China in Latin America: May 2025
from China Strategy Initiative and China 360
from China Strategy Initiative and China 360

China in Latin America: May 2025

Chinese leader Xi Jinping, Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Chilean President Gabriel Boric, and Colombian President Gustavo Petro attend a group photo session before the opening ceremony for the China-CELAC Forum ministerial meeting.
Chinese leader Xi Jinping, Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Chilean President Gabriel Boric, and Colombian President Gustavo Petro attend a group photo session before the opening ceremony for the China-CELAC Forum ministerial meeting. REUTERS/Florence Lo/Pool

In May, China hosted the fourth ministerial meeting of the China-Community of Latin America and Caribbean States (CELAC) Forum in Beijing. Colombia signed onto the Belt and Road Initiative. Public opinion polling showed the United States is ceding ground to China in South America.

June 4, 2025 9:28 am (EST)

Chinese leader Xi Jinping, Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Chilean President Gabriel Boric, and Colombian President Gustavo Petro attend a group photo session before the opening ceremony for the China-CELAC Forum ministerial meeting.
Chinese leader Xi Jinping, Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Chilean President Gabriel Boric, and Colombian President Gustavo Petro attend a group photo session before the opening ceremony for the China-CELAC Forum ministerial meeting. REUTERS/Florence Lo/Pool
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Current political and economic issues succinctly explained.

Trade: Last year, trade between Latin America and China exceeded $500 billion for the first time. Brazil is hoping to take advantage of renewed trade tensions between the United States and China to boost soy exports to China, potentially resulting in an additional $7 billion in profits due to President Donald Trump’s tariffs. In 2024, Brazil supplied more than 70 percent of China’s soy imports.

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Additionally, Chinese state-owned agricultural conglomerate Cofco is building its largest export terminal outside China at the Port of Santos in Brazil. The state-owned enterprise expects the terminal to boost exports of Brazilian corn, sugar, and soybeans from 4.5 million tons to 14 million tons by 2026.

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Argentina and China signed a nonbinding agreement for China to import $900 million of soybeans, corn, and vegetable oil.

Bolivia signed an agreement with China to export certain leather products to the Chinese market.

Reuters reported that more than $1 billion in Venezuelan oil shipments to China were disguised as Brazilian oil over the last year to circumvent U.S. sanctions.

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In an interview with the Financial Times, outgoing Secretary-General of the Organization of American States Luis Almagro said that trade with China was essential for the region and that, without it, there would be a “regional economic disaster.”

China-CELAC Forum: The fourth ministerial meeting of the China-Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) Forum took place in Beijing in May. Colombian President Gustavo Petro, Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (“Lula”), and Chilean President Gabriel Boric were the three heads of state who attended the forum.

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China sought to use the forum to project a united front with Latin American leaders that would also usher in a new “golden decade” of cooperation between China and the region. Chinese leader Xi Jinping announced a new ¥ 66 billion ($9.2 billion) credit line for the region, less than half of what Beijing offered during the China-CELAC Forum in 2015. Xi also pledged closer ties with Latin America through political, academic, and security exchanges. He also promised to increase imports from Latin America and encourage Chinese firms to boost investments in the region. The Chinese leader also singled out Trump without explicitly naming him by remarking that “[b]ullying and coercion only lead to isolation.” It was also announced that five Latin American countries (Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Peru, and Uruguay) would receive visa exemptions for travel to China beginning June 1. Panama was not granted visa exemptions.

Lula also completed a state visit in Beijing, his third meeting with Xi since Lula returned to the Brazilian presidency in 2023. He brought 11 ministers, several high-ranking politicians, and a delegation of more than 150 business leaders. The two sides signed thirty agreements, and Brazil’s trade and investment promotion agency announced that Brazil had secured $5 billion in investment by Chinese companies, including a $1 billion investment from China’s Envision Energy to produce sustainable aviation fuel in Brazil. The two countries’ central banks also agreed to a R$ 157 billion ($28 billion) currency swap agreement over a five-year period.

Petro signed a joint cooperation plan on the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) during his visit to Beijing. His decision will likely inject further uncertainty into Colombia’s relationship with the United States. Prior to Petro’s announcement of his intention to sign on to China’s BRI, outgoing U.S. Special Envoy for Latin America Maurico Claver-Carone remarked, “President Petro’s rapprochement with China is a great opportunity for Ecuadorian roses and Central American coffee,” in a thinly veiled warning to Colombia. On May 15, the State Department announced that the United States would oppose any funds from multilateral lenders, such as the Inter-American Development Bank, for Chinese companies in Colombia and other countries in the region that have joined BRI.

Colombia also petitioned to join the New Development Bank (formerly known as the BRICS Development Bank). Petro announced that Colombia could purchase $512 million worth of shares in the bank.

Other Latin American government officials met with their Chinese counterparts on the sidelines of the forum. Guyanese Foreign Minister Hugh Todd met with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, and the officials pledged to bolster cooperation between their two countries in energy and minerals. Ecuadorian Economy and Finance Minister Sariha Moya convened with representatives from several Chinese banks to discuss potential financing opportunities for Ecuadorian President Daniel Noboa’s initiatives in renewable energy and infrastructure.

Investment: China’s new ambassador to Guyana, Yang Yang, wrote an op-ed in the Stabroek News, highlighting that Chinese investment in Guyana has increased forty-fold between 2019 and 2024.

Brazilian Planning Minister Simone Tebet announced that her government was having discussions with China about constructing a railway linking Brazil to the Port of Chancay in Peru.

On May 5, Ecuadorian state-owned oil company Petroecuador inked an agreement with Chinese state-owned oil company Sinopec to drill new wells in the Orellana and Sucumbíos provinces.

On May 7, Chile’s economic development agency announced that two Chinese companies, BYD and Tsingshan, were withdrawing from plans to build lithium cathode plants in Chile, citing declines in global lithium prices.

A delegation of Chinese officials and business leaders traveled to Argentina to discuss new and expanded commercial opportunities between the two countries.

U.S.-China Competition in Latin America: House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence Chair Rick Crawford (R-AR) and Representative Ronny Jackson (R-TX) took a trip to Barbados, Guyana, and Suriname in late April. When they returned, Crawford remarked that the United States has taken its eye off the ball in the Caribbean, which has allowed China to come in and fill the void.

During a meeting with Peruvian Defense Minister Walter Astudillo and Peruvian Foreign Affairs Minister Elmer Schialer, U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth stated that China posed a threat to hemispheric security.

In a press conference outside his official residence, new U.S. Ambassador to Panama Kevin Cabrera remarked that his first priority was to strengthen U.S.-Panama bilateral efforts to “counter harmful influences in the region, such as that of China” and that “China is not a good ally neither for Panama nor for our hemisphere.” The Chinese Embassy in Panama issued a statement refuting Cabrera’s claims. A few weeks later, Cabrera posted on X that he would work to ensure the Panama Canal’s neutrality and defend it “from the malign influence of the Chinese Communist Party and its proxies in Panama and throughout our hemisphere.”

U.S. Ambassador to Guatemala Tobin Bradley warned at a regional security conference that using Chinese technology or doing business with China carried risks for Latin American governments.

In an interview with NBC News’ Meet the Press, Trump repeated his claim that China took over the Panama Canal. He asserted, without evidence, that around five months ago, more than 80 percent of the signs around the Panama Canal were in Chinese.

Panama Canal: China’s Ministry of Commerce spokesperson He Yongqian warned parties involved in the sale of CK Hutchison’s Panama ports to “proceed with caution,” as China continues to review the deal.

Public Opinion Polling: Public opinion polling from the Economist spotlights that although the United States remains most popular in South America, it is quickly ceding ground to China. Atlas Intel published another survey in which 49 percent of respondents stated they believe China provided better investment and financing opportunities, compared to 32 percent who said the same about the United States. In Brazil, 58.6 percent of respondents think China has more economic sway over Brazil than any other country, including the United States.

Diplomacy: In a meeting with Wang in Beijing, Bolivian Foreign Minister Celinda Sosa Lunda expressed her country’s gratitude for China’s support in getting Bolivia into BRICS, the bloc of nations including Brazil, Russia, India, and China.

Security: Vistazo and Código Vidrio, two Ecuadorian news outlets, published a report about Chinese secret police operating in Ecuador.

Poly Technologies, a subsidiary of China Poly Group Corporation, agreed to supply defense equipment to Nicaragua’s military. The Nicaraguan government also signed agreements with three other Chinese companies to develop Nicaragua’s digital infrastructure and supply a fleet of buses and municipal cleaning machinery.

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