Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1137Hits:19562911Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID080464
Title ProperChina's oil Venture in Africa
LanguageENG
AuthorZhao, Hong
Publication2007.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Oil has long been viewed as a strategic resource for nations. China is now the world's second largest oil-consuming country after the U.S.. Its global efforts to secure oil imports to meet increasing domestic demand have profound implications for international relations in the Asia-Pacific region. China's rising oil demand and its external quest for oil have thus generated much attention. As China's overseas oil quest intensifies, will China clash with the U.S. and other western countries' interests in Africa, and how dose it look at this rivalry? Will China disrupt the U.S. and its allies' foreign policy and the world order? This article tries to provide an overview of China's initiatives in developing oil in Africa. It examines factors for Chinese oil companies going to Africa and China's oil strategy there. Finally, it argues that even though China's practices of energy diplomacy in Africa seem to undermine U.S. goals of isolating or punishing "rogue states", contrary to those pessimistic views, China has largely accommodated the U.S. and is willing to forge joint efforts with the U.S. in energy exploration in Africa.
`In' analytical NoteEast Asia: An International Quaterly Vol. 24, No.4; Winter 2007: p499-415
Journal SourceEast Asia: An International Quaterly Vol. 24, No.4; Winter 2007: p499-415
Key WordsAfrican Oil ;  China - Energy Cooperation - Africa ;  Energy Rivalry ;  Equity Oil ;  Oil Strategy