Russia ready to help China with energy ahead of Putin's visit, foreign minister says - VOUX MAG

CELEBRITIES NEWS

Hot

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Russia ready to help China with energy ahead of Putin's visit, foreign minister says

Russia ready to help China with energy ahead of Putin's visit, foreign minister says

MOSCOW, April 15 (Reuters) - Russia is ready to increase energy supplies to China ahead of an expected visit by ‌President Vladimir Putin, Russian news agencies quoted Foreign Minister ‌Sergei Lavrov as saying on Wednesday at a news conference in Beijing.

Reuters Russia's President Vladimir Putin holds talks with China's President Xi Jinping via video link from Moscow, Russia, February 4, 2026. Sputnik/Vyacheslav Prokofyev/Pool via REUTERS Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov walks for a meeting with China’s President Xi Jinping at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, April 15, 2026. Iori Sagisawa/Pool via REUTERS

Russia's President Putin holds talks via video link with China's President Xi

The agencies quoted ​Lavrov as saying that the visit would take place in the first half of the year, while the Vedomosti newspaper cited sources as saying it would be during the week beginning May 18.

President Xi ‌Jinping met Lavrov on ⁠Wednesday, assuring Moscow of China's friendship and saying that China and Russia must trust and support each ⁠other, deepen cooperation, and defend each other's interests.

U.S. President Donald Trump is also scheduled to meet Xi during his first visit to China ​in ​eight years on May 14 and ​15.

Advertisement

Lavrov told the news ‌conference that Russia was ready to help China and other countries affected by the Middle East crisis with energy supplies.

"Russia can, of course, make up for the resource shortfall facing both China and other countries that are interested in working with us on an ‌equal and mutually beneficial basis," Lavrov ​told the news conference in China.

Lavrov also ​said that Russia and ​China had all the necessary means to avoid reliance ‌on what he described as ​U.S. efforts to ​disrupt global energy markets through conflict in the Middle East.

"Thank God, China and Russia have every capability, including those already ​in use, reserve capacity, ‌and planned capacity, to avoid depending on such aggressive ​gambits, which undermine the global economy," he said.

(Writing by ​Gleb Bryanski; Editing by Mark Potter)