Archive / Other publications
Central Asia's growing partnership with China
13/10/2009 By Sébastien Peyrouse
![]() |
| AFP/Getty Images |
Since the start of the 2000s, China has become an increasingly important player on the Central Asian scene, which had previously been essentially divided between Russia and the US. Beijing has managed to make a massive and multiform entry onto the Central Asian geopolitical landscape: it has proven itself a loyal partner on the level of bilateral diplomacy and has succeeded in turning the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) into a regional structure appreciated by its members.
China has become a leading actor in trade as well as in the hydrocarbon sector and infrastructure. This paper focuses on the political and geopolitical impact of Beijing's growing influence, along with the economic implications of the Chinese presence in Central Asia. Moreover, the paper assesses the extent to which this will affect the objectives of the European Union in the region. A final key question debated here is an assessment of possible joint interests of China and the EU in Central Asia.
Download the full version of this publication, available in English (546 kB)
Projects
EUCAMTo read or listen to the comments of our experts in the media about this and other topics, please visit our Press section.
Keywords
Central Asia and Russia Energy Supply EU European Union Kazakhstan Kyrgyzstan Tajikistan Turkmenistan UzbekistanRelated publications
- Business and trade relationships between the EU and Central Asia
- Central Asia and the global economic crisis
- Facing the challenges of separatism: the EU, Central Asia and the Uyghur issue
- Russia and Central Asia: from disinterest to eager leadership
- Russia in Central Asia: Old History, New Challenges?
- The Central Asian jigsaw
- The EU and Central Asia: commercialising the energy relationship
- The EU strategy for Central Asia: promoting democracy and human rights
- The EU Strategy for Central Asia: year one
- The EU' s approach to the development of mass media in Central Asia
- The EU's rule of law Initiative in Central Asia
- The food, energy and water nexus in Central Asia: Tajikistan
Bio author: Sébastien Peyrouse
Central Asia. Russia. China. Security. Political systems. Geo-economy. Islam


