'

 

http://www.isn.ethz.ch/infoservice/sw/details.cfm?ID=10409

China's energy and territorial concerns

 

Energy security now seems to be the driving force

behind much of Beijing's foreign policy,

much to the consternation of its energy-poor neighbors.

 

By John C.k. Daly for The Jamestown Foundation (20/12/04)

 

While much of the world is fixated on China's booming economic growth and
its ravenous appetite for

energy, untidy diplomatic loose ends in the form of territorial disputes
with neighbors have many of

the countries bordering the Asian giant nervous. Though Beijing's claims
over Taiwan remain the

focus of world attention, China is embroiled in unresolved territorial
maritime and land issues with

no less than thirteen of its neighbors. Given that China's military
capability is growing apace with

its economy, the potential for military conflict over the disputed regions
is similarly on the rise.

While China up to now has attempted to address these issues diplomatically,
the fact that many of

the unresolved border disputes involve potential energy reserves might
prompt China to use military

force to resolve issues of strategic economic interest. In the South China
Sea, China is involved in

a dispute with Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan, Vietnam, and Brunei over
the Spratly (Nansha) and

Paracel Islands. Chinese forces seized the Paracels in 1974, but Vietnam
still disputes their

ownership. While the signing of the 2002 "Declaration on the Conduct of
Parties in the South China

Sea" reduced tensions, it failed to provide the legally binding "code of
conduct" that several of

the signatories wanted. In 1988 and 1992, the Chinese and Vietnamese navies
clashed briefly over the

reefs; and on October 21 of this year, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman
Zhang Qiyue asserted that

China has "indisputable sovereignty" over the islands, claiming that the
South China Sea has been a

"Chinese lake" for "centuries". China currently has about 450 soldiers on
the Spratleys, Vietnam

about 1'500, the Philippines about 100 and Malaysia 70-90 troops. Moreover,
in the Paracels, China

has established port facilities on Woody and Duncan islands and established
a small airport.

 

South China Sea tensions

Despite Chinese assertions of control, tensions over the South China Sea's
waters have continued to

rise. On 26 October, a partnership of Malaysia's Petronas Carigali Overseas,
American Technology

Inc. Petroleum, Singapore Petroleum Co. and Petrovietnam's Petroleum
Investment and Development Co.

announced it had discovered oil at its offshore Yen Tu oilfield, 69
kilometers off Haiphong, with a

preliminary estimate of reserves at 181 million barrels. The same day,
Chinese Foreign Ministry

spokesman Zhang Qiyue immediately noted, "China is seriously concerned and
strongly dissatisfied."

China is also embroiled in a territorial dispute with Indonesia over the
272-island Natuna

archipelago in the South China Sea, 240 kilometers northwest of Borneo. The
islands have been in

dispute for over a decade; in 1993, China presented a map of its "historic
claims" on the Spratleys

during a workshop in Surabaya, Indonesia, which included not only nearly the
entire South China Sea

but a portion of Indonesia's Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) off the Natuna
islands. The Natuna's

natural gas reserves are among the largest in the world, estimated at 210
trillion cubic feet.

China's third maritime dispute is with Japan over the Senkaku (Diaoyu Tai)
islands, which Japan

currently administers. In a significant partnering with its "renegade
province," China, together

with Taiwan, have asserted their claims to the Senkakus, stating that they
have been under Chinese

sovereignty for the last 500 years. The five small volcanic islands and
three rocky outcroppings

total only 4.3 square kilometers, but once again, the dispute is about the
surrounding EEZ. None of

the islands, which lie 168 kilometers northeast of Taiwan and 406 kilometers
west of Okinawa, are

inhabited. While Japan claims that it discovered the islands and
incorporated them in 1895, China

and Taiwan maintain that Chinese discovered the islets in 1372. The Director
General of Japan's

Foreign Ministry Asian and Oceanian Affairs Bureau, Mitoji Yabunaka, and the
head of the Agency for

Natural Resources and Energy, Nobuyori Kodaira, met on 26 October with
China's Foreign Ministry

Asian Affairs Department Director General Cui Tiankai to discuss the
disputed boundaries and natural

gas reserves in the East China Sea. At issue is each country's claim to its
EEZ under the Third

United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), which came into
force in November 1994.

Under UNCLOS III, a country can claim an EEZ of 200 nautical miles from its
coast, but the East

China Sea is too narrow for such an arrangement to be feasible. China wants
a demarcation line drawn

from the end of the continental shelf, while Japan supports a median line.
The talks yielded so

little that Nakagawa later said, "I don't know why these talks were even
held."

 

Unresolved territorial issues

China also has unresolved territorial issues with its neighbor India. While
most of the boundary

with India is in dispute, the two sides are committed to begin resolution
with discussions on the

Middle Sector, comprising China's approximately 20 percent portion of
Kashmir, including Aksai Chin.

India retains possession of Jammu and Kashmir while Pakistan controls Azad
Kashmir. India does not

recognize Pakistan's ceding a portion of Kashmir and the Aksai Chin Ladakh
region to China in a 1964

boundary agreement. China also claims large parts of the northeastern Indian
states of Sikkim and

Arunachal Pradesh. China has been more successful in its territorial
disputes with the former

nations of the USSR, making significant concessions to its Central Asian
neighbors after the

collapse of Communism in December 1991. China has kept 20 per cent of the
land disputed with

Kazakhstan, and the two countries are working to demarcate their large open
borders to control

population migration, illegal activities, and trade. In its unresolved
territorial claims with

Kyrgyzstan, China has retained about 30 per cent of the contested area,
while it has dropped most of

its claims to Tajikistan's Pamir Mountains. In 2002, China signed boundary
delimitation agreements

whereby Tajikistan ceded 618 square kilometers of the Pamir mountain range
to China in return for

China's relinquishing claims to 17'296 square kilometers, but the
demarcation has yet to begin. In

the case of Kazakhstan, China's interest in the country's vast energy
reserves produced a strong

inclination towards conciliation.

 

Oil concerns

Oil is also a major consideration in the growing Chinese-Russian
rapprochement. China continues to

press for an agreement on disputed islands in the Amur and Ussuri rivers and
a small island in the

Argun River, and progress has been made. In 2001, the two countries signed a
Treaty of Good

Neighborliness, Friendship, and Cooperation in an attempt to ease tensions;
and on 14 October they

signed a Supplementary Agreement on the Eastern Section of the China-Russia
Boundary Line,

effectively resolving issues regarding the 4'272-kilometer land frontier.
The main result of Russian

President Vladimir Putin's visit to China in October was the signing of a
number of important

documents. Besides oil, the most important agreement delineated a section of
the Russian-Chinese

border along the Amur River, while China gave up its claims to exclusive
ownership of the islands

outside Khabarovsk, leaving the details to be hammered out in the future.
Putin's concessions

angered many in Russia's Far Eastern provinces, however. A senior official
in the Khabarovsk

Territory speaking on condition of anonymity said, "Over the years, we spent
huge sums on

reinforcing the border, deepening the river and populating the islands. It
now transpires that

Russia is sacrificing part of its indigenous territory for the sake of
transitory economic

interest." Finally, though oil does not influence China's dispute over
islands claimed by North

Korea in the Yalu and Tumen, along with territory around Mount Paektu, the
issue of stemming mass

illegal migration of North Koreans escaping famine and oppression into
northern China is likely to

impel Beijing to modify its claims.

 

Diplomatic solutions

For the moment, China has attempted diplomatic solutions to its territorial
claims with its

Southeast Asian neighbors: on November 2, 2002, it signed a Code of Conduct
in the South China Sea

with the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN), committing all
signatories to peaceful

resolutions of outstanding issues. While predicting future Chinese actions
is difficult, it would

seem that China is willing to modify its historic claims in return for
increased access to

indigenous energy reserves. Energy security now seems to be the driving
force behind much of

Beijing's foreign policy, much to the consternation of its energy-poor
neighbors. In addition to the

cases enumerated above, groups in Burma and Thailand have expressed concerns
over China's

construction of 13 hydroelectric dams on the Salween River in Yunnan
province. The only certainty

for China's East Asian neighbors is that as its economy continues to grow,
so will Beijing's need

for energy. In the final analysis, the best bargaining position for
countries affected by the

growing Chinese appetite for energy would be to develop an "energy for land"
policy, the sooner the

better.

 

 

UPI international correspondent, Dr. Daly received his Ph.D. in Russian and
Middle Eastern Studies

from the University of London and is an Adjunct Scholar at the Middle East
Institute in Washington,

DC.

This article originally appeared in Eurasia Daily Monitor, published by The
Jamestown Foundation in

Washington, DC., at (www.Jamestown.org). The Jamestown Foundation is an
independent, nonpartisan

organization supported by tax-deductible contributions from corporations,
foundations, and

individuals.

 



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