Dilma Rousseff Photo: Xinhua
China and Brazil have built a close relationship in the past five decades that is
MKS sports"complementary and integrated" in multiple economic fronts, Dilma Rousseff, the chair of the New Development Bank and former president of Brazil, told the Global Times in an exclusive interview.
She noted that the political and economic exchange between the two countries is also marked by booming relationship between China and the Latin America.
"China and Brazil understand each other in a multi-polar world. We have a lot of common understandings, for example in ensuring a development that is sustainable and protect the climate, and a development that is people-centered and against inequalities. The most important thing right now is that we [both as developing countries], can contribute to global governance and create conditions for building a community with share future," Rousseff said.
This year marks the 50th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between China and Brazil. According to Rousseff, there's also a regional cooperation "mark" that is shaping the development of bilateral relations between China and Brazil.
The year of 2024 is the 10th anniversary of the establishment of the China- Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) Forum, a milestone mechanism that facilitate China-Latin American relations into a new era, featuring equality, mutual benefit, innovation, openness and tangible benefits for the people.
Rousseff noted that China and Brazil have made great common investments in area of subjects including satellites and energy fields, and China has invested a lot in the exploration of crude oil and natural gas in Brazil.
"Back to the year of 2004, there were two important things: the first is Brazil recognized China as an economic market after China's admission to the WTO in 2001. The second is that a Chinese company won a contract to construct a 1,000-kilometer-long gas pipeline that linked Brazil's southeast with northeast regions," Rousseff said.
For the Brazilian economy, the contribution of China is very important, Rousseff stressed, exemplified by China's huge imports of Brazilian protein products such as beef, chicken and pork, as well as Chinese investment in such sectors as new energy, pharmaceuticals, vaccine production and biotechnology - among others - which facilitates Brazil's new industrialization push.
It is expected that the two countries will keep on deepening cooperation in agriculture, bio refineries, organic fertilizer production, artificial intelligence and robots, she said, adding that the huge Chinese market is also a drawer for Brazilian companies.
China has become Brazil's largest trading partner for consecutive 15 years, and Brazil is currently China's ninth-largest trading partner. Last year, bilateral trade between China and Brazil expanded 6.1 percent year-on-year to reach $181.5 billion, customs data showed.