Understanding China’s Global Search for Energy and Resources

The need for massive amounts of energy sources, raw materials, and natural resources is, in part, driving Beijing’s defense, energy, and foreign policies. The dynamic economic growth rates experienced over the past twenty years, coupled with increased manufacturing levels, rising exports of low-cost...

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Main Author: Sigfrido Burgos Cáceres
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Metropolitan University Prague 2013-03-01
Series:Central European Journal of International & Security Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://static.cejiss.org/data/uploaded/13835989624107/Article%2002_4.pdf
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author Sigfrido Burgos Cáceres
author_facet Sigfrido Burgos Cáceres
author_sort Sigfrido Burgos Cáceres
collection DOAJ
description The need for massive amounts of energy sources, raw materials, and natural resources is, in part, driving Beijing’s defense, energy, and foreign policies. The dynamic economic growth rates experienced over the past twenty years, coupled with increased manufacturing levels, rising exports of low-cost goods, rapid urbanisation, and higher demands for air travel and land transport, among other things, are increasing China’s appetite for crude oil, natural gas, timber, and critical minerals. To give an idea of China’s accelerated economic dynamism, one has to look at exports. China’s exports increased from $184 billion (USD) in 1998 to $1.2 trillion (USD) in 2007. As a result, China’s trade surplus increased from $44 billion (USD) in 1998 to $262 billion (USD) in 2007, leading to increased pressure on China from both the US and EU to upwardly revalue its currency, the Yuan. China’s phenomenal hunger for aluminium, cement, copper, and steel have, in part, caused its gas and oil consumption to surge. In fact, in no short measure, this accelerated usage of resources turned it into the world’s second-largest oil importer after the United States.
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spelling doaj.art-76e2fb749e0748fe8543ebda1a62b3a12022-12-22T02:12:24ZengMetropolitan University PragueCentral European Journal of International & Security Studies1802-548X1805-482X2013-03-010701Understanding China’s Global Search for Energy and ResourcesSigfrido Burgos CáceresThe need for massive amounts of energy sources, raw materials, and natural resources is, in part, driving Beijing’s defense, energy, and foreign policies. The dynamic economic growth rates experienced over the past twenty years, coupled with increased manufacturing levels, rising exports of low-cost goods, rapid urbanisation, and higher demands for air travel and land transport, among other things, are increasing China’s appetite for crude oil, natural gas, timber, and critical minerals. To give an idea of China’s accelerated economic dynamism, one has to look at exports. China’s exports increased from $184 billion (USD) in 1998 to $1.2 trillion (USD) in 2007. As a result, China’s trade surplus increased from $44 billion (USD) in 1998 to $262 billion (USD) in 2007, leading to increased pressure on China from both the US and EU to upwardly revalue its currency, the Yuan. China’s phenomenal hunger for aluminium, cement, copper, and steel have, in part, caused its gas and oil consumption to surge. In fact, in no short measure, this accelerated usage of resources turned it into the world’s second-largest oil importer after the United States.http://static.cejiss.org/data/uploaded/13835989624107/Article%2002_4.pdfChinaBeijingenergyresourcesraw materialseconomic growthoilnatural gastimbermineralsexporteconomic dynamismtrade surplus
spellingShingle Sigfrido Burgos Cáceres
Understanding China’s Global Search for Energy and Resources
Central European Journal of International & Security Studies
China
Beijing
energy
resources
raw materials
economic growth
oil
natural gas
timber
minerals
export
economic dynamism
trade surplus
title Understanding China’s Global Search for Energy and Resources
title_full Understanding China’s Global Search for Energy and Resources
title_fullStr Understanding China’s Global Search for Energy and Resources
title_full_unstemmed Understanding China’s Global Search for Energy and Resources
title_short Understanding China’s Global Search for Energy and Resources
title_sort understanding china s global search for energy and resources
topic China
Beijing
energy
resources
raw materials
economic growth
oil
natural gas
timber
minerals
export
economic dynamism
trade surplus
url http://static.cejiss.org/data/uploaded/13835989624107/Article%2002_4.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT sigfridoburgoscaceres understandingchinasglobalsearchforenergyandresources