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China-Myanmar Cooperation: News & Discussions

You are right for coast areas that sea shipping is lower cost.
But for southwest part of China which is far from the sea, it will usually cost more to transport from east coast.
The pipeline can reduce much shipping distance and improve local economy
Also it helps to reduce dependence on Strait of Malacca.
If any war or privates, oil can still come into China.

Is the cost of transport via the pipeline competitive with the sea shipping? I'm asking because shipping via sea is generally much more economical than any other means. I read in a report recently that one of the alternate routes via Gwadar port, all the way up Pakistan, through Azad Kashmir to Xinjiang, costs substantially more than similar sea based shipping cost.
 
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we can clearly see that the strategy now is to avoid over dependence on sea shipping through Malaccas Strait.
this means new pipelines, railways, ports....everything just to diversify, which is crucial to energy security.
 
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China-Myanmar crude pipeline opens: Chinese state media
January 29, 2015 by Thiha


[BEIJING] A pipeline pumping oil from Myanmar to China started a trial operation on Wednesday, Chinese state media reported, Beijing’s latest step to diversify energy imports into the world’s second-largest economy.

The 771 kilometre (478 mile) pipeline will connect the world’s top crude buyer with a deep-water port in western Myanmar, reducing China’s dependence on oil transported through the Straits of Malacca.

Myanmar Vice President U Nyan Tun and Liao Yongyuan, general manager of Chinese energy giant CNPC, attended the opening ceremony, China’s Xinhua news agency reported from Yangon.

CNPC and Myanmar’s state-run Oil and Gas Enterprise (MOGE), completed the pipeline in late May last year after launching the project in June 2010, Xinhua said.

CNPC owns 50.9 per cent of the project and MOGE the rest, according to the report.

Beijing was a key backer of Myanmar’s military junta while it was under Western sanctions, but Thein Sein has increased ties with other countries since launching political reforms in 2011.

Myanmar is still a key part of China’s bid to diversify its energy imports, however, and reduce its reliance on oil transported through the piracy hub of the Straits of Malacca.

Another pipeline pumping natural gas more than 2,500 kilometres from western Myanmar to southwest China went fully operational in 2013.

China also signed agreements worth $7.8 billion with Myanmar, state media reported in November, including deals to build power plants fuelled by natural gas.

The new oil pipeline will be able to transmit 22 million tonnes of crude a year from Myanmar’s Made Island Port, which is due to be officially opened on Friday, Xinhua said.

This one...?

Is this the reason for Rohingya's misfortune?
@Alongphaya @Aung Zaya

No.... bro.. the manners like trying to split from Myanmar and attack to native people will do lead to misfortune.. Now they are kept in camps and even have a better life than natives with the help of UNHCR...
 
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Updated: January 30, 2015 17:37 IST
New China-Myanmar oil pipeline bypasses Malacca trap - The Hindu

China has taken a firm step to beef up its energy security by inaugurating a pipeline that will bring crude oil from a deepwater port in Myanmar, along a transit route that will bypass the strategic Malacca Straits.



The first tanker that will offload 300,000 tons of oil is expected to arrive on Friday at Maday Island – a deep water port developed by China in the Bay of Bengal. From there, oil, mostly brought from West Asia and Africa, will be pumped into a 2402-kilometre long pipeline that will stretch for 771 kilometres in Myanmar and another 1631 kilometres in China. A gas pipeline, next to the Maday Island terminal, already runs from Myanmar’s port of Kyaukpyu. China also finalised plans to establish a rail corridor from Kyaukpyu to its Yunnan province.



The strategic oil pipeline will service China’s two major growth centres — Kunming and Chongqing, an industrial hub along the Yangtze River delta. Both cities are pivotal in the development of China’s Silk Road Economic Belt the 21st century Maritime Silk Road.

Kunming is one of the starting points of the Maritime Silk Road, because it connects with three ASEAN countries — Myanmar, Vietnam and Laos. Landlocked Laos in turn becomes the gateway to ports in Thailand, and a wider transportation network covering Malaysia and Singapore as well.



Chongqing is already a well-established junction along the Silk Road rail corridor, which begins at the coastal city of Yiwu, and heads to Duisburg - a major destination in Germany’s Ruhr industrial belt.



Significantly, the new oil pipeline bypasses the Malacca Straits — a narrow channel that connects the Indian Ocean with the Pacific. The Chinese are concerned that their access to the Malacca Straits — the main channel of their trade and energy supplies — can become compromised on account of Beijing’s growing rivalry with the United States, and maritime disputes with neighbours in the South China Sea.

China Daily quoted Li Li, strategy director at the energy consultancy firm, ICIS-C1, as saying that the “safety level of pipelines is much higher than for sea shipments, which will ensure a stable energy supply to China". "The economic benefits will grow as deliveries increase," she observed.



As oil begins to flow, the Chinese are also building a refinery in Kunming that can process 10 million tons of crude annually.



Part of the shipments received will also be delivered to Myanmar, said the country’s Vice-President U. Nyan Tun. China and Myanmar have jointly funded the project, including the construction of the Maday oil unloading terminal.



Analysts say that apart from enhancing energy security, the construction of an oil and gas pipeline from Myanmar is driven by environmental considerations, as China works to limit carbon emissions resulting from its over-dependence on coal. Consequently, China has signed a long-term $400 billion gas deal with Russia, which will deliver energy supplies, which will be routed for consumption towards the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei metropolitan area in the north, and the Yangtze River delta in the east. Russia and China have also signed an agreement for gas supplies along the western Altai route, which China hopes will also help reduce its carbon footprint.
 
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On March 13, a bomb fell on a sugarcane field in China’s Yunnan province, just across the border from Myanmar. The explosion killed five Chinese villagers and injured eight others. Beijing immediately blamed the Myanmar Air Force for the bombing and promised China’s own military would take “resolute action” to defend its citizens from harm. Myanmar’s government has been fighting Kokang rebels in the northeast since February 2015.

On April 2, Myanmar’s foreign minister, U Wunna Maung Lwin, officially apologized for the bombing, “On behalf of the Myanmar government and military, I officially apologize to China and express my deep sympathy to the families of the victims and the injured,” he told his Chinese counterpart, Wang Yi.

Previously, Myanmar’s government had previously suggested that Kokang rebels were responsible for the deadly mistake. In a statement published by the Global New Light of Myanmar, the government expressed “deep sorrow for (the) death and injuries of Chinese nationals,” but shied away from taking the blame. Instead, the government said rebel forces might have launched the bomb. “(A) thorough investigation will also be made whether the Kokang insurgent group is involved in this incident,” the statement said, suggesting the rebels might have wished “to have a negative impact on the friendship between Myanmar and China and to create instability along the border area.”

China, meanwhile, flatly rejected the implication that Myanmar’s Air Force was not to blame. “The facts are clear that a bomb from a Myanmar military plane caused the death of Chinese people,” Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hong Lei said.

U Wunna Maung Lwin was sent to China as a special envoy of President U Thein Sein specifically to discuss the bombing incident. In his meeting with Wang, U Wunna Maung Lwin accepted the results of a joint investigation into the bombing. According to China’s Defense Ministry, the investigation involved “military expert teams” from both countries, who investigate site of the bombing from March 24 to March 26. According to Xinhua, the investigation concluded that a Myanmar warplane was responsible for the bombing.

Wang said that the joint investigation also meant both side have “a clear understanding” of who specifically should be held accountable for the incident. U Wunna Maung Lwin promised that “Myanmar will ensure those involved in the incident are accountable for and punished in accordance with law.”

U Wunna Maung Lwin also said Myanmar would make “proper arrangement” for compensating victims of the bombing. Previously, Global Times reported that Myanmar would offer 70,000 RMB ($11,200) as compensation to the families of those killed in the bombing.

Myanmar Apologizes to China for Deadly Strike | The Diplomat
 
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BEIJING – China’s military will hold land and air live fire drills along a part of the border with Myanmar where shells have fallen during fighting between the Myanmar government and ethnic Chinese rebels, the Defence Ministry said on Monday.

China has been angered by repeated incidents of shells or bombs from the fighting falling in Chinese territory, in which at least five Chinese have died, and thousands of refugees have crossed into China’s southwestern province of Yunnan to escape the clashes.

The Chinese military’s drills will begin on Tuesday, the Defence Ministry said, and take place in two Yunnan counties which lie right next to Myanmar’s Kokang region.

China had informed Myanmar about the drills, it said.

The drills will not affect the normal lives of residents, though they will have to follow instructions on which parts of the county will be off limits, the ministry said, adding that the end of the exercises would be announced later.

Myanmar’s parliament last month extended martial law for three months in the Kokang region.

China has repeatedly demanded that Myanmar take greater steps to prevent fighting from spilling over to its side of the border.

Myanmar government soldiers have been battling rebels who were dug in as close as 500 meters (yards) from the border area, Myanmar’s Information Ministry said in April.

The main rebel group in Kokang is called the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army (MNDAA), which is led by ethnic Chinese commander Peng Jiasheng.

The MNDAA was formed from remnants of the Communist Party of Burma, a powerful China-backed guerrilla force that battled the Myanmar government until it splintered in 1989.

The group struck a truce with the government which lasted until 2009, when government troops took over their region in a conflict that pushed tens of thousands of refugees into China’s Yunnan province. – Reuters
 
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China's People's Liberation Army (PLA) has begun a series of live-fire exercises close to the Myanmar border: a move that underscores the increasingly fractious relations between the two countries.

Beginning with little prior notice on 2 June, the exercises have been reported in the Chinese media to involve both ground forces and aerial assets, and are being held in Zhenkang and Gengma prefectures of Yunnan province.

Zhenkang is situated immediately opposite the Kokang special region where Myanmar government forces, or Tatmadaw, have been struggling to push back ethnic-Chinese insurgents that Naypyidaw has repeatedly implied are being supported from China.

Gengma, to the south, is opposite Myanmar territory controlled by the United Wa State Army (UWSA), which maintains a ceasefire with the Tatmadaw but which the government has accused of directly supporting the Kokang and other insurgents in the country's north.

“Live-fire military exercises by the PLA are very rare in this region,” said Yue Gang, a retired Chinese colonel. “The Chinese government has been exercising forbearance and restraint since these incidents, but Myanmar has gotten carried away with its internal issues.”

“The intention could not be clearer,” Mr Yue added. “It is to show that there is a bottom line to China’s tolerance. When Myanmar crosses the line China must strike back to defend itself, not to start a war.”
 
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China, Myanmar focus on win-win ties
2015-6-12 0:28:03

Chinese President Xi Jinping Thursday met with Myanmar's National League for Democracy (NLD) leader Aung San Suu Kyi at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing. Suu Kyi, on her first trip to China, said during the meeting that the NLD admires China's great achievements under the leadership of the Party.

As this is Suu Kyi's first visit, the friendship of the Chinese people and the country's development have created a deep impression. Myanmar, still mired in poverty, faces daunting challenges in national development. As a stateswoman, Suu Kyi needs to prioritize Myanmar's national interests.

The China-Myanmar relationship is built on a deep and friendly foundation, though in recent years, bilateral ties have met setbacks. The divergence between the two countries partly results from Myanmar's internal politics, but it is also influenced by external geopolitical contentions.

Since 2011, Myanmar has embarked on a democratic transformation process resulting in great changes to its internal politics. The Western media portrays this transformation as Myanmar breaking away from China's influence and the relationship between the two sides is regressing. But it misreads the situation.

China has an indispensable role in Myanmar's national development and Myanmar's geographic location is important to China. Both sides are eyeing a long-term healthy development in bilateral ties.

China's investment in Myanmar is built on the basis of mutual benefit. The country harbors no empire-building ambitions, nor does it intend to interfere with Myanmar's internal affairs. As the two countries are geographically connected, it is in China's interests to help Myanmar realize national stability through social and economic development.

Bilateral cooperation is guided by mutual benefit, not ideology. The invitation to Suu Kyi by the Communist Party of China itself shows that China-Myanmar engagement surpasses ideology.

China's rapid growth in the past three decades, sustained by its unique development model, is attractive to underdeveloped countries. China's experience of large-scale poverty relief and promoting democracy in a way that fits the country while managing general social stability, can all be drawn upon by developing countries. The Chinese model is having a positive influence on China's neighboring countries.

In fact, China's commitment in regional development, through initiatives such as the "One Belt, One Road" program, is carried out through the same philosophy that China desires a win-win result by promoting development in its neighbors and in the region.

Suu Kyi's visit is expected to set another successful example for China's near-neighbor diplomacy.
 
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China sends Myanmar flood aid

China has donated 300,000 US dollars to flood stricken Myanmar, where at least 47 people have been killed and more than 210,000 people affected by widespread flooding following weeks of heavy monsoon rains.

Chinese Ambassador to Myanmar Hong Liang said Monday that they will provide flood aid for Rakhine state as well as Sagaing and Magway regions, worth about 300,000 US dollars.

The Chinese embassy has delivered flood aid to 20,000 families in Sittway, in Rakhine state. Earlier on Monday, they sent goods to 1,545 families in Kalay, in Sagaing region.

Ambassador Hong Liang said relief supplies will be sent to those people living in central Magway region this week.




 
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China sends Myanmar flood aid

China has donated 300,000 US dollars to flood stricken Myanmar, where at least 47 people have been killed and more than 210,000 people affected by widespread flooding following weeks of heavy monsoon rains.

Chinese Ambassador to Myanmar Hong Liang said Monday that they will provide flood aid for Rakhine state as well as Sagaing and Magway regions, worth about 300,000 US dollars.

The Chinese embassy has delivered flood aid to 20,000 families in Sittway, in Rakhine state. Earlier on Monday, they sent goods to 1,545 families in Kalay, in Sagaing region.

Ambassador Hong Liang said relief supplies will be sent to those people living in central Magway region this week.





thz for China aid and blue sky rescue team.. :D
 
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Staff members of a Chinese company distribute food to flood victims in Salingyi Township of Sagaing Region, Myanamr, Aug. 2, 2015. Death toll from severe flooding across Myanmar rose to 69, with 259,799 people affected by the disaster so far, the Ministry of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement said Wednesday.

 
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