How will China's Belt and Road Initiative fare when partners Russia, Ukraine are at war?

Like the rest of the world, China is watching closely as Russia's invasion of Ukraine unfolds, while also bracing for the impact of escalating Western sanctions against Russia.

As the largest trading partner of both Russia and Ukraine, China has a lot at stake, especially as the warring nations are both participants in the Belt and Road Initiative - China's ambitious plan to grow global trade with billions of dollars worth of investment and infrastructure projects.

Physical dangers; communication and transport cutoffs; and dire financial uncertainties are already straining China's investment plans in the region.

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The war is bound to drastically affect the global economic order. Moving forward, China must assess the headwinds it is facing, while rethinking how to proceed with its expansive infrastructure plan in warring countries and the rest of the world.

President Xi Jinping announced the Belt and Road Initiative in 2013. The land route of the globe-spanning infrastructure project traverses through landlocked Central Asia, in an area known as the Silk Road Economic Belt. And the sea route entails Southeast Asia, South Asia, the Middle East and Africa, known as the Maritime Silk Road.

As of January, China had formed collaborations through its belt and road project with 147 countries and 32 international organisations.

The initiative has invested in infrastructure projects, including roads, ports, airports, railways and power stations in mostly developing countries, and has sparked controversies and criticisms in the nine years since its inception.

Accusations have been levied against China for allegedly entrapping developing countries with debt to secure strategic assets in host countries.

Some projects have also been accused of threatening biodiversity and the welfare of the environment with its construction sites and exploitation of natural resources.

In 2020, despite the economic impact and disruptions caused by the global pandemic, China's investments in belt and road countries showed resilience with an 18.3 per cent uptick compared with 2019, according to Minster of Commerce data.

But the pandemic has also hindered China's belt and road progress, while Beijing has also placed increasing importance on the quality and benefits of its investments in overseas infrastructure projects.