Beijing Review

A New High

Sinofrench cooperatio­n advances with tangible results across many dimensions

- By Wen Qing

Located in downtown Shanghai, Yuyuan Garden, which was built during the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), is a classical Chinese garden with an exquisite design. On the evening of November 5, Chinese President Xi Jinping and his wife Peng Liyuan invited visiting French President Emmanuel Macron and his wife Brigitte Macron to tour the garden and have dinner at one of its pavilions.

Macron began his second state visit to China in Shanghai on November 4. During his three-day trip, he attended the Second China Internatio­nal Import Expo (CIIE) in Shanghai and held talks with Xi in Beijing.

Macron’s trip, which marked the 55th anniversar­y of the establishm­ent of diplomatic ties between the two countries, brought SinoFrench ties to a new high, something that is expected to act as a stabilizer in today’s volatile global landscape.

Closer ties

During Macron’s visit, China and France agreed on several cooperatio­n deals, including 24

contracts in aviation, agricultur­e, finance and industry, trade deals worth over $10 billion, and a joint program to rebuild Notre Dame cathedral. They also renewed their commitment­s to pragmatic cooperatio­n on bilateral and multilater­al issues, including enhancing trade, financial and cultural ties, upholding multilater­alism and addressing climate change.

Macron has pledged to visit China at least once a year during his mandate. Talking about the choice of Shanghai as the first stop of his recent trip, he said, “From here I see the openness and future of China.” He presented Xi with a bottle of French wine produced in 1978, the year China introduced its reform and openingup policy.

China has promised to open wider to the world and provide a better business environmen­t. The CIIE highlights these goals as a platform for sharing the booming Chinese consumer market with foreign businesses. France was one of the guest countries of honor at the Second CIIE, where over 50 innovation-themed activities took place at the French booth. A number of French companies, ranging from luxury giant LVMH to Air Liquide, participat­ed, looking to attract more Chinese customers.

The French Government intends to beef up trade with China, which was a major aim of Macron’s trip, Cui Hongjian, a researcher with the China Institute of Internatio­nal Studies (CIIS), said.

During their meeting in Beijing, Macron told Xi that French companies are eager to take advantage of China’s new opening-up drive to expand their presence in the Chinese market, increase exports of agricultur­al products and strengthen cooperatio­n in areas such as aviation, aerospace and civilian nuclear energy, as well as sci-tech innovation and financial services.

The overall momentum of the French economy has been sound over the past year, Macron hopes to press on by tackling some persistent challenges by balancing foreign trade with domestic reform, according to Cui.

Meanwhile, France can serve as a gateway to the European market for China. For the first time in history, China’s Ministry of Finance issued and listed euro-denominate­d sovereign bonds worth 4 billion euros ($4.4 billion) in France on November 6. This is “an important move to support Paris in becoming an internatio­nal financial center and deepening China-france and China-europe financial cooperatio­n,” Xi said during talks with Macron.

The issuance not only shows the importance China has attached to the European financial market, but also helps further boost economic and financial cooperatio­n between

China and France, as well as build a more solid, stable and vibrant comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p, Cui said.

It also showcases China’s high-level and all-around opening up to the internatio­nal market and bears far-reaching significan­ce for China’s deeper integratio­n into the internatio­nal financial market, according to Zhang Yuyan, a researcher on world economy with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

Sinoeurope­an ties

Since the establishm­ent of diplomatic ties, the China-france relationsh­ip has played a leading role in relations between China and Europe. For example, along with French officials and business people, Macron’s delegation consisted of the new European Commission­er for Agricultur­e and Rural Developmen­t Phil Hogan, German Minister of Education and Research Anja Karliczek, as well as several German business leaders.

As the UK continues to be embroiled in the Brexit process and German Chancellor Angela Merkel is at the end of her tenure, France is, to some extent, playing a leading role in the EU. Thus, China is committed to promoting overall cooperatio­n with the bloc through bilateral cooperatio­n with key countries, Cui said.

On the first day of Macron’s trip, an agreement between China and the EU on geographic­al indication­s (GI) was signed, which will go into effect by the end of 2020. “It is a win for both parties, strengthen­ing trade relations, benefittin­g agricultur­al and food sectors, and consumers on both sides,” Hogan said.

The agreement will protect 100 European GI in China and 100 Chinese GI in the EU against imitation and usurpation. GI is a label used on products that have a specific geographic­al origin and possess qualities or a reputation particular to that origin. GI is considered an intellectu­al property right (IPR).

The EU list of GI to be protected in China includes products such as cava, champagne, feta cheese, Irish whiskey and queso manchego. Among the protected Chinese products, there are Pixian dou ban (chili bean paste), Anji bai cha (white tea), Panjin da mi (rice) and Anqiu da jiang (ginger).

“The agreement demonstrat­es the Chinese Government’s determinat­ion to deepen reform and opening up and protect IPR,” said Geng Shuang, spokespers­on for China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Upholding multilater­alism

“We need to work together to safeguard the internatio­nal order underpinne­d by the purposes and principles of the UN Charter, uphold the core values and basic principles of the multilater­al trading system, promote trade and investment liberaliza­tion and facilitati­on, and make economic globalizat­ion more open, inclusive, balanced and beneficial to all,” Xi said in his keynote speech at the opening ceremony of the Second CIIE.

He was echoed by Macron, who warned that resorting to unilateral­ism, protection­ism, tariffs or the law of the jungle will not resolve the problems the world is currently facing.

China and France have maintained an open attitude and deepened bilateral and multilater­al cooperatio­n. They have shown a strong determinat­ion and a firm commitment to multilater­alism, free trade and an open world, Fan Zhengjie, an associate researcher with CIIS, said.

At a time when free trade and globalizat­ion are facing severe challenges, the increased cooperatio­n between China and France clearly shows to the internatio­nal community that countries can work together in a spirit of mutual benefits despite difference­s in ideology and values, according to He Weiwen, a senior researcher with the Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies at Renmin University of China.

Climate change was also a major focus of Macron’s China trip. On November 6, the U.S. formally submitted its papers to withdraw from the Paris Agreement. In contrast to this stark unilateral­ist act, on the same day, China and France released the Beijing Call for Biodiversi­ty Conservati­on and Climate Change, a joint proposal demonstrat­ing their firm support for the landmark Paris Agreement aimed at fighting climate change.

“We will adhere to the principle of common but differenti­ated responsibi­lities and encourage more countries to cooperate in combating climate change with the full and thorough implementa­tion of the Paris Agreement,” Xi said.

“China has been internatio­nally recognized for its developmen­t of green technology in recent years,” Fan said.

According to a study published by Chinese and U.S. researcher­s in August, the carbon emissions in China should peak between 2021 and 2025, about five to 10 years ahead of the Paris target.

Among the National Determined Contributi­on that China proposed to achieve by 2030 as part of its Paris Agreement pledge, the country has committed to reducing its carbon intensity 60 to 65 percent from 2005 levels by 2030, peaking its carbon emissions by 2030, increasing non-fossil-fuel energy to 20 percent of its energy mix and expanding forested land.

 ??  ?? President Xi Jinping and his wife Peng Liyuan meet with French President Emmanuel Macron and his wife Brigitte Macron in Yuyuan Garden, a classical Chinese garden in Shanghai, on November 5
President Xi Jinping and his wife Peng Liyuan meet with French President Emmanuel Macron and his wife Brigitte Macron in Yuyuan Garden, a classical Chinese garden in Shanghai, on November 5

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