Skip to main content

Serbia inks two road deals with China at 16plus1 summit

Serbia said it signed two road construction agreements with China during the 16plus1 Summit in Dubrovnik, Croatia earlier this month. The two deals are for construction of the Pozega-Boljare and Novi Beograd-Surcin road routes. The Pozega-Boljare project alone is worth €2 billion and will be financed from the existing loan from the Exim Bank, according to media reports. China’s east-west Belt and Road Initiative was the focus of the annual 16plus1 Summit that brought together leaders from Beijing plus
April 23, 2019 Read time: 3 mins

Serbia said it signed two road construction agreements with China during the 16plus1 Summit in Dubrovnik, Croatia earlier this month.

The two deals are for construction of the Pozega-Boljare and Novi Beograd-Surcin road routes. The Pozega-Boljare project alone is worth €2 billion and will be financed from the existing loan from the Exim Bank, according to media reports.

China’s east-west Belt and Road Initiative was the focus of the annual 16plus1 Summit that brought together leaders from Beijing plus 16 eastern European countries, including five Western Balkan states. China’s prime minister Li Keqiang was accompanied by an entourage of around Chinese 250 business leaders and politicians.

The 1116 European Union accounts for over 70% of direct investment in the Balkans that includes Serbia, Bosnia, Montenegro, Macedonia, Albania and Kosovo. Meanwhile, China accounts for only 1%, according to 2465 European Commission figures.

But China’s Belt and Road Initiative appears to be boosting Chinese investment in the region as the less economically well off countries – as well as Italy – are embracing Chinese investment in infrastructure.

But the deals usually come with a hefty price tag and the requirement of Chinese companies to carry out the work.

Many of the countries are not part of the European Union and so have no direct access to EU infrastructure funds. EU enlargement commissioner Johannes Hahn, who oversees bids to join the bloc, reportedly told the French news agency AFP that there are “concerns over the socioeconomic and financial effects some of China’s investments can have”.

Public debt can rise significantly to unmanageable levels in the near future in what is termed debt-trap diplomacy. Government’s that default on loans to China could be forced to hand over assets in lieu of debt repayments.

During the summit, Croatian Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic and Chinese Premier Li Keqiang visited the site of the controversial Peljesac Bridge to mark completion of the first phase of construction. The 2.4km-long bridge is 55m high at its highest. It is also partly financed by the European Union and the contractor is 3366 China Road and Bridge Corporation, which won the bid through an open tender.

When finished it will connect the Croatian mainland with its southernmost region, the Dubrovnik–Neretva County. This will avoid travellers crossing briefly into Bosnia because the country has the area’s sole access to the Adriatic Sea, around the town of Neum.

China Road and Bridge won the tender with a price tag of €279 million. But 945 Strabag, which bid much higher at €351million, alleged that the Chinese company bid low because it used what it called “dumping prices” when it came to valuing work on some aspects of the project.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • JP Autoceste eyes 2020 as completion date for Bosnia’s Corridor 5c
    March 3, 2016
    Around two-thirds of the Corridor 5c motorway project is expected to be completed by 2020, according to the director of the Bosnian motorways company JP Autoceste. Jasmin Buco said that 120km out of 337km of the motorway are complete. The corridor section, to connect Budapest with Ploce port in Croatia, is taking the most time. He said that the cost of the remaining part of the motorway is expected to be around €2.81 billion.
  • A vision for safer roads in the West Balkans
    March 6, 2017
    The West Balkan countries are at a turning point in their political resolve to address road traffic injuries, but must step up efforts on the ground to deploy sustained and systemic responses to what has become a major public health crisis
  • Show me the money at Australian Summit
    September 4, 2012
    The question of how to finance and fund major road infrastructure projects in Australia – including the potential role of user-pays charging as a funding solution – was top of mind at the recent Roads Australia National Summit in Sydney. The two-day summit, organised by peak national body Roads Australia, is the largest and most influential annual gathering of industry decision-makers in the country. This year’s summit was held against a backdrop of concern over the future of a raft of major road projects t
  • Montenegro motorway construction costs climbing
    February 8, 2019
    Construction of Montenegro’s Bar-Boljare motorway now looks likely to cost substantially more than originally planned. The project was originally budgeted at €80 million however Montenegro’s Ministry of Transport has now revealed that the work will have a pricetag some €15 million greater, totalling €95 million. This increase is considerably more than had been allowed for. The work is to be carried out by Chinese contractor CRBC although the deal has yet to be signed officially. The Smokovac-Matesevo stretc