars outspoken advocacy of
the Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline. The WSWS will comment on
this development shortly.
See Also:
Chinas growing trade with Africa
indicative of Sino-Western energy conflicts
[24 January 2006]
US woos India with
support in becoming a world power
[22 July 2005]
India joins the scramble
for oil
[12 April 2005]
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