From whisky distilleries, breweries and pubs to well-known high street names: Full list of Chinese investments in Scotland as fears grow over Beijing buy-up
From whisky distilleries, breweries and pubs to well-known high street names: Full list of Chinese investments in Scotland as fears grow over Beijing buy-up
Full list of Chinese investments in Scotland as fears grow over Beijing buy-up

cross-posted from: https://scribe.disroot.org/post/5194763
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China's well-documented strategy of investing in British companies and infrastructure means that Beijing has a huge presence in Scotland with everything from whisky and beer to wind farms and North Sea oil and gas under Chinese control.
The Sunday Times has compiled 'The China List' – first published in 2021 and updated two years later – which shows the Chinese state owns UK assets worth £45billion. In total, Chinese and Hong Kong investors own a portfolio worth £152bn including huge stakes in companies such as HSBC, AstraZeneca, Shell, BP and Diageo.
Infamously, Beijing's assets include a 33% stake in the Hinkley Point C nuclear power station and a 100% stake in UK Power Networks, which runs the power grid across London and south east England.
But one of the most lucrative investments is the 49% stake in Neptune Energy, a German firm with North Sea oil and gas assets. Over five years, it returned £294m in dividends to the China Investment Corporation.
Red Rock Renewables is based in Edinburgh, although it is a subsidiary of China's State Development and Investment Corporation. In September, it was reported that Red Rock was looking to sell its portfolio of Scottish wind farms, which was valued at £500m to £700m.
They include the Beatrice offshore wind farm in the Moray Firth, which can power up to 450,000 homes, and the Afton and Benbrack onshore wind farms.
A new report by the China Chamber of Commerce in the UK shows that 4.1% of Chinese-owned companies in the UK are headquartered in Scotland – the highest percentage outside London and the south east of England. Also, 27.4% of Chinese firms in the UK have Scottish operations.
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I mean legally enforcing 51% ownership by nationals is a pretty simple and effective policy to implement if this is an issue, but political donors don't tend to like rules on ownership.
Cracks me up that HSBC is included in their list though, considering it stands for "Hong-kong & Shanghai Banking corporation". I'd be surprised if their owners weren't from that part of the world, frankly
The UK has long encouraged external investment. As our capitalists don't invest in Britain. A cap on external owners likely to go down like a bag of sick also, due to Britain being an international market. Sure, we don't have NASDAQ or Dow Jones levels, but the FTSE is big. And it is dependable, in particular: pensions love it. Including external pensions, who generally don't want to cause any strife either