-
Advertisement
China trade
EconomyChina Economy

Despite loss of Panama Canal, China investing US$23.9b in global seaports: study

Beijing funds 363 ports outside the Panama Canal to safeguard against East-West decoupling and US bid to curb China’s supply chain influence

2-MIN READ2-MIN
5
Listen
A view of the Port of Balboa, managed by CK Hutchison Holdings based in Hong Kong, at the entrance to the Panama Canal in Panama City. On February 24, 2026, Hong Kong-based conglomerate CK Hutchison objected to a takeover by Panamanian authorities of two ports its subsidiary previously controlled on the Panama Canal. Photo: AFP
Ralph Jennings
Though a Hong Kong operator has lost control of the Panama Canal, one of the world’s most pivotal waterways for merchant ships, researchers said this week that Chinese state institutions have funded hundreds of other seaports around the world.

Specifically, they have invested a total of US$23.9 billion over the past quarter century in 363 ports and related activities abroad, according to AidData, a research lab at US university William & Mary. The lab called the investments a safeguard against East-West supply chain decoupling.

The research team’s just-released study said 45.1 per cent of the Chinese port finance portfolio goes to locales in 20 “high-income” countries including Australia, Brunei, New Zealand, Spain and Singapore, financing 30 individual ports.

Advertisement

“China’s nearly ubiquitous presence in the world’s top ports means that the US cannot currently insulate itself from Chinese supply chains, in either peacetime or conflict,” said the researchers in the study report, titled “Anchoring Global Ambitions, Beijing’s Ports Financing and the Race for Maritime Dominance”.

Years of China-US trade disputes, rising tariffs and export curbs have raised fears of supply-chain decoupling, which was accentuated in 2025, when US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Washington might push for delisting US-traded Chinese companies.

Advertisement
Last month, Panama took control of two ports at the Atlantic and Pacific entrances of the strategic Panama Canal after a Supreme Court ruling voided the concession of a Hong Kong conglomerate CK Hutchison subsidiary, a move that Washington called “in line with President Donald Trump’s drive to curb Chinese influence”.

The most heavily financed sites include Hambantota International Port in Sri Lanka, the Australian ports of Melbourne and Newcastle, the Autonomous Port of Kribi in Cameroon and Israel’s Haifa Port. Financing totals ranged from US$1.13 billion for Haifa to US$1.97 billion for Hambantota, AidData found.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x