This one, near Cambodia’s southern coast, is about 360 feet tall. It is the fourth-largest by power output in the country.
Sri Lanka borrowed more than $1 billion from China for this strategic deepwater port, but couldn’t repay the money. The port is now controlled by China, which is leasing it for the next 99 years.
Port
Port of Hambantota, Sri Lanka
South Africa turned to China for $1.5 billion for a coal-fired power plant. It is one of at least 63 such plants financed by China around the world, which collectively pollute more than Spain.
Power
plant
Medupi Power Station, South Africa
Zambia tapped China for $94 million to build a soccer stadium of over 50,000 seats. These are among the more than 600 projects around the world that China has financed to win new friends and develop new markets.
China envisions a vast global network of trade, investment and infrastructure that will reshape financial and geopolitical ties — and bring the rest of the world closer to Beijing.
It is a modern-day version of the Marshall Plan, America’s reconstruction effort after World War II, which created a foundation for enduring military and diplomatic alliances. China’s strategy is bolder, more expensive and far riskier.
Its money doesn’t necessarily come with the usual rules. And the cost, for China and its borrowers alike, can sometimes be too high.
We examined nearly 600 projects that China helped finance in the last decade, through billions of dollars in grants, loans and investments. Taken together, they show the scope and motivation of China’s strategy.
41 pipelines and other oil and gas infrastructure help China secure valuable resources.
Oil and gas infrastructure
203 bridges, roads and railways create new ways for China to move its goods around the world.
Bridges, roads and railways
199 power plants — for nuclear, natural gas, coal and renewables — give China new markets for its construction and equipment companies.
Power plants
We found 112 countries where China has financed projects. While most fall under its infrastructure plan known as the Belt and Road Initiative, Beijing has pushed beyond those boundaries.
Belt and Road countries
are shaded red.
Europe
Asia
North
America
China
Africa
South
America
Australia
After years of honing its construction skills at home, China is now deploying them abroad, including a series of hydroelectric dams.
Some of the dams that China has helped finance or build around the world.
In terms of power output, many of them approach or exceed the size of the Hoover Dam:
Each circle is
a single power project
Colombia
2,400 MW
Under construction
Angola
2,171 MW
Under const.
Nigeria
3,050 MW
Planned
Argentina
1,740MW
Under const.
Laos
1,272 MW
Under const.
Pakistan
1,124 MW
Under const.
Hoover Dam
2,080 megawatts
Ecuador
1,500 MW
Sudan
1,250 MW
Pakistan
969 MW
Sources: The Construction Intelligence Center and China’s Global Energy Finance project at Boston University
Geopolitical Goals
China needs friends. And literal bridges can help build figurative ones.
Large ports in Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Malaysia — three countries along a major oil and commerce route from the Mideast and Africa — could someday double as naval logistics hubs.
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