Pipeline politics prominent at SCO summit

Pipeline politics prominent at SCO summit

Negotiations to build a new pipeline designed to transport annually 50 billion cubic meters of gas from Russia to China through Mongolia are expected to close soon after the three countries’ leaders met in Uzbekistan.

Chinese President Xi Jinping, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Mongolian President Ukhnaa Khurelsukh held a face-to-face meeting in Samarkand on the sideline of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) Summit.

The three leaders agreed to actively move forward on the Mongolian section of the China-Russia natural gas pipeline known as Power of Siberia 2.

Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak was quoted as saying by Russia’s TASS news agency on Thursday that the Power of Siberia 2 deal would close in the near future.

The progress was made on Thursday, the same day when Xi and Putin held a bilateral meeting to discuss economic partnership and geopolitical issues including Ukraine and Taiwan matters.

Xi, Putin and Mongolia’s President Ukhnaa Khurelsukh in stiff repose in Samarkand. Photo: Kremlin

Long-time energy partnership

In 1994, then-Chinese president Jiang Zemin and Russian president Boris Yeltsin signed to settle the last remaining land dispute between the two countries. They also signed an agreement to form an energy partnership between the two countries that same year.

More concrete discussions started in 2004 but neither side could agree on pricing issues over the following decade. 

China expected to receive Russian gas at around US$200 per thousand cubic meters, similar to the level it was paying Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan. But Russia wanted to sell at $350 per thousand cubic meters, the price it set for Europe.

After Russia invaded and occupied Crimea in March 2014, it was sanctioned by the West. Two months later, Russia’s Gazprom and the China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) signed a 30-year national gas supply contract worth a whopping $400 billion.

In 2015, the construction of Power of Siberia commenced. The pipeline started operations in December 2019 and is expected to be able to transport up to 38 billion cubic meters of gas annually from Russia to China by 2023.

In July this year, Mongolia’s Prime Minister Oyun-Erdene Luvsannamsrai said the feasibility study for the Power of Siberia 2 gas pipeline, which will connect Siberian gas fields to China via Mongolia, had been completed and that construction would begin in 2024. The pipeline is expected to go online in 2030.

Russia’s Novak told reporters on Thursday: “We expect that final agreements on the Power of Siberia 2 will be reached in the near future. It will involve about 50 billion cubic meters of gas annually.”

He said the current Power of Siberia pipeline’s supply would reach 20 billion cubic meters this year. Novak also said Russia and China had decided on the construction of a new route from Vladivostok to the north of China, which can transport 10 billion cubic meters of gas per year.

Cutting off Europe

Asked by reporters if the Power of Siberia 2 pipeline aims to replace Nord Stream 2 within Russia’s energy strategy, Novak said “yes.”

Russia is downgrading the Nord Stream 2 pipeline to Europe in its energy strategy. Photo: Agencies

TASS reported on Friday that Russian gas deliveries through Nord Stream, the main route for export of Russian gas to Europe, had been fully suspended while gas sent to Europe in transit through Ukraine remained at a previous volume of around 42.4 million cubic meters per day. 

Before it invaded Ukraine, Russia exported around 35 billion cubic meters of gas per year to Germany.

According to Chinese media, China is paying $360 per thousand cubic meters for Russia’s gas, compared with $320 per thousand cubic meters for gas from Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan.

Last month, the spot price of gas in Europe reached $3,300 per thousand cubic meters.

Ukraine and Taiwan issues

Prior to the Xi-Putin meeting, Li Zhanshu, chairman of the Chinese Communist Party’s National People’s Congress, paid a four-day visit ending September 10 to meet Putin in Vladivostok and top Russian lawmakers in Moscow.

In a meeting with Russian State Duma chairman Vyacheslav Volodin, Li pledged China’s “understanding and full support” for Russia’s military operations in Ukraine, according to footage released by the Kremlin.

But the Chinese state media reported neither this nor what Xi and Putin had discussed about the Ukraine situation on Thursday.

According to TASS, Putin said he highly appreciated “the balanced position of our Chinese friends in connection with the Ukrainian crisis.” He said the Russian side understood Beijing’s questions and concerns in this matter.

Putin was quoted by Xinhua news agency as saying that Russia is ready to work with China to consolidate and deepen bilateral and multilateral communication and coordination and expand cooperation in key areas such as the economy, trade and energy

He said both Russia and China are committed to promoting a fairer and more equitable international order, setting an example for international relations.

Chinese President Xi Jinping with his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin in Moscow in 2019. Photo: AFP / Alexander Zemlianichenko

Xi expressed his appreciation for Russia’s adherence to the “One China” principle, Xinhua reported. Xi stressed that Taiwan is a part of China and that Beijing strongly opposes “Taiwan independence” separatist activities and external interference in the Taiwan question.

Victor Ng Ming-tak, a former banker and an adjunct associate professor in Hong Kong, said Chinese leaders could not openly support Russia in the Ukraine crisis as such a move would expose China to Western sanctions.

Ng said what Beijing can do now to help Moscow is to buy more Russian energy and sell more manufactured goods in return. He said China still needs to rely on trade with the West.

According to China’s General Administration of Customs, Sino-Russian bilateral trade grew 35.8% to $146.9 billion last year from $107.8 billion in 2020. 

For the period, China’s exports to Russia rose 33.8% to $67.6 billion and imports from Russia increased 37.5% to $79.3 billion, with China mainly purchasing food and energy.

By comparison, China’s exports to the United States surged 27.5% to $576.1 billion and imports from the US rose 32.7% to $179.5 billion over the same period.  

Maxim Gennadievich Reshetnikov, Russia’s minister of economic development, said on September 7 that the Sino-Russia bilateral trade would reach $170 billion this year and $200 billion by 2024.

On September 6, Russia’s Gazprom said it had signed an agreement with China to start payments for gas supplies to China in yuan and rubles instead of US dollars.

Read: Power of Siberia 2 to divert Europe-bound gas to China

Follow Jeff Pao on Twitter at @jeffpao3