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Home >  Short Publications >  Concerns with Respect to China's Energy Policy
Concerns with Respect to China's Energy Policy
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By Dan Blumenthal
Posted: Tuesday, July 22, 2008
BOOK CHAPTER
Publication Date: July 1, 2008

While China relies mostly on the open market to meet its energy needs, its sometimes mercantilist tendencies and relations with unsavory oil-rich regimes have led to increased tensions with Japan, India, and the United States. Beijing's deep-seated suspicion of the United States, along with the belief that Washington controls the world oil market, have led China to develop power projection capabilities that threaten Asian neighbors as well as U.S. dominance of the seas, the mainstay of Pacific security for the last 60 years. While U.S.-Chinese cooperative energy initiatives provide reason for reserved optimism, a profound strategic reorientation in Beijing will be necessary to avoid future great power competition.

Download file Click here to view text of the full chapter as an Adobe Acrobat PDF.

 
Resident Fellow
 Dan Blumenthal
 
The tremendous increase in China's appetite for energy, and the response to this by regional powers, is changing the dynamics of international politics. Over the past two decades, the growth in China's demand for natural resources has been dramatic. Twenty years ago China was East Asia's largest oil exporter; now it is the world's second largest oil importer. According to various estimates, in the last two years the increase in China's energy demand has made up anywhere from 20-40 percent of worldwide growth. China's expanding portion of the worldwide demand for energy and other natural resources helps to explain China's booming presence on the international stage. China's share of worldwide aluminum, nickel, and iron ore consumption, which are now each approximately 20 percent, doubled from 1990 to 2000 and will probably double again by the decade's end.[1]

As China scours the globe for energy resources, it has become a new player in some important regions. It receives between 40 and 45 percent of its energy imports from the Middle East, 11 percent from Iran alone. More than 30 percent of its oil now comes from Africa. President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao have worked hard to secure and protect China's far-flung investments. Through high-level diplomacy, economic aid, and military relations, Chinese leaders have increased Beijing's influence in oil-producing states. As a latecomer to the world energy consumption game, Beijing has entered markets forbidden to Americans. Some of these relationships have strengthened the hand of dangerous regimes looking for an alternative to the United States: for example, China's presence in Latin American resource markets has allowed Hugo Chavez to boast that no longer will the United States be the dominant consumer of Venezuelan oil; now, "[Venezuela is] free and place[s] this oil at the disposal of the great Chinese fatherland."[2] . . .

Download file Click here to view text of the chapter as an Adobe Acrobat PDF.

Dan Blumenthal is a resident fellow at AEI.

Notes

1. For statistics on demand growth see, for example, David Zweig and Bi Jianhui, "China's Global Hunt for Energy," Foreign Affairs 84, no. 5 (2005): 25-38.
2. Ibid.

Source Notes:   This chapter appears in China's Energy Strategy: The Impact on Beijing's Maritime Policies, edited by Gabriel B. Collins, Andrew S. Erickson, Lyle J. Goldstein, and William S. Murray and published by the Naval Institute Press (2008).


Also by Dan Blumenthal
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In the latest edition of Latin American Outlook, Roger F. Noriega says that Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has made impressive strides, but he needs to take on lingering economic and political reforms.


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