MOSCOW (MRC) -- China's Foreign Ministry on Monday called for talks after Costa Rica's state-run oil company Recope said last week it had decided to abandon a USD1.5-billion refinery upgrade project it was working on with China National Petroleum Corp. (CNPC), said Reuters.
In 2009, the two firms formed a company called Soresco, with each putting in USD50 million. But the project has been paralyzed since 2013 by Costa Rica's comptroller after complaints of conflicts of interest in the feasibility studies.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang said he had noted the media reports on the issue, adding that relations have been developing well in recent years.
"As for individual problems that arise during our cooperation, we hope the relevant companies in both countries can continue to increase communication, understand each other's concerns and find an appropriate resolution," he told a daily news briefing, without elaborating.
Costa Rica made the surprise move of breaking off its decades-long relationship with Taiwan in 2007, now only recognized by a handful of small countries, including the rest of Central America.
China lent Costa Rica nearly USD400 million in 2013 during a visit by Chinese President Xi Jinping.
As MRC informed earlier, China's March refinery throughput fell 0.2% compared with the same period a year earlier to 44.91 million tons, or 10.58 MMbpd. The daily run rate in March was largely unchanged from the 10.59 MMbpd recorded in the first two months this year. China's crude oil output fell 3.9% on year to 17.37 million tons, the bureau said.
MRC