In his meeting with Brunei’s Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah in San Francisco on Thursday, Xi said China would welcome more exports from Brunei, tell more Chinese enterprises to set up shop in the Southeast Asian country, and expand cooperation in areas such as food security, according to Chinese state media.
“Both sides should work together to promote positive progress in joint maritime development and jointly safeguard peace and stability in the South China Sea,” Xi told Brunei’s sultan on the sidelines of the APEC summit in San Francisco.
Brunei has counted China as one of its biggest foreign investors and an important force in its efforts to create a more diversified economy, with its crude oil reserves expected to be totally depleted in a few decades.
The largest Chinese investment so far has been a multi-billion dollar oil refinery.
Hengyi initially invested around $3.45 billion. It subsequently invested a further $13.65 billion to expand the plant’s refining capacity and build additional petrochemical facilities.
Brunei’s economy is forecast to contract about 1% this year, the International Monetary Fund has said, due to reduced energy production amid infrastructure maintenance.
Reporting by Ryan Woo; additional reporting by Andrew Hayley Editing by Gareth Jones – Reuters