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Alaskan Governor Bill Walker welcomes Chinese President Xi Jinping and first lady Peng Liyuan at the Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport on Friday evening. Photo: Courtesy of Bill Walker

Xi Jinping stops in Alaska after summit with Trump

Alaskan Governor Bill Walker hopes Chinese president’s visit will lead to increased trade for far north state

Chinese President Xi Jinping was able to take in views of the natural beauty Alaska has to offer on Friday night. The state’s governor hopes this will lead to an increased appetite in the world’s most populous nation for more natural resources from the sparsely populated state to the northwest of Canada.

Xi requested time with Governor Bill Walker on Friday night as the Chinese delegation’s plane made a refuelling stop in Alaska’s largest city following meetings with President Donald Trump in Florida.

The sightseeing tour included a stop at Beluga Point, a rocky outpost on the scenic Seward Highway about 15 miles south of Anchorage.

The point offers stunning views of the snow-capped Chugach Mountains and Turnagain Arm in Alaska’s Cook Inlet. The waters are home to the endangered Beluga whale.

Walker said he was eager to tell Xi about the abundance of Alaska’s resource development opportunities. “We have tremendous potential in our oil and gas, tourism, fish, air cargo and mineral resource industries,” Walker said in a statement issued before the meeting.

Chinese President Xi Jinping and first lady Peng Liyuan arrive at the Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport in Alaska on Friday evening. Photo: Courtesy of Bill Walker

For Walker, even just a few hours of time with the president of the world’s largest country can pay dividends.

China is the state’s top export market, buying nearly US$1.2 billion worth of goods in 2016, according to the US Census Bureau. The next top international market was Japan, at nearly US$820 million, followed by South Korea, at US$730 million.

Chris Hladick, the commissioner of the state’s Commerce department, called the visit by the Chinese delegation a “once-in-a lifetime opportunity.”

“We’re not even shown on the map for the United States,” he said, a nod to Alaska and Hawaii often being left off of maps of the US. “I think this is an extremely valuable opportunity to meet with our largest trade partner face to face.”

The state’s top export product to China is fish, accounting for 58 per cent. Frozen cod and flat fish, such as halibut, topped a lengthy list of fisheries products, which also included frozen salmon and pollock.

I think this is an extremely valuable opportunity to meet with our largest trade partner face to face
Chris Hladick, commissioner of Alaska’s commerce department

A distant second on the export list are minerals and ores, accounting for 27 per cent. Included in that last year was about US$130 million of precious metals, which Hladick said was likely gold from the Fairbanks area.

Lower-tier exports included oil, wood, scrap metal and aeroplane parts.

Hladick sees China as a potential market for Alaska coal and hoped to raise the issue with Chinese officials during their visit. “It’s meetings like this that spark interest and then you follow up,” Hladick said.

Having your largest trade partner drop in for a meeting is fortuitous when the state is in tough financial straits because of a prolonged period of low oil prices. Hladick said he’d be happy to get a 45-minute meeting with the Chinese trade minister.

Walker has been courting Asian markets — particularly Japan and South Korea — in trying to drum up interest in a liquefied natural gas project the state is pursuing. State officials wouldn’t say if Walker would bring up the natural gas pipeline, which is in its early stages, during his visit with Xi, but it seemed unlikely that he wouldn’t take time to tout the multibillion dollar project that would take natural gas from Alaska’s North Slope to a plant on the state’s coast, where it would be liquefied and shipped.

Xi is the second major world leader to spend time in Alaska’s largest city in the last few years. Then US president Barack Obama used a three-day trip to Anchorage in 2015 to showcase the impact of climate change. King Harald V of Norway also made an official visit to Anchorage a few months before Obama.

Alaska’s location provides a natural stopping point for world leaders to make refuelling stops, and Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage has hosted many presidents over the years for these short stints.

President Ronald Reagan and Pope John Paul II met in 1984 during refuelling stops at the airport in Fairbanks. Their paths were crossing as one finished and one began trips to Asia.

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