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How the global water crisis can help the US-China détente

The Biden administration’s season of engagement with China has at last led to tangible progress. A series of China visits by high-ranking administration officials led to the announcement of a new structure for U.S.-China economic dialogue, under which newly created U.S.-China working groups will meet to discuss policy and exchange information.

This is an important development — it represents a concrete step forward in the administration’s China strategy of “invest, align, compete” and a strong counter to the factions in both the U.S. and China that seek outright confrontation. But working groups and information exchange only go so far. What will it take to transform the promise of the new framework into genuine, concrete progress on the ground?

To produce concrete results, attack the global water crisis.

The way to accomplish this is to identify a collaborative project — one that produces tangible outcomes, attacks an urgent problem and represents a win for the U.S., China and the world.

The global water crisis presents exactly this opportunity. Here is why:

The challenge with these technologies is that many of them are in the early stages of research and development, and that makes them extremely expensive, effectively beyond the reach of nations in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia that need them the most.

That — and the need to move quickly — means that the right vehicle for a U.S.-China water collaboration is not a government-to-government project but rather a public-private water technology investment fund, managed and run by a team of investment professionals in collaboration with the U.S., China, other water-technology-savvy nations such as Saudi Arabia, Israel, Singapore and South Africa, and multilateral institutions such as the World Bank, the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and others.

There are several reasons why an investment fund makes sense:

Models for such a fund exist – the Millennium Challenge Corporation is one example; another is the recently announced NATO $1.2 billion venture capital fund designed to boost the alliance’s technology edge, which the U.S. declined to join.

Of course, the details of the fund’s structure, management and focus would have to be matters for negotiation. But the promise of the fund should be clear — both for U.S.-China relations and for all the nations and regions that struggle with the massive impact of the water crisis. 

Those officials in the U.S. and China who genuinely seek cooperation within the framework of “invest, align, compete” would do well to remember the words of Laozi. “Nothing in the world is as soft and yielding as water,” he wrote in the Tao Te Ching. “Yet for dissolving the hard and inflexible, nothing can surpass it.”

Sadek Wahba is chair of the Wahba Institute for Strategic Competition at the Wilson Center. He is the author of the forthcoming book “Build: Investing in America’s Infrastructure” published by Georgetown University Press. He is a member of President Biden’s National Infrastructure Advisory Council and Chairman of I Squared Capital. The views expressed in this article do not necessarily represent those of NIAC or I Squared Capital.