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China to invest $20 bn in struggling Venezuela: Maduro
by Staff Writers
Caracas (AFP) Jan 7, 2015


China and Venezuela to step up co-operation: Xi, Maduro
Beijing (AFP) Jan 7, 2015 - China and Venezuela will step up co-operation this year, Presidents Xi Jinping and Nicolas Maduro said in Beijing Wednesday as falling oil prices threaten the Latin American nation's economy.

Maduro was widely expected to ask for a new cash injection to shore up oil-rich Venezuela's finances during his visit as elections loom and a faltering economy could hurt his left-wing party's chances.

"We have very good news to share about the cooperation that will increase this year," Maduro said at a meeting with his host.

"It will be strengthened on the basis of the successful formula that we've built," he said, without giving details.

There were signs that Xi was willing throw a lifeline to what he called an "old and good friend of the Chinese people".

"Going forward we will deepen cooperation in all spheres," he said.

Foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei told reporters at a regular briefing: "During President Maduro's visit we will work with them to promote our strategic cooperation, including with regards to finance.

"Due to falling oil prices Venezuela is facing some difficulties in its domestic economy."

Venezuela's economy has sunk into recession in recent weeks due to the plummeting price of oil, which the country relies on for 96 percent of its foreign currency.

Maduro is in the Chinese capital to attend a two-day forum aimed at bolstering China's relations with Latin American and Caribbean countries, some of which officially recognise rival Taipei, viewed by Beijing as part of its territory.

China is looking to increase its diplomatic heft in the region, while Caracas and Washington have been at loggerheads since the days of Maduro's predecessor Hugo Chavez.

Welcoming Maduro, Xi told him: "When I visited Venezuela I felt deeply the love and esteem, as well as the boundless memories, of the Venezuelan people for President Chavez, and that they continue to hold high the Venezuelan revolutionary system, making great efforts to build a glorious homeland."

But the extent of any new deal remained unclear, with officials saying that no new agreements had been signed.

- Billions borrowed -

Maduro, who announced his "very important tour" in a national address Sunday after admitting Venezuela was in recession, made a stopover in fellow oil giant Russia on Monday before arriving Tuesday in China, his country's largest investor and second-largest oil customer.

China has been a key ally of Venezuela since Chavez came to power in 1999 and imports an average of 640,000 barrels of Venezuelan oil a day, much of that paying off borrowing.

China has extended $42 billion in long-term loans to Venezuela, $24 billion of which has been paid out so far, according to Venezuelan officials.

The South American country is estimated to have the largest oil reserves in the world but depends largely on imports for basic goods, including food and medicine.

Maduro's government wants Beijing to increase its oil purchases to one million barrels a day in the coming years and expand bilateral trade, which reached $20 billion in 2012.

Experts say the relationship between China and many Latin American states serves each other's needs, with China hungry for natural resources and South America looking to offset the long-running geopolitical dominance of the United States.

During a trip last year, Xi said trade between China and Latin America should reach $500 billion a year within the next decade, with proposed direct investment hitting $250 billion.

China has agreed to more than $20 billion in investments in economically struggling Venezuela, the South American nation's president Nicolas Maduro said Wednesday during a summit meeting in Beijing.

Maduro arrived on Tuesday in Beijing, where he has been meeting China's President Xi Jinping, at a critical time for Venezuela, which is in the throes of financial crisis from falling oil prices.

"We scooped up more than $20 billion in investment," Maduro told Venezuela's official AVN news agency.

He did not say whether new loans from China were included in that figure, or whether it included previously announced investment deals.

Xi said that China, the world's second-biggest economy which has been bolstering its diplomatic and economic reach in South America -- had agreed to "strengthened cooperation."

The sweeping investment deal covers a wide range of areas including technology, housing and urban planning, AVN said.

The meeting between the two leaders is their third, after talks in Beijing in September 2013 and another in Caracas last July.

China is Venezuela's largest investor and the second-largest purchaser of its oil.

Caracas last week announced that it has entered recession, a heavy blow for an already beleaguered economy where annual inflation tops more than 60 percent.

Plummeting global oil prices have caused additional distress for Venezuela, a member of OPEC that relies heavily on its oil revenue to keep its lumbering command economy afloat.

Oil has lost more than half its value since June 2014 owing to a glut in global supply and slowing growth in major world economies that has hurt demand.

Analysts have warned that socialist Venezuela is on the brink of a debt default, struggling to pay its bills while maintaining its lavish subsidies, oil discounts to allies and rigid system of foreign exchange controls.

Oil accounts for 96 percent of Venezuela's GDP, and the South American country is estimated to have the largest oil reserves in the world, but depends largely on imports for basic goods, including food and medicine.

China has been a key ally of Venezuela since Maduro's predecessor Hugo Chavez came to power in 1999.

Beijing has extended $42 billion in long-term loans to Venezuela, $24 billion of which has been paid out so far, according to Venezuelan officials.

Maduro's government wants Beijing to increase its oil purchases from 640,000 barrels to one million barrels a day in the coming years and expand bilateral trade, which reached $20 billion in 2012.

China, eyeing up what has traditionally been Washington's backyard, also reached a deal this week to lend $7.5 billion to Venezuela's neighbor Ecuador, whose economy also has been hammered by falling oil prices.

That loan was reached by Ecuador's President Rafael Correa, who, like Maduro, is in the Chinese capital to attend a two-day forum aimed at strengthening China's role in South America.

That gathering, the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States, gets under way on Thursday.


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