27/10/2025
27/10/2025
Chinese Vice President Han Zheng
BEIJING, Oct 27: Chinese Vice President Han Zheng will visit Saudi Arabia and Kuwait from Oct. 28 to Nov. 2, and then attend the Second World Summit for Social Development in Qatar upon invitation from Nov. 3 to 5, a foreign ministry spokesperson announced on Monday. Han will pay his visit at the invitation of Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince and Prime Minister Mohammed bin Salman and Kuwait’s Crown Prince Sheikh Sabah Al-Khaled Al-Sabah, according to the spokesperson. For Sazzad Abdul Hannan, a chauffeur in the Saudi capital, the deepening economic ties between China and Saudi Arabia are no longer distant headlines -- they play out every day from the driver’s seat. “In the past, most of my clients were locals or Europeans,” he said. “But now, Chinese businesspeople visiting Saudi Arabia for investment have become one of my main customer groups.” As the kingdom opens the ninth edition of the Future Investment Initiative conference (FII9) on Monday, a fl agship gathering on the Middle East’s investment calendar, nearly the entire fleet of Hannan’s company has been booked by Chinese firms attending the forum. His experience mirrors a sweeping regional trend: Chinese companies are setting their sights on the Middle East and emerging as key players in the region’s quest for diversified growth, a drive highlighted in the FII9’s theme -- The Key to Prosperity: Unlocking New Frontiers of Growth.
Expanding footprint Earlier this month, at Palm Jumeirah in Dubai, a sleek fl ying car rose nimbly into the sky. Under the gaze of Emirati royals and business leaders gathered below, the craft, developed by Chinese company XPENG AEROHT, hovered for a moment and then descended smoothly. The futuristic demonstration marked a symbolic milestone: the entry of China’s low altitude aviation technology into the Middle East. In recent years, Chinese companies have steadily expanded their presence across the region, moving beyond traditional partnerships in energy to high-tech industries such as solar power, smart logistics, new-energy vehicles, and cloud computing. Their investment footprint now stretches from the Gulf to the Mediterranean.
Along Saudi Arabia’s Red Sea coast, Chinese firms are deeply involved in key projects for NEOM, the kingdom’s ambitious “city of the future,” contributing to railway systems, data centers, and wind-power networks that support the goals of the country’s Vision 2030. In the northern Egyptian desert, the China-Egypt TEDA Suez Economic and Trade Cooperation Zone has attracted more than 180 enterprises. By forming industrial clusters in building materials, petroleum equipment, machinery manufacturing, home appliances, and textiles, it has become one of Egypt’s most productive industrial areas, providing jobs for nearly 10,000 local workers.
In the United Arab Emirates, more than 6,000 Chinese companies are active in such sectors as artificial intelligence, digital services, and cloud computing, helping power the country’s digital transformation. “Middle Eastern countries are pushing for industrial diversification and the growth of local manufacturing, which has created vast opportunities for Chinese enterprises to expand abroad,” said Cao Hui, executive director of Egypt-TEDA SEZone Development Company. “We’re very confident about the region’s prospects.” Echoing Cao’s view, a survey conducted by PwC between April and May found that Chinese companies’ confidence in the Middle Eastern market continued to rise, with nearly 90 percent of the enterprises surveyed planning to enter or further deepen their presence in the region.
Mutually reinforcing partnership Analysts say that the rapid expansion of Chinese companies in the Middle East and the region’s growing receptiveness toward them are reinforcing each other in a mutually beneficial cycle. “By creating tangible economic and social value locally, Chinese companies have earned the trust of host countries, and that trust provides a crucial foundation for their further growth,” Li Weibin, executive president of the Jereh Group, which operates across multiple Middle Eastern countries, told Xinhua. Today, Chinese enterprises and Middle Eastern economies are becoming increasingly interdependent. “Chinese companies have become a key component of local development, accelerating the implementation of major projects and providing flexible financial and technological solutions that enhance efficiency and reduce costs,” said Khaled Walid, a researcher at the Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies in Qatar. Experts note that the region’s openness to Chinese firms is driven not only by their technological and cost advantages, but also by their proactive adaptation to and respect for local economic and social contexts.
“Chinese companies respect local sovereignty and cultural norms, enabling Middle Eastern partners to pursue their own political and economic paths while receiving world-class investment,” said Diaa Helmy, secretary-general of the Egyptian-Chinese Chamber of Commerce. “This approach is highly valued and fosters stable, long-term partnerships focused purely on shared prosperity and development, without ideological preconditions,” Helmy added.
On a broader scale, the success of Chinese enterprises in the Middle East reflects the deepening ties and closer cooperation between China and the region. For example, under the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), China has signed cooperation documents with all 22 Arab nations and the League of Arab States, offering both a strategic framework and institutional safeguards for Chinese companies to grow in Middle Eastern markets. (Xinhua)
