The arbitration ruling on the South China Sea might have added extra fuel to pre-existing tensions in the disputed waters, but instead of resorting to more belligerent rhetoric, Beijing and other claimants appear to be ready to invest in fostering cooperation and reviving joint development initiatives in the contested region.
"Their gestures include an agreement between China and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) to finalize a framework for the Code of Conduct in the South China Sea before mid-2017 and a host of accommodating trilateral arrangements among China and new leaders in the Philippines and Vietnam," Texas-based think tank Stratfor detailed in its latest analysis.
"Their gestures include an agreement between China and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) to finalize a framework for the Code of Conduct in the South China Sea before mid-2017 and a host of accommodating trilateral arrangements among China and new leaders in the Philippines and Vietnam," Texas-based think tank Stratfor detailed in its latest analysis.
China and the Philippines, the country that brought the case to the Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA), have recently discussed possible regional joint development projects during a meeting between former Philippine President Fidel Ramos and Chinese experts. One specific initiative that was mentioned involved developing fishing farms in the disputed waters.
In addition, Beijing has indicated that it wants to expand cooperation with Hanoi, using in a plan that will be modeled after the existing joint development and delimitation agreement the countries have applied in package in the Gulf of Tonkin as the basis.
Beijing's rediscovered interest in cooperation seems to go beyond the South China Sea. "China and Japan appear ready to resume a long-stalled dialogue on natural gas exploration in the East China Sea," Stratfor said.
The idea is not new. Policymakers in China have championed joint development initiatives since the 1990s, but the majority of projects were not carried out. Other countries that Beijing courted have largely remained suspicious of China's true intensions in the region. In addition, China wanted its potential partners to recognize its territorial claims, which is a non-starter.
Only time will tell whether Beijing is ready to become more flexible on the issue, but "to many claimant countries," Stratfor said, "developing maritime resources in the disputed areas of the South China Sea has become more of a crucial economic imperative than ever."
Take Vietnam, for instance. "With its near-shore oil and natural gas blocks long past their peak productivity, [Hanoi] needs new energy sources to satisfy its domestic economy and provide export revenue to pay for its growing demand for imported refined oil products," the analysts explained. For its part, "the Philippines has some natural gas production but imports virtually all of its crude oil," they said.
As a result, "the oil and natural gas potential in the South China Sea, particularly around Reed Bank and its commercially viable proven reserves of natural gas, is too high to ignore," the think tank explained. But in Beijing's case developing maritime resources in the South China Sea meets the country's "strategic interests far more than its economic ones."
"In theory, joint development arrangements could allow Beijing to justify its dominance of the South China Sea and expand outreach in areas in which it has no legal claim in a more cooperative manner, all while allowing claimants to acquire the resources they want," the analysts said. But it all will depend on China's willingness to "dampen its sovereignty claims now that it has established its tactical advantages" in the region.
This story first appeared on Sputnik & is reposted here with permission.