UAE's G42 to Pare Back China Presence

G42 at the GITEX Global tech exhibition in Dubai. (Getty)
G42 at the GITEX Global tech exhibition in Dubai. (Getty)
TT
20

UAE's G42 to Pare Back China Presence

G42 at the GITEX Global tech exhibition in Dubai. (Getty)
G42 at the GITEX Global tech exhibition in Dubai. (Getty)

Abu Dhabi’s G42 is paring back its presence in China and has pledged to invest in key Western markets in an effort to assuage US concerns over the artificial intelligence firm’s ties to Beijing, according to Bloomberg.

“All of our China investments that were previously made are already divested,” G42 Chief Executive Officer Peng Xiao said in an interview with Bloomberg News. “Because of that, of course, we have no need anymore for any physical China presence.”

The comments come months after a key US lawmaker urged the Commerce Department to consider trade restrictions on the firm over its ties to China, following allegations made in a New York Times article.

G42 denied the report, and said the company has “pursued a commercial strategy since 2022 to fully align with our US partners and not to engage with Chinese companies.”

That’s against a backdrop of broader pushback on entities perceived to have close ties with Beijing. Officials in President Joe Biden’s cabinet were reviewing over half a dozen acquisitions, people familiar with the matter said last year, including deals from Mubadala Investment Co., which owns a stake in G42.



China’s Sinopec Signs Joint Venture Agreement with Saudi Aramco Worth $4 Billion

The Shaybah oil field (Aramco website) 
The Shaybah oil field (Aramco website) 
TT
20

China’s Sinopec Signs Joint Venture Agreement with Saudi Aramco Worth $4 Billion

The Shaybah oil field (Aramco website) 
The Shaybah oil field (Aramco website) 

China's state-run Sinopec said on Monday it had signed an agreement with a unit of Saudi Aramco to establish a joint venture company aimed at operating ports, transporting crude oil, and providing other services related to the sector.

The capital of this joint venture is worth 28.80 billion yuan ($3.95 billion).

The agreement was signed by Sinopec, its unit Fujian Petroleum Chemical Industry Co, and Saudi Aramco's Singaporean unit Aramco Asia Singapore (AAS).

Sinopec and its unit shall contribute 7.20 billion yuan and 14.40 billion yuan in cash, respectively. The remaining amount, representing 25% of the registered capital of the joint venture, will come from AAS.

The joint venture company, Fujian Sinopec Aramco Refining and Petrochemical Co, will engage in port operation, crude oil transportation, and other activities at the refinery and petrochemical complex in the Gulei Port Economic Development Zone, Zhangzhou, in China's Fujian province.

Sinopec and Saudi Aramco started constructing the complex in November last year, as part of the Middle Eastern company's plans to grow its downstream business outside the kingdom and to supply a million barrels per day of crude oil to China for oil-to-chemicals investments.

Sinopec, in a separate statement, reported a 27.6% drop in first-quarter net profit under the China Accounting Standard on Monday.