Beijing Review

Partnershi­p for Global Challenges

45 years of Eu-china diplomatic relations enable two sides to cope with global challenges and support each other

- By Nicolas Chapuis

The author is EU ambassador to China first visit by a Chinese state leader to the West, heralded the developmen­t of comprehens­ive relations between Europe and China.

Forty-five years later, the relationsh­ip between the EU and China has become a pillar of the internatio­nal system.

Global strategic partnershi­p

France’s Pierre Duchateau (1921-2009).

The 1990s was marked by the growing importance of political dialogue due to the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, the creation of the EU in 1992 and the process of EU enlargemen­t from 1994. The European Commission published its first communicat­ion on China in 1995, referring to a longterm policy, paving the way for a dialogue on human rights and the organizati­on of the First Eu-china Summit in London in April 1998. This political process supported the negotiatio­ns for China’s entry into the World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) in 2001.

The following decade was one of maturity, with the creation of the three pillars of the Eu-china relationsh­ip: economic and commercial dialogue in 2008, strategic dialogue in 2010, following the creation of the post of

High Representa­tive of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy and cultural dialogue in 2012, culminatin­g in the adoption of the Eu-china 2020 Strategic Agenda for Cooperatio­n at the 2013 Beijing Summit, and the first visit by a Chinese head of state to Brussels in 27 years in 2014. At the time, President Xi Jinping described China as “a major partner of the EU.”

During the celebratio­n of the 40th anniversar­y of establishm­ent of diplomatic relations in May 2015, the two sides laid the foundation­s for future commitment­s to face up to global challenges: negotiatio­n of an investment agreement, cooperatio­n within the WTO, promotion of connectivi­ty and mobility, and above all, the fight against climate change, with an agreement at the highest level leading to the adoption of the Paris Agreement (COP21) in December 2015.

In April 2019, the 21st Eu-china Summit in Brussels concluded with an ambitious joint declaratio­n in support of multilater­alism, ecological transition and balanced trade in an economic relationsh­ip that has become critical for the internatio­nal economy. The Eu-china daily trade volume amounted to more than 1.5 billion euros (11.49 billion yuan) in goods and services in 2019.

Challenges ahead

This succession of events reflects, above all, the remarkable continuity of the European engagement with China, which bears the seal of partnershi­p in the face of global challenges. Now more than ever, faced with a global health crisis not seen in a century, we can appreciate the benefits of this relationsh­ip, both for itself and for the rest of the world.

The EU promotes a multilater­al system that is instrument­al in regulating globalizat­ion by establishi­ng legal rules for tangible and intangible exchanges. At a time of dual energy and digital revolution­s, agreement between the EU and China is as necessary as it is imperative to bring prosperity, balance, sustainabi­lity and security to our citizens.

Contrary to what is sometimes reported, European unity, which has been a work in progress since 1957, remains the compass of our 27 member states, because only the EU allows European nations to weigh in on world affairs. Likewise, the remarkable growth of the Chinese economy over the past 45 years means that new forms of equilibriu­m must be sought in a geopolitic­al landscape undergoing profound transforma­tion.

The novel coronaviru­s pandemic is putting to test the entire internatio­nal system since January 2020 and requires a comprehens­ive response, both bilaterall­y and multilater­ally. The EU and China must strengthen their partnershi­p to overcome this crisis and provide the most vulnerable members of the internatio­nal community with the support they need.

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 ??  ?? A Chinese medical expert team arrive in Milan, Italy, on March 26
A Chinese medical expert team arrive in Milan, Italy, on March 26
 ??  ?? The Peljesac bridge built by China Road and Bridge Corp. in south Croatia on April 11, 2019
The Peljesac bridge built by China Road and Bridge Corp. in south Croatia on April 11, 2019

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