Saturday, September 28, 2024

Chinese investors to have 1/3 Stake in Site C Dam Contract BC Canada

Chinese investors to have 
1/3 Stake 
in Site C Dam Contract
 BC Canada 

With a 30% share, Aecon Group Inc. (TSX:ARE) leads the consortium that BC Hydro announced on December 21 would be the preferred bidder for the spillway and generating station contract, which is expected to be worth at least $1.2 billion.

Other partners in the consortium include Dragados Canada, Inc. (27.5%), Flatiron Constructors Canada Ltd. (27.5%), and EBC Inc. (15%), according to an Aecon news release.

One day after BC Hydro announced that the Aecon-Flatiron-Dragados-EBC Partnership (AFDE) had been named as the preferred contractor, the Ontario Superior Court of Justice approved a $1.5 billion takeover of Aecon by CCCC International Holding Ltd.

CCCC is the overseas financing arm of China Communications Construction Co. Ltd., a state-owned, publicly traded construction company headquartered in Beijing.


CCCC International Holding Ltd.

Aecon’s shareholders approved a plan of arrangement that will see CCCC International acquire all of Aecon’s shares at $20.37 per share, with 99.4% of Aecon’s shareholders approving the takeover. The friendly takeover is still subject to a review under the Investment Canada Act.

Aecon has experience working on hydro-electric dams in B.C. In 2014, it was one of the partners that won the contract to modernize the John Hart hydro-electric dam in Campbell River in 2014.

Following a review by the BC Utilities Commission (BCUC), which determined the Site C dam wont be completed on time or on budget, the NDP government decided to complete the project nonetheless. Cancelling it would have meant covering $4 billion in sunk costs, termination fees and site remediation, with nothing to show for it.

The project’s new estimated cost is now $10.7 billion – more than $2 billion over the last budget of $8.3 billion.

The largest contract was for the main civil works, which is still underway. That contract was awarded to a consortium called Peace River Hydro Partners for $1.7 billion.

One of the partners, Petrowest Corp., is now in receivership, after lenders called in their loans, and was terminated from the partnership.

The second largest contract for Site C is for the spillway and generating station. BC Hydro has not publicly stated how much that contract would be worth.

But it is likely to be worth at least $1.2 billion, which is how much the contract was estimated to be worth in a report by Deloitte that had been unintentionally released during the BCUC’s review of the Site C dam.

The contract for the spillway has not been formally awarded yet.  BC Hydro said it still must come to terms with the preferred bidder – AFDE – before a final contract is awarded.

The AFDE Partnership was one of four bidders shortlisted in the competition for the spillway contract. Others were Bechtel Canada Co., Peace River Hydro Partners 2 and Peter Kiewit Infrastructure Co.

During peak construction, the spillway and generating station contract is expected to employ up to 1,600 [Canadian?] people, according to BC Hydro.

As per the NDP’s commitment to require project labour agreements on all the remaining work on Site C, BC Hydro stated that the AFDE Partnership has signed a project labour agreement with three unions: the International Union of Operating Engineers (IUOE) Local 115, the Construction and Specialized Workers Union (CSWU) Local 1611 and the Construction Maintenance and Allied Workers (CMAW).

The agreement obliges the consortium employ up to 25% of its workforce as apprentices.

The third largest contract, to build the new transmission lines, has not been awarded yet. A request for proposals for that contract went out in September.

China's invested interest in Site C Dam with their Belt and Road Initiative to North America, on through Alaska and Canada.
The centre for all this Chinese development is centred in this Surrey Vancouver building. Christy Clark the promoter.


The Site C Dam is planned to be its Chinese hub in Canada


Guo Taicheng
is chairman of Hong Kong-based trading firm Shing Kee Godown Group. The businessman is also executive vice-president of the China Federation of Overseas Chinese Entrepreneurs, which is part of the All-China Federation of Returned Overseas Chinese (AFROC) of the United Front, an agency of the Chinese Communist Party.

Guo envisions Canadian food producers as key warehouse tenants. The Surrey facility, he said, will lease space to small to medium sized Canadian businesses and “offer them entry to the Chinese market.”

Guo said the market would dictate what comes back to Canada, suggesting at this time Chinese-manufactured personal protective equipment could be a hot import upon opening. (Following the COVID-19 pandemic, Xi announced intentions of a China-led “health silk road,” as part of the increasingly broad BRI mandate.)

Guo confirmed associations such as AFROC require approval from the Chinese government and “to join the association will certainly bring opportunities.”

But he said he is not a member of the CCP and the party “does not tell [him] what to say or not to say,” despite his standing in the organization. Rather, his sole focus is on improving his business, and that means increasing trade.

However, Guo evokes Chinese nationalist rhetoric espoused by Xi, when speaking about the trade centre, which his company asserts is to serve the Yanjiao “mother centre.”

As reported in Chinese state media, Guo told a trade conference in December 2017 that, “The current new era of socialism with Chinese characteristics is a new era for the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation and a new era for overseas Chinese and overseas Chinese.”

When asked why it is important for his company to focus on the BRI and purported CCP achievements, Guo said, “It’s just to follow the local rules because in China you have to show this type of picture and play by the rules.

And, “How the government views this [trade centre] plan is not up to us,” added Guo, who met with China’s Consul General Tong Xiaoling in Vancouver to discuss the BRI in February 2018, according to the consulate’s website.

China’s inroads to Canada should be more closely monitored, experts say

Former ambassador to China Guy Saint-Jacques says while many development proposals in China may provide more rhetoric than substance, it is clear this one has some degree of support from the Chinese government — although time will tell whether or not Yanjiao is a “pie in the sky.”

Regardless, he said CCP-sponsored activity in Canada requires a closer examination.

“We should be worried about the activities of the United Front,” said Saint-Jacques.

Of some concern is the degree to which local projects, such as the trade centre, may be controlled in a manner to favour China’s interests over Canada’s, said both Saint-Jacques and Burton.

“I would be interested to look at the contracts the Canadian companies will be asked to sign. If the Chinese are forcing to sign long-term exclusive rights, then I’d be concerned. Companies should learn from the ongoing crisis from China they need to diversify their markets.

“I would be concerned if these guys are saying, for instance, we will become your exclusive exporter to China for your cherries, for example,” said Saint-Jacques.

Pollyco’s manager Hugh Carter told Glacier Media in an interview his company is tasked with marketing the development whereas Shing Kee brings “users who fit into the trading centre.”

But Carter said while the company was aware the trade centre was billed back in China as a BRI project, it is his understanding any Canadian business may lease warehouse space and exporting products to China is not a requirement.

If that is the case, Saint-Jacques said there’s little to worry about with this project specifically.

“Unless this facility offers some kind of advantage or premium for shippers to use it [to export to China], I don’t think this will be significant,” he said.

Burton said he would be particularly worried if Chinese companies bought or built several such facilities in the Lower Mainland.

“That would give China an advantage in sourcing goods to put [Canadian companies] in a position where we couldn’t diversify to other competitors. Arguably, the whole BRI is about re-orienting the global economy to China, because all the belts and roads go to China. No belts and roads go other places,” said Burton.

This could be done without any Canadian government oversight. And so, a failure to understand China’s cumulative impact on commerce in Canada can jeopardize Canadian interests, Burton asserted.

Part of the BRI strategy, said Burton, “involves keeping under the thresholds for government regulation.



Thursday, September 12, 2024

China courts global elite at WEF in Davos with largest presence in years

China courts global elite at WEF in Davos with largest presence in years


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Key Points
  • China returned to Davos in full force this week as it attempts to thaw relations with the international community and court investment following years of Covid lockdowns.
  • China’s 2024 Davos delegation is estimated to be the largest since 2017, when President Xi Jinping led an 80-strong cohort up the Swiss mountain.
  • “Choosing investment in the Chinese market is not a risk, but an opportunity,” China’s Premier Li Qiang said in a keynote address Tuesday.
Participants walk in the street of the Alpine resort of Davos during the World Economic Forum (WEF) annual meeting in Davos on January 18, 2023. (Photo by Fabrice COFFRINI / AFP) (Photo by FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP via Getty Images)
Participants walk in the street of the Alpine resort of Davos during the World Economic Forum.

Davos, SWITZERLAND — China returned to Davos in full force this week as it attempts to thaw relations with the international community and court investment following years of Covid-19 lockdowns and rising geopolitical tensions.

A delegation led by Chinese Premier Li Qiang is estimated to be the largest since 2017, when President Xi Jinping led an 80-strong cohort of Chinese business leaders and billionaires up the Swiss mountain.

Addressing the forum Tuesday, Li, China’s second in command, said the country was open for business, seemingly downplaying a recent crackdown on private industry which has spooked investors and prompted hefty outflows of foreign cash.

“Choosing investment in the Chinese market is not a risk, but an opportunity,” he said.

Li went on to meet for lunch with a host of top business leaders, including the CEOs of JPMorgan, Bank of America, Standard Chartered and Blackstone. Also present was the governor of the People’s Bank of China.

He was joined by several other high ranking ministerial representatives including the Deputy Foreign Minister Ma Zhaoxu and Commerce Minister Wang Wentao.

Outside the main congress center, one group of Chinese delegates CNBC spoke to said they were attending for a broad brush of issues including “finance and trade and commerce.”

“It’s a great time to tell the China story,” another Chinese tech executive said.

Raising concerns in Washington

The amped up Chinese presence has reportedly ruffled feathers in Washington amid U.S. concerns about Beijing’s growing global influence.

A U.S. State Department document dated Jan. 12 said that “10 state ministers” would be included in Beijing’s Davos delegation, prompting the White House to step up its charm offensive, according to Politico.

The document dubbed the presence a “pseudo state visit,” with the Chinese delegation also expected to meet with Swiss counterparts in the capital, Bern, later in the week. In response, the schedule of Secretary of State Anthony Blinken, also attending Davos, was reportedly updated to include a meeting with Swiss officials.

The State Department did not immediately respond to a CNBC request for comment on Blinken’s amended agenda.

It comes as relations between the U.S. and China have grown increasingly fractured amid national security concerns and rising geopolitical tensions, particularly over Taiwan and Russia. That has prompted Washington to embark on a “de-risking” strategy, including curbing trade of some critical technologies.

Li Qiang, China's premier, delivers a special address on the opening day of the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland, on Tuesday, Jan. 16, 2024.
Li Qiang, China’s premier, delivers a special address on the opening day of the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland, on Tuesday, Jan. 16, 2024.

Li, in his keynote address, pushed back against the move, saying that tech innovations should not be used as a way to restrict or contain other countries.

“To keep the competition healthy and bring out the greatest vitality, the only way is to enhance cooperation,” he said.

The comments speak to the confliction other countries face, including Switzerland and Europe more broadly, in picking alliances in the standoff between the world’s two largest economies. Europe, a close ally of the U.S., is equally aware of how important the Chinese market is for its domestic companies.

Still, confidence in China has been knocked by the country’s prolonged and stringent Covid lockdowns, as well as its broader clampdown on key industries, including Big Tech.

Notably, Xi’s 2017 entourage included Jack Ma, founder of Alibaba, and Wang Jianlin, chairman of property developer Dalian Wanda, both of whom have since fallen out of favor with Chinese authorities amid a clampdown on private business and a collapse in the country’s property market.

What is the World Economic Forum?
VIDEO07:01
What is the World Economic Forum?

As a result, Chinese firms are now investing more abroad than foreign firms are investing in China. Foreign investors withdrew $12 billion from China in the third quarter of 2023. Meanwhile, international investors have withdrawn around $25 billion from the Chinese stock market since August 2023.

Ian Bremmer, president and found of the Eurasia Group, said that China’s increased Davos presence indicated that Xi acknowledges the challenges Beijing now faces in re-establishing its reputation on the international stage.

“It’s necessary for a country that’s underperforming economically in a big way,” Bremmer told Semafor.

“Xi recognizes it; [it] implies better managed relations for the West with China at least in the near term,” he added.

The World Economic Forum did not respond to a CNBC request for confirmation on the number of Chinese delegates in attendance.


Canada is the weakest link of the 5 Eyes Due to Chinese interference

 Canada is the weakest link of the 5 Eyes Due to Chinese interference

Sept 12 2024

Sam Cooper is the investigative journalist and publisher of The Bureau. We discuss commissioner Hogue's decision on Chinese election interference as a result of Canada’s foreign interference inquiry, recent revelations of China’s role in the global fentanyl epidemic- specifically as it relates to the United States, and what the US response has been.

Read more at The Bureau:

https://thebureau.news

Follow Sam on X:

https://twitter.com/scoopercooper

Follow Brave New Normal on X, Substack and audio streamers:

https://linktr.ee/bnnpod
https://www.cpac.ca/in-committee-from-the-house-of-commons/episode/special-committee-on-canada-china-relations--june-17-2024?id=e6e43523-1601-44c7-b0cd-055b3f55cae5


Saturday, September 7, 2024

Chinese government and their military easily gained access to Canada's top deadly virus lab

Chinese government and their military easily gained access to Canada's top deadly virus lab>now tighten security only after the Chinese scientists MAILED live Ebola virus to Wuhan

The Canadian Government under Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has fought for years to keep the investigation by the Canadian Security Intelligence Services (CSIS) a secret, according to media reports.

The CSIS initially released a heavily-redacted version of the investigation in 2021, but this sparked outcry from the Conservative opposition and accusations of a cover-up.

This week they were forced to release the documents after a national security review by a special parliamentary committee and a panel of three retired senior judges.

The review claimed the couple had been able to use the lab as a 'base to assist China to improve its capability to fight highly-pathogenic pathogens... and achieve brilliant results'.

Dr Qiu, born in China, was a 'star' at the internationally renowned lab for her work on developing an antibody treatment against Ebola — which was used in the 2014 outbreak in Africa.

But in July 2019, she and her husband were escorted from the laboratory and then dismissed from their roles in January 2021 without official explanation. 

Dr Qiu is pictured above working in the lab. Investigators said she had sent the genetic code for Ebola to the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV)

Dr Qiu is pictured above working in the lab. Investigators said she had sent the genetic code for Ebola to the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV)

Dr Qiu, shown working in the lab, was also found to have lied to officials about a vacation she took to China in 2018 and to have appeared on two Chinese patents without the knowledge of the lab

Dr Qiu, shown working in the lab, was also found to have lied to officials about a vacation she took to China in 2018 and to have appeared on two Chinese patents without the knowledge of the lab

In the newly-released assessment from 2020, the CSIS warned: 'Dr Qiu represents a very serious and credible danger to the government of Canada as a whole.

'And in particular at facilities considered high-security due to the potential for theft of dangerous materials attractive to terrorist and foreign entities that conduct espionage to infiltrate and damage the economic security of Canada.'

The assessment added: 'The service assesses that Ms Qiu developed deep, co-operative relationships with a variety of People's Republic of China (PRC) institutions. 

'[She has also] intentionally transferred scientific knowledge and materials to China in order to benefit the PRC Government, and herself, without regard for the implications... to Canada's interests.'

Listing violations by Dr Qiu, officials said she had provided Beijing 'with the Ebola genetic sequence, which opened a door of convenience for China'.

They also accused her of sending live Ebola virus to the WIV, including documents in their report showing that the shipment was sent.

She was also accused of sending Henipavirus to the WIV in the shipment of 30 vials in total.

Additionally, they allege she had been contracted to work for the WIV on a trip to China in 2018 — which she had claimed was for 'personal reasons.'

And Dr Qiu was found to have brought two restricted visitors to the lab, including a research assistant at the Academy of Military Sciences' in Beijing and a woman who held a Chinese public affairs passport reserved for civil servants. 

The report also claims that Dr Qiu was an applicant in Beijing's Thousand Talents Program, which was set up to pay students for participation in research to further Chinese interests.

And it alleges that she was negotiating an employment agreement with the Hebei Medical University in Shijiazhuang, China, between 2018 and 2022. The unfinalized agreement would have seen the equivalent of $1.2million paid to support her work.

The agency also claimed she and her husband had an undisclosed bank account in China's Commercial Bank and that she had applied to be part of a programme at China's WIV. As part of this, she had committed to 'building the People's Republic of China's biosecurity platform for new and potent infectious disease research'.

Concerns were first raised over Dr Qiu in September 2018 when her name appeared on a patent filed in China for a treatment for Ebola — research the lab had not been told about.

The source of the tip-off has not been revealed. 

Suspicions were then raised about Dr Cheng in October after he was found to have invited students into the lab who attempted to leave carrying two clear plastic bags containing vials of an unknown substance.

Later the same month, Dr Cheng was also caught trying to leave the lab carrying two empty Styrofoam containers, which BSL-4 labs use to transport materials, including viruses.

The Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC), concerned by the reports, launched an investigation into the pair in December 2018 — which revealed numerous security failings accusations to the pair, including that they had repeatedly allowed restricted visitors to download experimental data from the lab and send it to their email accounts.

The Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) Theresa Tam



The PHAC also alleged that in May 2018, Dr Cheng had been sent vials containing mouse protein in a package shipped from China labeled as 'kitchen utensils'.

Dr Qiu was accused of having shipped Ebola-fighting antibodies out of the lab for at least two years to countries including China, the US and the UK.

She was also accused of being named on a second patent in China which was concerned with a treatment for Marburg virus.

Alarmed by their findings, the investigation was then passed to the CSIS just before July 2019, which launched their own security investigation — and interviewed the couple.

Health Minister Mark Holland said China's influence on Canada's scientific community 'was not known to the extent it was today', following the release of the files.


'These were eminent scientists whose research and work was well known. They were leaders in their field, some of the brightest scientists that were known,' he said.

'I think there was a nascent understanding of the extent to which foreign actors in the most direct sense — China we're talking in this instance, in other instances Russia and other foreign entities, foreign governments — were attempting to influence Canada.'

The pair have not been able to be contacted, and numerous media reports have suggested they've  moved to China.