Montenegro calls for EU help over $1bn Chinese highway loan

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China holds a quarter of Montenegro’s debt, and despite delays to the highway’s construction, the first repayment is due in July © Savo Prelevic/AFP/Getty Images

Montenegro has asked the EU for assistance with paying off a $1bn Chinese loan for an incomplete highway project that has imperilled the finances of the small western Balkan nation.

The saga of the incomplete road project, which is being built by the China Road and Bridge Corporation, is part of a larger geopolitical battle for influence on the EU’s periphery. How Brussels responds to Podgorica’s request — and whether it will bail the country out of a project long deemed unviable — will help to shape the bloc’s relationship with the region.

“Montenegro is small enough that it should be an easy decision” for the EU to help refinance the loan, Milojko Spajic, Montenegro’s finance minister, told the Financial Times in an interview. “This is a small but easy win for them. It’s low-hanging fruit,” he added.

Stefan Vladisavljev, foreign policy analyst for the Belgrade Fund for Political Excellence, a think-tank, said: “This is the first time that Montenegro or any other country from the western Balkans has made this type of outreach towards Brussels to combat rising Chinese influence.

“We’ve not heard that someone asked Brussels so openly to combat this together.”

Montenegro raised eyebrows in 2014 when it signed a deal with China’s ExIm Bank to finance 85 per cent of the cost of a road with a dollar-denominated loan worth almost $1bn. The first 41km section, a quarter of the total length, cost €20m per km, making it one of the most expensive highways per km in the world, said Spajic.

“For infrastructure we’re currently relying on China . . . The situation is dramatic from a geopolitical standpoint,” he said, adding that its important tourism industry relied on visitors from non-EU countries such as Russia. “We have to connect ourselves closer to our EU allies. We need alignment with the economy.”

Montenegro, which became an independent country when it separated from Serbia in 2006, joined Nato in 2017, despite strong objections from Moscow. Russia has traditionally been a big investor in Montenegro, which hopes to get a green light to join the EU by 2024.

Spajic said the government would seek financial help from a range of western organisations, including the European Commission, the European Investment Bank and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development.

The EU has indicated a willingness to help but a commission official said it would be hard to find the proper financial instruments, a task made harder because the project was almost complete.

“Politically we want to help . . . But the size of the loan is disproportionate to the size of the economy, so the mechanics are not obvious yet,” the official said. Montenegro would also need to commit to fiscal reforms, the official added, noting that the highway project did not match EU standards.

Beijing has made steady inroads into the Balkans through infrastructure and energy projects, and more recently its “vaccine diplomacy” drive in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic. China donated 30,000 doses of the Sinopharm vaccine to Montenegro and sold several million to Serbia.

“China is on the cusp of acquiring real leverage over policy choices, political attitudes, and narratives in some parts of the western Balkans,” the European Council on Foreign Relations said in a report in February.

The contract to build the highway was signed by the previous Montenegro government led by the Democratic Party of Socialists, which was ousted in August after 30 years in power.

Its decision has been scrutinised given that two separate feasibility studies, in 2006 and 2012, concluded that the highway was economically unviable. The government also signed a €54m contract with a Montenegrin-Chinese consortium for a thermal power plant just before it was ejected from office.

China holds one-quarter of Montenegro’s debt, and despite massive delays on the highway’s construction, the first repayment is due in July. If Montenegro were to default, the terms of the contract give China the right to access Montenegrin land as collateral.

A new Montenegrin government, a coalition of forces opposed to DPS with a razor-thin majority, took the reins in December. It faces a host of challenges, including the fact that the tourism-reliant economy collapsed by 15 per cent last year, according to the IMF.

Spajic said Podgorica was in talks with Beijing over another outstanding debt worth €127m.

Observers said Montenegro’s plea was an opportunity for Brussels. “The EU should step in,” said Tena Prelec, a scholar at the University of Oxford who studies the region. “Montenegro is in the EU’s backyard: it would be, finally, a concrete way to show that the EU is indeed a player, a true geostrategic actor.”


@Costin84 @Nilgiri How surprising.
 

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LoL they should take Montegro and change it to Little China...
 

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EU rebuffs Montenegro plea to help repay $1B Chinese highway loan​

Brussels on Monday rejected a call by Montenegro's government to help finance a $1 billion Chinese loan for an unfinished highway project that has plunged the EU accession candidate into a debt crisis.

Senior government officials have urged the EU in recent weeks to help Montenegro repay the loan, which amounts to one-quarter of the country's overall debt, and has shone a spotlight on China's influence in the Western Balkans.

But the European Commission said it was not going to comply with that request: "The EU is already the largest provider of financial assistance to Montenegro, the largest investor and the largest trade partner," EU foreign policy spokesperson Peter Stano said at a regular press briefing. “We continue to stand by them, but we are not repaying the loans they are taking from third parties.”

The EU’s decision risks opening the door for China’s state-run lender, the Export-Import Bank of China, to control assets owned by Montenegro.

Critics say that Montenegro's previous government made a poor decision in 2014 when it — against EU advice — accepted the Chinese loan, which covers 85 percent of the cost for a controversial highway project that has yet to be completed.

Other countries like Sri Lanka, Pakistan and Djibouti accepted attractive loan offers under China's Belt and Road Initiative and now find themselves under financial pressure to repay them, which risks exposing them to Chinese influence.

“The EU has concerns over the socioeconomic and financial effects of some of China’s investments, or the debt that some of China’s investments can have in the country," Stano said. "Because there is the risk of macroeconomic imbalances and debt dependency.”

A spokesperson for Montenegro Prime Minister Zdravko Krivokapić had no immediate comment on the Commission's reaction.

 

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$1 billion loan for a $5 billion GDP country,sounds absolutely right and normal.
 

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@Costin84 @Nilgiri How surprising.

Something similar happened with Maldives (and they eventually ran to India to help pay back the Chinese loan).

India in that case helped out (Maldives political situation also turned more pro-India right around same time)...given Maldives is of very high strategic significance in Indian ocean...and it is simply imperative for India to have as close relations with Maldives as possible given the "string of pearls" strategy China is working on for last cpl decades.

But montenegro does not hold this kind of card w.r.t EU, so it was even sillier IMO.

Small countries/small economies should be extra careful about these things....yet their politicians/elitists keep getting suckered into it at too high frequency.

$1 billion loan for a $5 billion GDP country,sounds absolutely right and normal.

In fact its almost parallel in these numbers for the earlier Maldives situation. Around 1.5 billion "infra" loan for a 5.5 billion GDP country.
 

Costin84

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That is quite rich, asking for a EU bailout now....I know that the gesture would win geopolitical sympathy but it shouldn't be done.
 

KKF 2.0

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That is quite rich, asking for a EU bailout now....I know that the gesture would win geopolitical sympathy but it shouldn't be done.
Help me out, please. How many billions is the EU transferring into Romanian government accounts every year?
 

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EU rebuffs Montenegro plea to help repay $1B Chinese highway loan​

Brussels on Monday rejected a call by Montenegro's government to help finance a $1 billion Chinese loan for an unfinished highway project that has plunged the EU accession candidate into a debt crisis.

Senior government officials have urged the EU in recent weeks to help Montenegro repay the loan, which amounts to one-quarter of the country's overall debt, and has shone a spotlight on China's influence in the Western Balkans.

But the European Commission said it was not going to comply with that request: "The EU is already the largest provider of financial assistance to Montenegro, the largest investor and the largest trade partner," EU foreign policy spokesperson Peter Stano said at a regular press briefing. “We continue to stand by them, but we are not repaying the loans they are taking from third parties.”

The EU’s decision risks opening the door for China’s state-run lender, the Export-Import Bank of China, to control assets owned by Montenegro.

Critics say that Montenegro's previous government made a poor decision in 2014 when it — against EU advice — accepted the Chinese loan, which covers 85 percent of the cost for a controversial highway project that has yet to be completed.

Other countries like Sri Lanka, Pakistan and Djibouti accepted attractive loan offers under China's Belt and Road Initiative and now find themselves under financial pressure to repay them, which risks exposing them to Chinese influence.

“The EU has concerns over the socioeconomic and financial effects of some of China’s investments, or the debt that some of China’s investments can have in the country," Stano said. "Because there is the risk of macroeconomic imbalances and debt dependency.”

A spokesperson for Montenegro Prime Minister Zdravko Krivokapić had no immediate comment on the Commission's reaction.

Strange request,why lend from China instead of the ECB?
Btw,isnt there a EU budget for infrastructure?
 

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Strange request,why lend from China instead of the ECB?
Btw,isnt there a EU budget for infrastructure?
Don't forget that most east european countries including the Balkans don't have proper political infrastrucure with institutions and public awareness in place to tell people about some of the decisions their politicians make. So when politicians gets fooled into believing it's a good deal, they take it.

They should have realized that taking money from a loan shark isn't a good thing :), my take on it is that one EU country (France, Germany etc.) may help them. So that it doesn't become a "EU" help.

I would/could imagine an arab country helping too, but that would require US to ask them to do so or even an EU country, e.g. France in return for export of military arms etc.

But still an incomplete project.... They didn't even bother ensuring the project was completed before the loan got activated. sheesh....
 

Costin84

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Help me out, please. How many billions is the EU transferring into Romanian government accounts every year?
Not because we took billions of Chinese loans and I don't see why that would concern you as those are EU funds available for all EU members. They were available for others years ago,such as Spain,Italy, Portugal, etc.How much money did Turkey receive, without being a member ?
 

Ryder

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Don't forget that most east european countries including the Balkans don't have proper political infrastrucure with institutions and public awareness in place to tell people about some of the decisions their politicians make. So when politicians gets fooled into believing it's a good deal, they take it.

They should have realized that taking money from a loan shark isn't a good thing :), my take on it is that one EU country (France, Germany etc.) may help them. So that it doesn't become a "EU" help.

I would/could imagine an arab country helping too, but that would require US to ask them to do so or even an EU country, e.g. France in return for export of military arms etc.

But still an incomplete project.... They didn't even bother ensuring the project was completed before the loan got activated. sheesh....

Gotta love the Balkans no matter how much I diss them. Such a funny and whacky place.
 

Costin84

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Strange request,why lend from China instead of the ECB?
Btw,isnt there a EU budget for infrastructure?
The EU rejected the project as not being economically viable. What the "China helps Africa, they help Pakistan and the developing world!" crowd doesn't understand is that IMF,EU or any Western lending institutions won't give you money without proper vetting on how they're being spent and if the projects are economically viable.
 

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