After meeting President Xi Jinping at Elysee Palace on Monday, French President Emmanuel Macron welcomed Beijing’s commitments to “refrain from selling any weapons or aid” to Russia and to “strictly control” sales of products and technologies that could be used for both civilian and military purposes.
Meanwhile, the commerce ministry’s director of Eurasian affairs, Liu Xuesong, said on Monday that China would “work along with Russia” to tap new sectors for bilateral trade, including in services, the digital economy, and green industry and low-carbonisation development.
A bilateral trade expo will be held from May 16-21 in the northeastern city of Harbin, with a focus on industrials and manufacturing, agriculture, and logistics collaborations.
Both countries “have a solid development on China-Russia crude oil pipelines, the Power of Siberia, the Blagoveshchensk-Heihe Bridge and the Tongjiang-Nizhneleninskoye railway bridge”, Liu said at a press conference.
Their bilateral trade grew by 5.2 per cent to US$56.68 billion in the first quarter of this year, driven by robust cooperation on trade in services and cross-border e-commerce.
“Even if Beijing curtails dual-use exports to avoid further sanctions, its strategic interest in Russia remaining a stable partner will persist,” Nathaniel Sher, a senior research analyst at Carnegie China, wrote in an article posted to the think tank’s website on May 6.
Jiang Jiang, a researcher at the Xinhua Institute think tank, said that China “has the right to independently develop diplomatic and trade relations” with other countries that are not subject to interference by a third party.
“Both China and Europe support a political solution to the Ukraine crisis,” he added.
In December, Chinese ambassador to Russia Zhang Hanhui told Russian media that the Power of Siberia 2 was crucial for deepening energy cooperation between China and Russia.
The two sides are believed to still be engaged in talks over the project, which could bring as much as 50 billion cubic metres of gas to China annually.
“Both sides were actively discussing a range of issues, including project technology, business, and cooperation models,” Jiang added.
While Beijing and Moscow are still negotiating specific details of the pipeline, Kazakhstan’s envoy to Russia, Dauren Abayev, said at the weekend that Russia was planning to send about 35 billion cubic metres of natural gas per year to China via Kazakhstan, and that his country wanted “to make the most” of transit potentials.
Last year, Kazakhstan and Russia set up the route for a future gas pipeline to support shipments between the two countries and to China.
“This year, China and Russia mark their 75th year of diplomatic relations,” China’s vice-foreign minister, Sun Weidong, told Russian ambassador to China Igor Morgulov on Monday. “We aim to strengthen our interactions in all aspects under the framework of promoting Chinese and Russian cultures.”
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in late April that he pressed China over its support for Russia’s military-industrial base while meeting with Xi and foreign minister Wang Yi in Beijing.