Ottawa,
Jan 1 : In September, two months after China's state-owned CNOOC Ltd
made an unexpected $15.1 billion bid for Canadian energy company Nexen Inc,
Canada's spy agency told ministers that takeovers by Chinese companies may
threaten national security.
The rare warning from the Canadian Security
Intelligence Service (CSIS), which was disclosed to as by intelligence sources,
did not stop the takeover. That was approved by Canadian authorities earlier
this month.
But the intervention and an influential U.S. lawmaker's
warning in October that Canadian companies should be careful about doing
business with Chinese telecom equipment companies Huawei Technologies Co and ZTE
Corp made the approval process for the deal more difficult than initially
expected.
"CSIS did not like the Nexen bid and thought it was a bad idea
for Chinese firms to be investing in the oil sands. It all played into their
greater fears about firms like Huawei," said one person familiar with the
agency's concerns. "They do not want to wake up one day and realize a crucial
sector of the economy is under the control of foreign interests."
And
after listening to the spy service, which usually keeps a low profile, Canada
drew up surprisingly tough foreign investment rules that were unveiled when
approving the Nexen deal, China's biggest-ever successful foreign takeover. In a
clampdown on companies it deems influenced by foreign governments, Canada will
block similar purchases in the future.
CSIS has been silent about what it
said to Ottawa on the Nexen transaction, and it declined to comment for this
story. It didn't specifically recommend the CNOOC deal be blocked, but rather
warned more generally about such deals with Chinese entities, the person
said.
In reality, the government was unlikely to want to block the CNOOC
bid, given a high-profile push by Prime Minister Stephen Harper earlier in the
year to boost ties with China, and given that a lot of Nexen's assets are
outside Canada, and it has underperformed other energy companies.
By
pushing back aggressively, CSIS ensured that it got foreign investment policy
tightened significantly to deter similar such takeovers by companies under the
sway of foreign governments.
"I think people at CSIS and elsewhere are
going 'Good. That was a very good response by the government'," said Ray
Boisvert, a former CSIS assistant director of intelligence, who retired this
year after almost three decades at the agency.
"It did reflect some of
those deep strategic concerns that practitioners have had about this kind of
investment."
Specific worries include theft of Canadian intellectual
property, espionage, computer hacking and foreign companies gaining too much
influence over crucial sectors of the economy, said the person familiar with the
agency's views.
The government could, in theory, nationalize assets if it
thought foreign control was problematic. But the pro-business Conservatives
would likely find it politically unpalatable to take such a step.
"To be
blunt, Canadians have not spent years reducing the ownership of sectors of the
economy by our own governments, only to see them bought and controlled by
foreign governments instead," Harper said as he announced the new investment
rules.
In October, the U.S. House of Representatives' Intelligence
Committee urged U.S. firms to stop doing business with Huawei and another
Chinese telecom equipment company ZTE on the grounds that Beijing could use
products made by the two companies to spy.
The House Intelligence
Committee's chairman, Rep. Mike Rogers, a Michigan Republican, urged Canada to
take a similar stance, and two days later, the Canadian government indicated it
would not let Huawei help build a secure government communications network
because of possible security risks.
"The Huawei business caused a lot of
political complications for the CNOOC bid," another person familiar with the
CNOOC deal said of the U.S. committee's report.
Both Huawei and ZTE have
repeatedly denied the allegations in the report, and China's foreign ministry
dismissed as "baseless" the idea that security concerns could impede commercial
ties.
"We hope that the relevant party can objectively and justly treat
Chinese companies' overseas investment and cooperation plans, and stop actions
which harm Chinese companies' image and do more to benefit the promotion of
bilateral trade and business cooperation," said ministry spokeswoman Hua
Chunying.
In its annual report, released in September, CSIS noted risks
that included espionage and illegal technology transfers, and said some foreign
state-owned enterprises had "pursued opaque agendas or received clandestine
intelligence support for their pursuits" in Canada.
The agency did not
give details, but added: "When foreign companies with ties to foreign
intelligence agencies or hostile governments seek to acquire control over
strategic sectors of the Canadian economy, it can represent a threat to Canadian
security interests."
CSIS, hit by controversy in 2010 after its head
suggested China had too much influence over some Canadian provincial
politicians, did not mention any country or firm in its report.
It is
unclear how much, if any, influence the United States had on the Canadian
authorities' foreign investment policy.
Fen Hampson, head of the global
security program at the Centre for International Governance Innovation in
Waterloo, Ontario, said he had learned that a U.S. official visited Ottawa in
the last few months to discuss mutual concerns about foreign state-owned
enterprises.
U.S. Ambassador David Jacobson said he was not aware of such
a meeting, but he noted that officials from the two countries met constantly. "I
would be surprised if almost any issue you could think of has not come up in one
or more of those conversations," he said. "The United States has not sought to
influence Canada's decision with respect to that (CNOOC's bid)... We respect
that decision."
The Canadian government did not respond to a request for
a comment.
Chinese companies have bought up smaller Canadian energy firms
before, but the July 23 bid for Nexen was their first attempt to buy one of the
larger players.
Nexen has assets in Canada, the North Sea, Nigeria and
the Gulf of Mexico. Technology that Nexen and its partners use for deep sea
drilling could interest CNOOC.
Asked about the CSIS concerns, a
spokeswoman for Industry Minister Christian Paradis replied: "The government has
the authority to take any measures it considers necessary to protect national
security."
Yet two people close to the deal noted that the Canadian
government did not exercise its option to do a separate review of the potential
security risks of the CNOOC-Nexen bid, again signaling its concerns were tied to
overall Chinese investment rather than to this particular deal.
Under the
new rules, which Paradis is responsible for enforcing, foreign state-owned
enterprises can no longer buy controlling stakes in assets in the oil sands, the
biggest reserve of crude oil outside Saudi Arabia and Venezuela.
Such
enterprises can buy minority stakes in the oil sands, or majority stakes in
companies outside the oil sands. Companies deemed to have strong government
links will be treated with particular caution wherever they propose to
invest.
"When it comes to our security and intelligence services, they
would rather pull up the drawbridge than let it down," said Hampson, co-author
of a report on trade ties between Canada and emerging nations that he discussed
with Harper in June.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Insight: Security fears dogged Canada debate on China energy bid
Insight: Security fears dogged Canada debate on China energy bid
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