Ads by Google Ads by Google

China likely to team up more on aid to Pacific

 Contractors work on the Te Mato Vai water project in Rarotonga, Cook Islands [Photo: Phillipa Webb / Cook Islands News]

The Pacific is likely to see more teamwork involving China such as the Chinese-New Zealand partnership to pipe water around Rarotonga.

An expert on China's foreign aid programme, Denghua Zhang, said the Te Mato Vai project in the Cook Islands was helping China learn about aid delivery and monitoring.

According to his research, about four percent of China's total aid spend goes to Oceania, most of that in soft loans for new roads and other infrastructure.

Mr Zhang said China was increasingly teaming up with traditional donor countries and agencies like the UN Development Programme and it saw the Pacific as a good testing ground for such co-operation.

"To me that is being small but being smart," he said.

"The Chinese government will continue to test this kind of trilateral aid co-operation in the near future including in the Pacific region but the Chinese government will continue to be very cautious about this kind of experimentation," he said.

China is also working with Australia on malaria diagnosis and research in Papua New Guinea.

Mr Zhang said when working with other partners to deliver aid to the region, China would likely focus on "less sensitive" sectors such as agriculture, public health and climate change.

He said big infrastructure projects were complicated and difficult to manage, compared to the smaller scale projects.

"This kind of trilateral partnership is not only good for the recipient countries but is also beneficial for Chinese global image building as a responsible global power."

China has been criticised in the past for aid and infrastructure unsuited to the region and there have been fears of growing indebtedness to Beijing via concessional loans.

Mr Zhang said China was interested in learning from traditional donors in areas such as project facilitation, monitoring and maintenance.

"It is very encouraging that the Chinese aid officials and also the researchers are showing more interest in this kind of engagement."