Romania welcomes Belt and Road Initiative: officials
Source: Xinhua | 2016-03-30
Photo taken on Oct. 17, 2015 shows the aerial view of the port in Beihai city, southwest China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region. Beihai city, starting point of China's ancient marine silk road towards outside world, plays an important role in China's foreign trade over 2,000 years ago. To revitalize economic prosperity, Beihai is playing catch-up by joining the movement behind the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st-Century Maritime Silk Road to make its port an export channel for west China and a star of the modern version of the maritime Silk Road. (Xinhua/Huang Xiaobang)
by Marcela Ganea
BUCHAREST, March 30 (Xinhua) -- Romania welcomes the the Belt and Road Initiative as a continuation of the Silk Road idea in the 21st century, Florin Marius Tacu, secretary of state with the Chancellery of the Romanian prime minister, told a workshop in Bucharest on Tuesday.
Tacu, former Romanian consul general in Shanghai, said that Romanian President Klaus Iohannis stressed the wish to facilitate the economic exchanges between Europe and China, when meeting with diplomatic corps in Bucharest in January 2015.
The official said that Romania is "interested in all fields: nuclear energy, infrastructure ... We are making efforts to streamline the procedures for Romanian products to enter the Chinese market."
Daniel Tanase, from the Department of Globalization of the Romanian Foreign Ministry, said that China's initiative to bring a new Silk Road to connect Europe and Asia is a good input to stimulate the 16+1 cooperation.
"Romania is interested in finding common points between the 16+1 cooperation, the EU programs for infrastructure and investments, and the new Silk Road proposed by China," he said.
According to Dinu Dinulescu, general secretary of the Association for the Economic and Social Study and Forecast (ASPES), China and the EU have a daily exchange of goods of 1 billion euros (1.11 billion U.S. dollars).
Dinulescu told the workshop that the exchanges between Romania and China are 1 billion euros in six months, so there is a lot of room for development.
"Romania used to be a major partner for China and under the 16+1 framework, we can become again a good market for China. We can become an energy hub, we have potential in energy facilities, both conventional and renewable," he stressed.
In addition, Liviu Muresan, president of the EURISC foundation, stressed, "Global economy needs China."
The Romanian think tank wants to promote pragmatic economic and development projects and stimulate the cooperation between China and the Central and Eastern Europe countries along the Belt and Road Initiative as well as the 16+1 mechanism, by involving think tanks from the 16+1 countries.
Xu Feihong, Chinese ambassador to Romania, also said,"China put forward the Belt and Road Initiative by analyzing the challenges in today's world and China's new tasks, to enhance cooperation and promote common development."
The ambassador emphasized that in 2015, Chinese companies invested 40.8 billion U.S. dollars in the countries along the Belt and Road. The Chinese economy will take off together with the economies of the Belt and Road countries which will bring prosperity to Asia and Europe.
Regarding the Romanian-Chinese cooperation, Xu told the participants of the workshop that he is very happy with the cooperation in the energy field. However, "the level of our mutual cooperation is still below our aspiration."
"We'll have to find methods to put forward projects of mutual cooperation between China and Romania," he said.
The workshop, under the theme of "Romania-China cooperation: Romania's contribution to 16+1 and Belt & Road Initiative," was organized by the EURISC foundation, together with two other local think tanks: Middle East Political and Economic Institute and ASPES.
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@Shotgunner51 , could you please merge this thread with the larger OBOR thread? I could not locate the dedicated OBOR thread.
Regards.