‘No political obstacles’ to grant China 50% stake in Russian oil and gas fields – Deputy PM

Reuters / China Daily

Reuters / China Daily

Russia may consider granting Chinese investors over 50 percent stakes in its strategic hydrocarbon fields, Russia’s Deputy Prime Minister Arkady Dvorkovich has said.

“If there is a request from China, we will seriously consider
it. And I see no political obstacles at the moment,”

Dvorkovich said Friday at the Krasnoyarsk Economic Forum, adding
that fields on the Arctic continental shelf are an exception.

Russia and China are on the verge of a major breakthrough in
terms of investment, not just trade, and are ready to deepen
their economic ties. A strategic partnership and a mutual
interest in new industries make China an obvious investor in
Russia, says the deputy prime minister.

“We have a strategic partnership with China and now decisions
are made much faster than before. In particular, we have a gas
contract; a second one will be signed soon. Now we know China
better: their motives and intentions are understood. There used
to be a psychological barrier. Now it doesn’t exist anymore. We
are interested in maximizing investments in new industries. China
is an obvious investor for us,”
Arkady Dvorkovich said at
the conference in Krasnoyarsk.

READ MORE: Russia and China seal historic $400bn
gas deal

In May 2014, Russian gas major Gazprom and China’s CNPC signed a
$400 billion contract to supply 38 billion cubic meters of gas
per year to China for 30 years via the Power of Siberia pipeline.

READ MORE: Putin, Xi Jinping sign mega gas deal on second gas
supply route

In November, Moscow and Beijing signed a memorandum on an
additional pipeline, the so-called Western route, which is to run
from gas fields in Western Siberia via the Altai gas pipeline.
These direct supplies are planned to start in 2019.

Chinese investors are interested in the Russian agriculture, the
processing of natural resources, and retail and logistics,
according to Dvorkovich who had also mentioned the Moscow-Kazan
high-speed railway project. China plans to build a $242 billion
high-speed rail link between Beijing and Moscow with a Moscow to
Kazan branch.

READ MORE: Moscow to Beijing in 2 days: China to build
$242bn high-speed railway

“We’re not just discussing, we are talking about absolutely
specific projects and concrete things with our partners,”

the deputy prime minister said.

The two countries are looking forward to boosting cooperation in various areas such as finance,
aviation and space along with improving trade and economic
cooperation.

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