Putin Leaves Beijing Empty-Handed After Xi Talks Fail to Seal Gas Pipeline Deal
Vladimir Putin’s three-day state visit ended without the long-awaited agreement on the Power of Siberia 2 pipeline. Talks in Beijing exposed growing friction over pricing and infrastructure, despite the veneer of strategic unity. Russia’s energy ambitions face a harsh reality as Chinese demands tighten.
BEIJING — Russian President Vladimir Putin departed Beijing on Saturday without the landmark energy deal he had sought, capping a high-profile visit that showcased deepening ties but also exposed sharp divergences over one of the world’s most critical partnerships.
After three days of closed-door negotiations and ceremonial pageantry, including a red-carpet arrival and a military band playing *Moscow Nights*, the two sides failed to finalize terms on the $40 billion project. Chinese officials insisted on stricter pricing formulas, stricter payment schedules, and greater control over pipeline routing—demands that Moscow viewed as unacceptable encroachments on its sovereign control of energy exports.
Key Points
- ⚡ Putin sought a deal on Power of Siberia 2 but left without one
- 📉 China pushed for lower prices and faster payment terms
- 🌐 The failure highlights growing leverage of Beijing in energy talks
Putin and Xi Jinping, who have met over 40 times since 2013, framed their relationship as a bulwark against Western pressure during joint statements. They condemned “irresponsible” U.S. nuclear policy and criticized Washington’s missile defense ambitions, echoing a shared narrative of encirclement. Yet beneath the diplomatic choreography lay unspoken tensions—particularly around energy, a sector where mutual dependence is high but trust is thin.
| Aspect | Russian Position | Chinese Position |
|---|---|---|
| Pricing | Long-term contracts with indexed European benchmarks | Fixed or capped prices tied to Asian LNG markets |
| Payment Terms | Annual settlement with 90-day grace period | Quarterly prepayment and penalties for delays |
| Pipeline Routing | Full Russian control over route and ownership | Shared oversight with Chinese participation in operations |
Analysts note that China’s bargaining power has surged as Russia’s isolation deepens following Western sanctions. While Russia still supplies 10% of China’s gas via the existing Power of Siberia 1 pipeline, Beijing now commands the upper hand in negotiations, demanding concessions that Moscow can ill afford to refuse.
💡 Pro Tip
Avoid tying energy contracts to single buyers in geopolitically volatile markets. Diversify export routes and buyers to maintain leverage.
Sources inside the Russian delegation revealed that Chinese negotiators walked out of a critical session on Thursday, only returning after Putin personally intervened. The standoff centered on a clause requiring China to purchase a minimum volume of gas annually—regardless of market conditions—a demand Russia saw as a non-starter. By Friday evening, both sides had agreed to study the issue further, with no timeline set for resolution.
📋 By The Numbers
- 10% — Share of China’s total gas imports currently supplied by Russia
- 46 — Number of times Putin and Xi have met since 2013
- $40 billion — Estimated cost of the Power of Siberia 2 pipeline
The failure comes amid a broader shift in global energy flows. Chinese imports of Russian gas have risen 15% this year, but Beijing now insists on contracts that minimize price volatility and maximize flexibility. Meanwhile, Russia’s Gazprom is under pressure to find new revenue streams after losing access to European markets, making China its most vital but exacting customer.
- 2023 — First Power of Siberia 1 pipeline launched, carrying 15 billion cubic meters annually
- 2024 — China begins demanding stricter terms for future contracts
- November 2025 — Putin’s visit to Beijing aimed at finalizing Power of Siberia 2
- March 2026 — Next round of talks scheduled in Moscow
The breakdown underscores a paradox at the heart of the Russia-China axis: their alignment against the West is real, their rhetoric is coordinated, but their interests—especially in energy—are increasingly misaligned. As Putin boarded his jet Saturday evening, the absence of a deal spoke louder than any diplomatic communiqué.