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China and the United States in Africa: Coming Conflict or Commercial Coexistence?

Abstract

China and the US are two key players in the recent round of 'scrambling' for Africa. They compete for control over oil and other strategic resources, for markets, and for political influence. Their competition has alarmed many. This study tests the alarmist interpretations by identifying what the US and China are actually doing and to how they perceive each other's activities. Their ambitions are often considered in isolation. When laid out side by side, the extent to which their activities in Africa may overlap or clash can be seen more clearly. China and the US are seeking different things at different places in the continent and are careful not to upset one another. Their activities do not support the dire prediction. The 'scramble for Africa' may irritate; it is unlikely to cause direct confrontations because competition remains by and large economic and economic competition in an integrated creates networks of constraints that ameliorate potential confrontation. (auth)
Authors:
Publication Date:
Jul 01, 2007
Product Type:
Conference
Resource Relation:
Conference: 20th World Energy Congress 2007, Rome (Italy), 11-15 November 2007
Subject:
29 ENERGY PLANNING, POLICY AND ECONOMY; USA; CHINA; AFRICA; COMPETITION; INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS; RESOURCES; MARKET; ECONOMICS; PETROLEUM
OSTI ID:
21081165
Research Organizations:
Griffith University (Australia)
Country of Origin:
WEC
Language:
English
Other Identifying Numbers:
TRN: XX0701074
Availability:
Available in PDF from the World Energy Council (WEC) site at the following URL: http://www.worldenergy.org/documents/rome07/p001074.pdf
Submitting Site:
ETDE
Size:
19 pages
Announcement Date:
Oct 06, 2008

Citation Formats

Yi-chong, Xu. China and the United States in Africa: Coming Conflict or Commercial Coexistence?. WEC: N. p., 2007. Web.
Yi-chong, Xu. China and the United States in Africa: Coming Conflict or Commercial Coexistence?. WEC.
Yi-chong, Xu. 2007. "China and the United States in Africa: Coming Conflict or Commercial Coexistence?" WEC.
@misc{etde_21081165,
title = {China and the United States in Africa: Coming Conflict or Commercial Coexistence?}
author = {Yi-chong, Xu}
abstractNote = {China and the US are two key players in the recent round of 'scrambling' for Africa. They compete for control over oil and other strategic resources, for markets, and for political influence. Their competition has alarmed many. This study tests the alarmist interpretations by identifying what the US and China are actually doing and to how they perceive each other's activities. Their ambitions are often considered in isolation. When laid out side by side, the extent to which their activities in Africa may overlap or clash can be seen more clearly. China and the US are seeking different things at different places in the continent and are careful not to upset one another. Their activities do not support the dire prediction. The 'scramble for Africa' may irritate; it is unlikely to cause direct confrontations because competition remains by and large economic and economic competition in an integrated creates networks of constraints that ameliorate potential confrontation. (auth)}
place = {WEC}
year = {2007}
month = {Jul}
}