Consortium
led by state-owned CCCC was the only bidder with a complete proposal. A
previous concept for the port's development, released for a contract that was
canceled in 2020 (ADC)
The
government of Georgia has awarded a 49 percent stake in the future Black
Sea port of Anaklia to a Chinese consortium led by state-owned China Communications
Construction Company (CCCC). The project
will have a container throughput of 600,000 TEU per year, which will support a
long-planned "Middle Corridor" of multimodal
transport connecting China to Europe.
A Swiss
consortium also entered the bidding, but never submitted its final proposal,
according to Georgian economy minister Levan Davitashvili.
"This
is not the first important investment project from China to Georgia, but I
believe it’ll be a milestone for our cooperation within the framework of the
Belt and Road initiative," said Chinese Ambassador to Georgia Zhou Qian in
a statement.
CCCC's partners include China Harbour
Investment Pte., China Road and Bridge Corporation and Qingdao Port
International Co. The full details of the agreement with CCCC will
be disclosed soon, the Georgian government said.
"The
application is complete, the relevant bank guarantees have been
presented," Davitashvili said. "In a few days, we will have
clarifications, after which the Chinese consortium will be announced as the
winner."
The
Georgian government claims that CCCC is not sanctioned by the U.S. government,
and a top official told local media that reports to the contrary were "a
lie."
In 2020,
CCCC was sanctioned by the U.S. Commerce Department for its role in building
artificial islands in Philippine waters, and in the following year it was
designated by the U.S. Treasury as an element of the Chinese
military-industrial complex. Taken
together, these sanctions imposed limited restrictions on investing in CCCC, or
sending exports or technology transfers to CCCC. These measures are still
in place, but they only cover certain types of transactions, and Georgia noted
that the restrictions "do not prevent others from purchasing services or
goods from CCCC."
Ambassador
Zhou noted that U.S.-backed civil society groups in Georgia have raised concerns about
Chinese involvement in the project. "I think that if you look back at some
disinformation about the CCCC, made by some so-called think tanks, which is
financed by Taiwan and the United States, you can see why such disinformation
was spread," he said.
A
previous plan to build a port at Anaklia was launched in 2017, with
participation from TBC Holding, SSA Marine, British Wondernet Express, and
G-Star Ltd. The contract ran into controversy related to the finances of its
local backers, and it was ultimately canceled by the government.