Beijing to supply development funds for projects such as hydropower and roads, South Sudan information minister says.

China has offered South Sudan $8bn in development funds for road, hydropower, infrastructure and agriculture projects, South Sudan’s information minister has said.

The loan came after Salva Kiir, the country’s president, visited Beijing to secure support from China, which has major oil interests in both South Sudan and its northern neighbour Sudan.

A long-brewing conflict between Sudan and South Sudan over oil export fees, border demarcation and citizenship has halted nearly all oil production in the two countries, who sit atop one of Africa’s most significant oil resources.

South Sudan depends on oil for nearly 98 per cent of its state revenue and the shutdown has puts its economy under pressure.

“China has offered financial funding to the value of $8bn for major development projects,” Information Minister Barnaba Benjamin said.

The funds will be provided over the next two years and the projects will be conducted by Chinese companies, Benjamin said.

China is already the biggest investor in oilfields in South Sudan, through state-owned Chinese oil companies China National Petroleum and Sinopec.

The Asian economic powerhouse has had to play a delicate balancing act with the two countries, since Beijing is also one of Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir’s major supporters.

When landlocked South Sudan seceded from Sudan last year, it took three-quarters of the region’s oil production, while the pipelines to export the oil are mostly in Sudan.

South Sudan is considering building two alternative pipelines, one to a port in Kenya and another through Ethiopia and Djibouti.