http://www.timesofoman.com/featuredetail.asp?fid=399


China showers gifts on resources-rich Timor  Reuters



14 September 2009 14:49:11 Oman Time  

DILI: Dili's gleaming new Presidential Palace and Foreign Ministry, gifts from 
China, stand in stark contrast to nearby burnt-out buildings and are symbols of 
how the energy-hungry superpower is growing closer to tiny, oil-rich East 
Timor. 

In the 10 years since the independence vote that led to a split from Indonesia, 
China has spent more than $53 million in aid to East Timor, also known as Timor 
Leste. While that is just a fraction of the $760 million in Australian 
government aid, China has raised its profile in dusty Dili in several other 
ways. 

It is building big and showing generosity such as its donation of 8,000 tones 
of rice during a recent food crisis. Noticeable projects such as a new Ministry 
of Defence building, houses for soldiers and schools are underway as are 
scholarships and training programmes for civil servants. 

In all, China is sending a very public message that it is serious about 
strengthening bilateral ties with East Timor, which many analysts put down to 
its desire to diversify strategic energy interests. 

Loro Horta, who is a China expert at Singapore's Nanyang Technological 
University and is the son of East Timor's President Jose Ramos-Horta, said that 
the aid is linked to China's desire for energy and infrastructure contracts. 

"The Chinese are desperate for oil, every single drop for them counts and they 
are definitely looking to Timor as potential to meet that need," he told 
Reuters in a phone interview, adding that he estimated the total value of 
investments by Chinese companies in East Timor to be less than $400 million. 

East Timor is one of Asia's poorest and least developed countries, but it has 
enormous oil and gas reserves. The Bayu Undan gas field is expected to reap 
$12-15 billion by 2023, the country's Natural Resources Minister, Alfredo 
Pires, told Reuters in an interview. 

Bayu Undan is already the subject of a deal between Australia and East Timor 
but other, untapped reserves still needs development partners. 

Another oil field, Kitan, has an estimated 40 million barrels of recoverable 
light oil, Pires said, and the Greater Sunrise field contains around 300 
million barrels of condensate and 9.5 trillion cubic feet of gas, according to 
the United Nations. 

Lucrative opportunities also exist in the minerals sector, including copper, 
gold, silver and marble, and for big-ticket infrastructure projects as East 
Timor tries to reverse years of under-investment. 

Pires said Spain, China and Australia are all keen on a piece of the Timor 
resources pie, while East Timor expert Damien Kingsbury from Deakin University 
said the United States and the United Kingdom are also interested. 

China and East Timor's links date back centuries. Hakka Chinese traders sailed 
there more than 500 years ago looking for sandalwood, rosewood and mahogany. 
Many stayed on, forming an overseas Chinese community as in many other parts of 
Asia. 

Today, Dili's main street is lined with buildings, some of which display 
Chinese script; families can be seen praying at a Confucian temple in downtown 
Dili, while Chinese traders run appliance stores on busy streets. 

Chinese labourers are already at work on one of two heavy oil power plants 
which are under construction after Dili in 2008 awarded the Chinese Nuclear 
Industry 22nd Construction Company a $360 million contract to build the power 
plants and a national power grid. East Timor also paid $28 million for two 
petroleum vessels from China. 

Loro Horta said China is also angling for big ticket infrastructure contracts 
such as a pipeline that East Timor wants built from its Greater Sunrise oil 
field to a proposed processing plant on land. He said Chinese oil giant 
PetroChina has already done studies and is keen to drill. 

"In 2004, PetroChina did a seismic study and said they didn't find much. But 
then, two years ago, I heard from [former Prime Minister Alkatiri and from my 
father the President, that they were willing to drill but they want exclusivity 
rights," he said. 

Yang Donghui, a spokesman for the Chinese ambassador in Dili, said that the 
first phase of the seismic investigation was completed as an aid project, but 
that a proposed second phase investigation became the subject of commercial 
talks between the East Timor government and PetroChina. 

"Maybe the company asked [for some rights, if they do the investigation. We 
think it is normal and just a commercial issue, no company can put so much 
money to do something and do not consider the result," said Yang Donghui. 

China's ambassador to East Timor, Fu Yuancong rejected speculation that China's 
interest in the fledgling nation is driven by a desire to gain an advantage 
when East Timor is handing out contracts to develop its billion-dollar oil and 
gas fields. 

"All this assistance from China to Timor Leste is full of sincerity and without 
any selfishness, unlike what the Western media has speculated. The Chinese 
government never bore any political strategy in Timor Leste," he said through a 
translator. He also said that his government was in energy talks with Dili. 

"The Timor Leste government always expresses its will to have co-operation with 
China in this field. After I took my position, the leaders of Timor Leste 
talked with me many times to say they would like to invite Chinese companies to 
have some oil exploration in future," he added. 

"The Timor Leste government should give [us a concrete project for 
co-operation." And as stability has slowly returned to Dili, Fu said his 
government has encouraged a new generation of Chinese entrepreneurs to move to 
East Timor. 

"The growing Chinese presence is part of their natural expansion into Southeast 
Asia and I think Timor is not really their priority," said Loro Horta, at 
Singapore's Nanyang Technological University. "But they are definitely keeping 
an eye on it. The Chinese are very patient people and they think very long 
term." 

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