6:00: Morning News

China Energy requests meeting with state officials in China

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — A delegation made up of mostly state government officials will travel to China and Japan later this week for what’s being called a business development mission.

Ed Gaunch

State Commerce Secretary Ed Gaunch will lead the delegation that will leave Friday for an eight-day trip that will include stops in Beijing, Tokyo and Nagoya.

The stop in China will include meetings with officials from China Energy, the company that signed a memorandum of understanding with the state in 2017 with potential of $83 billion investment in West Virginia natural gas projects.

China Energy requested the visit, Gaunch said during an appearance Wednesday on MetroNews “Talkline.”

“We’re going really at their encouragement,” Gaunch said. “They’ve said, ‘We invite you. We want you. It would be helpful if you would come to China.’ So that’s why we’re going.”

Gaunch said he doesn’t know of any pending announcement of a specific China Energy project but he’s hopeful.

“I can hope like all other West Virginians that we will have an announcement forthcoming in the very near future. I don’t have any evidence of that heading into this trip that one is forthcoming immediately but we’re hopeful one will be coming shortly,” Gaunch said.

Back in November 2017, then-Commerce Secretary Woody Thrasher traveled to China to sign the MOU while President Donald Trump looked on.

Gov. Jim Justice spoke with excitement about the sheer amount of the potential investment.
“For crying out loud, it absolutely takes your breath,” Justice said at the time.

But the investment has also been shrouded in mystery. State officials have been unwilling to release the memorandum of understanding, and they also said they could not elaborate on specifics of the projects, saying they would evolve over the 20-year span of the agreement.

The signing of the MOU with China Energy took place in Nov. 2017 as President Trump looked on.

Executives from China Energy cancelled a trip to a petrochemical conference in the U.S. last June over the ongoing strain over trade between China and the U.S.

Some have doubted whether China Energy will make investments anywhere close to $83 billion. Gaunch said China Energy officials have remained interested and visited the state several times.

“I’d rather be the state that has this memo of understanding than the state that doesn’t,” Gaunch said.

The West Virginia delegation will also have a chance to meet with other Chinese companies during the visit in hopes of attracting more investment.

The trip to Japan will be used to thank representatives of the 21 Japanese businesses that already do business in the Mountain State along with meeting with some new prospects, Gaunch said.

The traveling party includes Gaunch, four representatives of the state Development Office, state Revenue Secretary Dave Hardy and Gov. Justice’s senior adviser Bray Cary, who Gaunch said would be paying his own way.

House of Delegates Speaker Roger Hanshaw and state Senate Majority Leader Tom Takubo, R-Kanawha, are also scheduled to be part of the delegation. Takubo won’t join the group until it arrives in Japan because of Saturday’s special session on education reform.





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