
Arabian Post Staff -Dubai

A new Qingdao Overseas Integrated Service Centre launched at the China‑Arab Business Forum in Qingdao is set to deepen commercial ties between China and the Gulf region by enhancing the current $400 billion trade corridor.
Abdulla Albasha Alnoaimi, UAE commercial attaché to China, and Zeng Zanrong, Qingdao’s municipal party secretary, formally unveiled the centre, established by SepcoIII Electric Power Construction Co and Hisense Group. Drawing on their extensive foothold in the UAE and the broader Middle East, the centre is intended to act as a bridge to support Chinese firms entering Arab markets.
At the forum, 40 projects worth $5.93 billion were signed, spanning high‑end equipment, new energy, advanced materials and next‑generation information technology. These agreements signal a deliberate shift towards elevating the technological content and sophistication of trade between the regions.
Bilateral trade between China and Arab countries reached more than $400 billion in 2024, compared to just $36.7 billion in 2004, marking a ten‑fold rise over two decades. Saudi Arabia and the UAE led these exchanges, recording $107.53 billion and $101.838 billion respectively in 2024, with the latter growing by 7.2 per cent year‑on‑year.
Mohammed Saqib, secretary‑general of the CHIMENA Business Council, emphasised the centre’s role in aligning public and private sectors to drive economic cooperation, cultural exchange and joint investment initiatives. He noted it will act through mechanisms such as overseas industrial parks, procurement matching and international exhibitions.
China’s expansion into the Gulf forms part of its broader geopolitical strategy to diversify trade alliances and reduce dependency on Western markets, especially the US. Chinese firms are now deeply involved in infrastructure development across the MENA region, including ports, industrial zones, and renewable energy projects.
The forum drew 465 multinational firms, including 135 from the Fortune Global 500 and 330 leading industry enterprises across 43 countries. Three focused matchmaking sessions brought together over 300 Chinese companies with counterparts in Egypt, the UAE and Saudi Arabia.
Co‑hosts of the event included the Qingdao municipal government, China’s Ministry of Commerce and the Shandong provincial department of commerce, signalling full institutional support and coordination.
With its strategic location in the UAE, the centre is expected to catalyse an export‑oriented alliance, supporting Chinese firms in sectors such as energy, manufacturing and new materials, as well as bolstering the implementation of the Belt and Road Initiative across Gulf markets.
This initiative aligns with a historical trajectory of Sino‑Arab exchange, tracing back over two millennia via the Silk Route. Contemporary developments reflect a sharpened focus on innovation‑driven partnerships.
The unfolding dynamics underscore a growing economic interdependence between China and Gulf states. The QOISC adds an institutional anchor to sustain momentum, foster deeper investment flows, and integrate advanced technology and green energy into bilateral commerce.
However, observers caution China must continue to navigate geopolitical sensitivities, particularly in managing strategic competition with the US and ensuring sustainable and balanced partnerships that benefit local economies.
Also published on Medium.