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‘Small’ Belt, ‘Beautiful’ Road: China’s Cautious Return to Global Energy Finance

Antananarivo, Madagascar. Photo by Brent Ninaber via Unsplash

A new update to  China’s Global Energy Finance (CGEF) Database, managed by the Boston University Global Development Policy Center, estimates that from 2000-2023, China’s two development finance institutions (DFIs)—the China Development Bank (CDB) and the Export-Import Bank of China (CHEXIM)—provided 367 loans, totalling $209 billion to 118 public borrowers in 68 countries for energy projects around the world.

For the year 2023, the CGEF Database recorded three new energy-related loan commitments from CHEXIM, totalling $502 million, to three African government borrowers – Madagascar, Burkina Faso and Uganda – marking a cautious comeback after a one-year hiatus. Yet, the amount committed in 2023 is only 6 per cent of the average annual lending total amount ($9 billion) for 2000-2022.

The CGEF Database is an interactive data project that provides an estimate of lending commitments for global energy projects from CDB and CHEXIM. The commitments tracked are international sovereign loans, which means the recipient is a public entity, a public majority or a private entity with a sovereign guarantee. It is important to note that CGEF Database loan amounts are not equivalent to government debt, as the database tracks commitments and not disbursement, repayments or defaults.

new policy brief by Jiaqi LuDiego Morro, Shengheng Li and Thang Ha analyses the state of China’s global energy finance from 2000-2023.

Main findings: 
Source: China’s Global Energy Finance Database, Boston University Global Development Policy Center, 2024 and Projects, The World Bank Group.

Figure 2: Chinese Lending by Energy Source, 2000-2023

Source: China’s Global Energy Finance Database, Boston University Global Development Policy Center, 2024.
Source: China’s Global Energy Finance Database, Boston University Global Development Policy Center, 2024.

The next phase of China’s overseas energy finance will likely reveal the true extent of its commitment to renewable energy and sustainable development. While China’s move away from coal (and potentially all fossil fuels) demonstrates a remarkable change, the scope and scale of its future investments will ultimately determine its contribution to the global energy transition.

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