Trade between China and African countries is estimated to be US$40 billion
last year, according to Foreign Ministry statistics. Some 750 Chinese
enterprises have invested a total of US$1 billion in the continent.
Hu said a joint declaration laying out specific measures to intensify
Sino-African co-operation would be issued at the China-Africa Co-operation Forum
summit to be held in Beijing in November.
Nigeria's Minister of State for Petroleum Edmund Daukoru said yesterday that
the Sino-Nigerian agreement "is a formalization of the four oil block contracts,
which include the maintenance and management of the Kaduna refinery and setting
up a power generation station."
In exchange, China will grant Nigeria 40 million yuan (US$5 million) for
infrastructure construction and 5 million yuan (US$624,000) for anti-malaria
drugs, training for Nigerians to control malaria and bird flu, and co-operation
in technology, according to other agreements signed the same day.
Last week, China's top offshore oil and gas producer, China National Offshore
Oil Corp Ltd, completed a deal to buy a stake in a Nigerian oil-mining licence
its biggest overseas acquisition.
"The main purpose of my visit is to deepen the Chinese-Nigerian relationship
and strengthen the partnership both politically and economically," Hu said at
the signing ceremony with Obasanjo.
Nigeria is the largest oil producer in Africa and the world's sixth-biggest
exporter.
During talks between the two leaders before the signing, Hu proposed to
expand partnerships in areas such as agriculture, energy, electricity,
infrastructure construction, telecommunications and satellite technology.
Obasanjo said Nigeria welcomes more investments from China; and spoke highly
of Beijing's policy of establishing industry in his country rather than the
wholesale export of finished products.
Analysts said the oil deal was a good fit for both countries.
"China is an emerging world economy; she needs oil," former Nigerian foreign
minister Bolaji Akinyemi said. "Nigeria needs as much investment as possible and
to diversify the sources of its income."
Sino-Nigerian trade volume was US$2.83 billion last year, up 29.6 per cent
from 2004, according to Foreign Ministry statistics.
China also has major investments in Nigeria's fast-growing telecoms industry
and has found a ready market for textiles and other finished goods.
"Stronger ties between China and Nigeria are long overdue," said Wang
Yusheng, former Chinese ambassador to Nigeria. "Many Chinese do business there
and contribute a lot to the regional development."
Hu is scheduled to arrive in Kenya today on a state
visit, the last stop of his five-nation tour, which has also taken him to the
United States, Saudi Arabia and Morocco.