Romania to ban Chinese companies from big infrastructure projects
Romania's government will analyse next week a decree that will exclude companies from non-EU countries that don't have trade agreements with the EU, including China, from participating in infrastructure projects in Romania, said Prime Minister Florin Citu.
"Today, I spoke with the government's general secretary
and I am waiting for the emergency decree for next week's meeting," Citu
said in an interview with G4media.ro published on March 3.
In early February, the government passed a memorandum on
limiting the participation in tenders for companies from non-EU countries that
have no trade agreements with Romania or the European Union. Deputy prime
ministers Kelemen Hunor and Dan Barna were the first to reveal the existence of
the draft decree.
Asked in February about the existence of a memorandum to
exclude Chinese companies from tenders for highways and railways, the PM
replied, as repoted by reported by Hotnews.ro: "No. If this is the case,
then there must be a decree to change the public procurement law."
In his interview with G4Media, Citu also spoke about the
sale of 5G licenses and the changes to the Offshore Law, two of the most
important economic themes on his cabinet’s agenda. He also said he is waiting
for the Digitisation Ministry to come up with the draft law for organising the
5G license sale — a deal that is also related to China because of a memorandum
signed by Romania with the United States on avoiding unsafe suppliers of
equipment.
In 2020, Romania also broke off its agreement with China
General Nuclear Power Corp. (CGN) for building two new reactors at the
Cernavoda nuclear power plant after the negotiations went cold. Instead,
Romania plans to expand its sole nuclear power plant with a consortium led by
US engineering firm AECom and including Canadian, French and Romanian partners.
The deal would "unshackle" Romania from China's
"malign influence", US ambassador to Romania Adrian Zuckerman said in
October, adding that "the [Chinese] communist party's control of every
Chinese company, domestically and abroad, poses an existential danger."
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