China is showing an increasing interest in the countries around the Arctic. FOI, in collaboration with the American research organisation, RAND Corporation, has investigated Chinese activities in the Arctic and considered how they play a part in China’s economic statecraft.
Economic statecraft is the use of economic means to achieve strategic goals. It is considered China’s most useful foreign policy instrument, also in the Arctic. Images from Shutterstock and Poring Studio/Samuray Studio.
FOI and RAND published their respective reports in 2022. Researchers from FOI analysed Chinese activities in the Nordic countries and Russia, while RAND’s analysts studied the North American aspects. Few completely new activities were identified by FOI, although it was possible to discern a number of areas that could be of interest to China in future.
“For example, we flagged scientific research, the use of advanced technology and the expansion of infrastructure along the northern sea route,” says Christopher Weidacher Hsiung, a China researcher at FOI who, together with his colleague, Oscar Almén, wrote the report, China’s Economic Influence in the Arctic Region: The Nordic and Russian Cases.
Economic statecraft is the use of economic means to achieve strategic goals. It is considered China’s most useful foreign policy instrument.
“In general, China uses not only incentives, such as the potential for more trade and investment, but also punitive measures, such as sanctions, or import and export bans,” says Christopher Weidacher Hsiung.
The RAND report, China’s Strategy and Activities in the Arctic: Implications for North American and Transatlantic Security, concludes among other things that:
“This research was conducted as a collaborative effort between RAND and FOI, which allowed for fruitful discussions and exchanges of ideas during our entire research collaboration,” says Stephanie Pezard, associate research department director at the RAND Corporation.
In mid-June, representatives from RAND will visit FOI’s offices in Kista, for a two-day workshop. One of the purposes of the meeting between the two organisations is to plan the continuation of their joint activities on a number of topics. These include the future military capabilities of Russia, lessons learned from Russia’s war against Ukraine, civil defence and Western collective defence against Russia, as well as new technologies and long-term planning. Itis possible that, in future, other joint studies will follow, modelled along the lines of the present collaboration on studying China’s Arctic presence.