After decades of growing complex global interdependence, a new discourse of geopolitical contest has replaced optimism about globalisation and international cooperation. The likely future role of China is at the centre of this discourse. Meanwhile China is developing new forms of interdependence, constructing new trans-regional institutions, platforms, and projects, in which a central role is played by its Belt and Road Initiative. The reaction of the US and its allies has been primarily geopolitical, pursuing strategic competition with China and suspicious of China's contributions to global governance as destabilizing to world order. In this new era of uncertainty and change, risks abound for a wide range of actors seeking to benefit from and manage risks and opportunities in interdependence with China. A non-normative political risk approach is taken to examine China's Belt and Road in the context of a changing world order.