On September 5, the Beijing Declaration on Building a China-Africa Community with a Shared Future for the New Era (Full Text) was released. Regarding energy, it mentions that China will support African countries in better utilizing renewable energy sources such as solar, hydro, and wind power. China will also further expand its investment in low-emission projects in energy-saving technologies, high-tech industries, and green low-carbon industries, assisting African countries in optimizing their energy and industrial structures, and developing green hydrogen and nuclear energy.
Full Text:
China-Africa Cooperation Forum | Beijing Declaration on Building a China-Africa Community with a Shared Future for the New Era (Full Text)
We, the heads of state, government leaders, heads of delegations, and the Chairperson of the African Union Commission from the People’s Republic of China and 53 African countries, held the China-Africa Cooperation Forum Beijing Summit from September 4 to 6, 2024, in China. The summit’s theme was “Joining Hands to Advance Modernization and Build a High-Level China-Africa Community with a Shared Future.” The summit unanimously adopted the “Beijing Declaration on Building a China-Africa Community with a Shared Future for the New Era.”
I. On Building a High-Level China-Africa Community with a Shared Future
China has noted the “Statement on Establishing a Unified Front for the Just Cause and Compensation Payments to Africa” released at the 37th AU Summit in February 2024, which opposes historical crimes such as slavery, colonialism, and apartheid and calls for compensation to restore justice to Africa. We believe that Eritrea, South Sudan, Sudan, and Zimbabwe have the right to decide their own destinies, continue to advance economic and social development, and demand that the West end long-term sanctions and unfair treatment of these countries.
China and Africa will continue to uphold the core values and principles of the World Trade Organization, oppose “decoupling and breaking chains,” resist unilateralism and protectionism, protect the legitimate interests of developing members, including China and Africa, and invigorate global economic growth. China supports achieving development-oriented results at the 14th WTO Ministerial Conference, which will be held on the African continent in 2026. China and Africa will actively participate in WTO reforms, advocating for reforms that build an inclusive, transparent, open, non-discriminatory, and fair multilateral trading system, strengthen the central role of development issues in WTO work, and ensure a comprehensive and well-functioning dispute settlement mechanism while upholding WTO’s basic principles. We condemn unilateral coercive measures by some developed countries that infringe on the sustainable development rights of developing countries and oppose unilateralism and protectionist measures such as carbon border adjustment mechanisms under the pretext of addressing climate change and protecting the environment. We are committed to creating a safe and stable supply chain for critical minerals to benefit the world and promote the sustainable development of China-Africa relations. We welcome the UN General Assembly’s initiative to establish a key minerals group for energy transition and call for assistance to raw material supplying countries to enhance their industrial chain value.
II. Promoting High-Quality Belt and Road Construction in Alignment with the African Union’s Agenda 2063 and the UN 2030 Sustainable Development Goals
(12) We will jointly implement the important consensus reached at the high-level meeting on “High-Quality Belt and Road Construction: Creating a Modern Development Platform for Consultation, Construction, and Sharing.” Guided by the Silk Road spirit of peace, cooperation, openness, inclusiveness, mutual learning, and win-win benefits, and in combination with the promotion of the AU’s Agenda 2063 and the China-Africa Cooperation Vision 2035, we will adhere to the principles of consultation, construction, and sharing, and uphold the concepts of openness, green development, and integrity. We aim to build the China-Africa Belt and Road Initiative into a high-standard, people-benefitting, and sustainable cooperative pathway. We will continue to align the high-quality Belt and Road construction with the AU’s Agenda 2063 goals, the UN 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda, and the development strategies of African countries, making greater contributions to international cooperation and global economic growth. African countries warmly congratulate the successful hosting of the 3rd Belt and Road Forum for International Cooperation in Beijing in October 2023. We unanimously support future UN summits and the positive “Future Pact” to better implement the UN 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda.
(13) As an important partner in Africa’s development agenda, China is willing to strengthen cooperation with the forum’s African member countries, the African Union and its affiliated institutions, and African sub-regional organizations. We will actively participate in implementing the African Infrastructure Development Plan (PIDA), the Presidential Infrastructure Champions Initiative (PICI), the African Union Development Agency – New Partnership for Africa’s Development (AUDA-NEPAD), the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP), and the Accelerated Industrial Development of Africa (AIDA) among other pan-African plans. We support Africa’s economic integration and connectivity, deepen and accelerate China-Africa cooperation on key cross-border and cross-regional infrastructure projects, and promote Africa’s development. We support aligning these plans with Belt and Road cooperation projects to enhance logistics connectivity between China and Africa and elevate trade and economic levels.
(14) We emphasize the significance of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), noting that full implementation of the AfCFTA will add value, create jobs, and boost economic development in Africa. China supports Africa’s efforts to strengthen trade integration and will continue to support the comprehensive establishment of the AfCFTA, the promotion of the Pan-African Payment and Settlement System, and the introduction of African products through platforms such as the China International Import Expo and the China-Africa Economic and Trade Expo. We welcome Africa’s use of the “green channel” for African agricultural products entering China. China is willing to sign joint economic partnership framework agreements with interested African countries, promoting more flexible and pragmatic trade and investment liberalization arrangements and expanding access for African countries. This will provide long-term, stable, and predictable institutional guarantees for China-Africa economic and trade cooperation, and China will expand unilateral access for the least developed countries, including African nations, and encourage Chinese enterprises to increase direct investment in Africa.
(15) We will enhance China-Africa investment cooperation, advance industry chain and supply chain cooperation, and improve the capacity for producing and exporting high-value-added products. We support our enterprises in actively using various mutually beneficial cooperation models, encourage financial institutions on both sides to strengthen cooperation, and expand bilateral local currency settlement and diversified foreign exchange reserves. China supports local-level trade and economic exchange platforms with Africa, promotes the development of local parks and Chinese economic and trade cooperation zones in Africa, and advances the construction of China’s central and western regions’ access to Africa. China encourages its enterprises to expand investment in Africa and employ local labor while fully respecting international law, local laws and regulations, customs, and religious beliefs, actively fulfilling social responsibilities, supporting local production and processing in Africa, and assisting African countries in achieving independent and sustainable development. China is willing to sign and effectively implement bilateral investment promotion and facilitation agreements to provide a stable, fair, and convenient business environment for enterprises from both China and Africa and safeguard the security and legitimate rights and interests of personnel, projects, and institutions. China supports the development of African SMEs and encourages Africa to make good use of the special loans for SME development. Both sides appreciate China’s Corporate Social Responsibility Alliance in Africa, which implements the “100 Companies, 1000 Villages” initiative to guide Chinese enterprises in Africa to fulfill their social responsibilities.
(16) We attach great importance to Africa’s development financing concerns and strongly call for international financial institutions to allocate more funds to developing countries, including African nations, and optimize the approval process for providing funds to Africa to enhance financing convenience and fairness. China is willing to continue supporting African financial institutions. Africa appreciates China’s significant contributions to debt management for African countries, including debt treatment under the G20 Debt Service Suspension Initiative’s Common Framework and the provision of $10 billion in IMF Special Drawing Rights to African countries. We call on international financial institutions and commercial creditors to participate in African debt management based on the principles of “joint action, fair burden,” and to assist African countries in addressing this critical issue. In this context, support for developing countries, including Africa, should be increased to provide long-term affordable financing for their development. We reiterate that sovereign ratings of developing countries, including those in Africa, affect their borrowing costs and should be more objective and transparent. We encourage the establishment of an African rating agency under the AU framework and the support of the African Development Bank to create a new evaluation system that reflects Africa’s economic uniqueness. We call for the reform of multilateral development banks to provide complementary development financing within their mandates, including increased subsidies, preferential financing, and the creation of new financing tools tailored to the needs of African countries, to help achieve sustainable development goals.
III. The Global Development Initiative as a Strategic Framework for Joint Actions in China-Africa Development
(17) We are committed to implementing the Global Development Initiative and actively engaging in cooperation under this framework to build high-quality partnerships. Africa appreciates China’s proposed actions under the Global Development Initiative to help expand food production in Africa and encourages China to increase agricultural investment and deepen technology cooperation. We welcome the “Friends of the Global Development Initiative” group and the “Global Development Promotion Center Network” in pushing the international community to focus on key development issues to accelerate the implementation of the UN 2030 Sustainable Development Goals and to ensure the success of future UN summits while addressing concerns of developing countries. We welcome the establishment of the China-Africa (Ethiopia)-UNIDO Cooperation Demonstration Center, aimed at promoting economic development in “Global South” countries.
(18) We will jointly implement the important consensus reached at the high-level meeting on “Industrialization, Agricultural Modernization, and Green Development: The Path to Modernization.” Africa appreciates the “Support for African Industrialization Initiative,” “China-Africa Agricultural Modernization Plan,” and “China-Africa Talent Training Cooperation Plan” announced at the 2023 China-Africa Leaders’ Dialogue, as these initiatives align with Africa’s priorities and contribute to integration and development.
(19) We support the roles of the China-Africa Environmental Cooperation Center, the China-Africa Ocean Science and Blue Economy Cooperation Center, and the China-Africa Geoscience Cooperation Center in promoting projects such as the “China-Africa Green Envoy Program,” “China-Africa Green Innovation Program,” and the “African Light Belt.” We welcome the active role of the China-Africa Energy Partnership, with China supporting African countries in better utilizing renewable energy sources such as photovoltaics, hydropower, and wind energy. China will further expand investments in low-emission projects, including energy-saving technologies, high-tech industries, and green low-carbon industries, to help African countries optimize their energy and industrial structures and develop green hydrogen and nuclear energy. China supports the operation of the AUDA-NEPAD Climate Resilience and Adaptation Center.
(20) To seize the historic opportunities of the new round of technological revolution and industrial transformation, China is willing to work with Africa to accelerate the development of new productive forces, enhance technological innovation and achievement transformation, and deepen the integration of the digital economy with the real economy. We must jointly improve global technology governance and create an inclusive, open, fair, just, and non-discriminatory technology development environment. We emphasize that the peaceful use of technology is an inalienable right granted to all countries by international law. We support the UN General Assembly resolution on “Promoting Peaceful Uses of Technology in International Security” and ensuring that developing countries fully enjoy the right to peaceful technology use. We commend the UN General Assembly’s consensus on the resolution “Strengthening International Cooperation on Artificial Intelligence Capacity Building.” Africa welcomes China’s proposals for the “Global Artificial Intelligence Governance Initiative” and the “Global Data Security Initiative” and appreciates China’s efforts to enhance developing countries’ rights in global governance of AI, cybersecurity, and data. China and Africa agree to work together to address the misuse of AI through measures such as establishing national codes of conduct and developing digital literacy. We believe that both development and security should be prioritized, continually bridging the digital and intelligence divides, jointly managing risks, and exploring international governance frameworks with the UN as the main channel. We welcome the Shanghai Declaration on Global Artificial Intelligence Governance adopted at the World Artificial Intelligence Conference in July 2024 and the African AI Consensus Declaration adopted at the High-Level Forum on AI in Rabat in June 2024.
IV. The Global Security Initiative Provides Strong Momentum for Joint Actions by China and Africa to Maintain International Peace and Security
We believe that the “African Peace and Security Architecture” is a powerful and ideal normative framework for addressing peace and security challenges and threats on the African continent and call on the international community to support this framework. Africa appreciates China’s “Horn of Africa Peace and Development Initiative.” We reaffirm our commitment to close cooperation on African peace and security issues within the United Nations Security Council to safeguard our common interests. We emphasize the importance of peace and the role of United Nations peacekeeping operations in maintaining international and African peace and security. China supports providing financial support for African-led peacekeeping operations under United Nations Security Council Resolution 2719. We commend Africa’s efforts in combating the growing threat of terrorism, particularly in the Horn of Africa and the Sahel region, and call for global counter-terrorism resources to be further allocated to developing countries, assisting African nations, especially those affected by terrorism, in strengthening their counter-terrorism capacities. We reaffirm our commitment to addressing new maritime security threats faced by coastal African countries, combating transnational organized crimes such as drug trafficking, arms trafficking, and human trafficking. China supports the AUDA-NEPAD’s proposed Peace, Security, and Development Nexus Plan and will support the implementation of related plans by the AU Post-Conflict Reconstruction and Development Center.
V. The Global Civilization Initiative Injects Vitality into Deepening Cultural and Civilizational Dialogue between China and Africa
VI. Review and Outlook on the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation