Pomegranates, introduced to China more than 2,000 years ago from Central Asia, have become a name card for free trade propelled by the Silk Road.
Now a sought-after fruit in Xi'an, capital of Northwest China's Shaanxi province, pomegranate-made products from Azerbaijan, one of the main producers of the fruit, drew the attention of participants at the seventh Silk Road International Exposition which ended on Nov 20.
Pomegranate juice and wine from Azerbaijan were, for the first time, brought to the expo this year, which attracted guests from over 50 countries and regions.
"We hope to take the expo as an opportunity to establish long-term partnerships with Chinese distributors," said Teymur Nadiroghlu, trade representative at the embassy of the Republic of Azerbaijan in China.
Stressing that the two countries have long-established collaboration in the fields of construction, energy, logistics and tourism, Nadiroghlu said there is huge room for growth of sales of Azerbaijani food and beverage products in the Chinese market in the future.
The previous six editions of the Silk Road International Exposition had welcomed more than 10,000 overseas exhibitors from over 190 countries and regions, and the total amount of contracts signed for foreign investment projects had exceeded $45.3 billion in value.
China has signed more than 200 documents with 152 countries and 32 international organizations on cooperation under the Belt and Road Initiative, covering 83 percent of the countries with which the nation has established diplomatic relations.
The expo's role as a platform for BRI partner countries to tap the huge, ever-expanding Chinese market is becoming more prominent.
During a roundtable discussion at the expo, Mirzahmedov Bobirjon Batirovich, president of the Uzbek-Chinese Association for Development of Foreign Trade and Investment, said that although Uzbekistan is located in the hinterlands of Eurasia, the trade volume between it and China had exceeded $9 billion in 2022 thanks to the BRI.
Meanwhile, during this year's China-Central Asia Summit, the construction of a wharf project in Kazakhstan was officially launched, in accordance with an agreement inked between the Xi'an International Trade and Logistics Park and Kazakhstan's national railways group.
Not long ago, the two sides jointly witnessed the inauguration of a logistics terminal project in Almaty, which is expected to further enhance the operational capacity of China-Europe freight trains.
"The practice of jointly building the BRI shows that by connecting the Eurasian continent with land and sea routes, the landlocked area is no longer an economic desert, but at the forefront of driving development," said Wang Fan, president of China Foreign Affairs University.
Take the northwestern Chinese province of Shaanxi as an example. The BRI is transforming its geographical disadvantages into assets, making it an active player in the nation's opening-up drive.
Mao Xuzhi, vice-president of Hitachi Energy China, said market opportunities delivered by the BRI and global energy transformation have resulted in Hitachi Energy's production plant in Xi'an developing into the world's largest power capacitor manufacturing base, and its products are now exported to Europe, the United States, Oceania and Africa, which has further increased the company's confidence in the Chinese market.
Davit Mkhitaryan, vice-president of the Armenian Chinese Partnership Center, said that the center has signed memorandums of understanding on strategic cooperation with 57 Chinese government agencies, economic and trade associations and organizations, with 28 cooperation projects already in process.
"Since participating in the BRI, the trade volume between Armenia and China has shown almost threefold growth. China is our second-largest trading partner. We are very optimistic about the Chinese market and its development potential," Mkhitaryan said.