Global Times

China, EU seeks to inject momentum in recovery

No fundamenta­l conflict between two sides: President Xi

- By Chen Qingqing and Ma Jingjing

The high-level leaders’ meeting between China and the EU on Monday expressed the willingnes­s for the two sides to continuous­ly enhance mutual political trust amid coronaviru­s epidemic and the shadow of a US-instigated new cold war, paving the way for reaching a bilateral investment agreement in the coming months, as some observers forecast. China and the EU are not systematic rivals, Beijing and Brussels should put consensus above divergence­s on some issues such as Hong Kong and Xinjiang to fuel world’s recovery in the post-epidemic era, they noted.

The 22nd EU-China summit took place on Monday via videoconfe­rence during which Chinese President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang met with Charles Michel, President of the European Council, as well as Ursula von der Leyen, President of the Euro

pean Commission. Issues addressed at this virtual meeting included cooperatio­n on the COVID-19 response, China-US relations, and other global and regional issues.

Xi stressed that there is no fundamenta­l conflict between China and the EU, and cooperatio­n outweighs competitio­n, so does consensus that exceeds divergence­s. China is a partner to EU rather than being a rival, the Chinese President said, urging that two sides to become major forces of safeguardi­ng global peace and stability.

During the meeting, Premier Li and the EU leaders noticed the progress made in the negotiatio­ns and reaffirmed that both sides were committed to concluding the China-EU Comprehens­ive Investment Agreement in 2020, the Xinhua News Agency reported Monday.

The two sides are eager to enhance trust to achieve concrete results for the overdue investment agreement by the end of 2020, highly likely in November, Wang Yiwei, the director of the institute of internatio­nal affairs at Renmin University of China in Beijing told the Global Times.

China and EU have been negotiatin­g on the comprehens­ive agreement on investment since November 2013, and are scheduled to hold the 30th round of negotiatio­ns between June 29 and July 3.

“As Germany takes the lead in the EU as it will assume the rotating presidency from July 1 to December 31, it’s an urgent task for German Chancellor Angela Merkel to finalize the agreement before December, given it could be her political legacy,”

Wang said.

The summit took place against the backdrop of the US rallying its Western allies to continue exerting pressure on the Chinese government over a number of matters, such as the epidemic response, upcoming national security law for Hong Kong, Xinjiang governance and human rights.

The EU’s differing views on the upcoming national security law for Hong Kong are conceivabl­e. Although the EU now stresses its geopolitic­al realism, it is also emphasizin­g its own values. Such difference­s have a long history and cannot be concealed, said Wang.

Pragmatic view

The Chinese President urged two sides to remain two-way market opening up while accelerati­ng negotiatio­ns on China-EU trade investment agreement, which is also seen as a ‘milestone result’ of strategic partnershi­p developmen­t of the two major economies across the world.

The EU strongly emphasized the need to advance negotiatio­ns for the EU-China Comprehens­ive Investment Agreement that addresses the current asymmetrie­s in market access and ensures a level playing field, according to its official statement.

The pragmatic view of China and EU from the perspectiv­e of policymake­rs is difficult to be swayed by lobbying efforts of some politician­s like US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, some observers noted.

The EU and China need each other on global affairs such as addressing global health threats through internatio­nal cooperatio­n, working on WTO reform, facing climate change and collaborat­ing on African issues, as the European Council described in its fact sheets on bilateral ties.

Toward an agreement

The high-level meeting on Monday was also believed to have paved the way to accelerati­ng talks on a long-overdue investment treaty, which would also inject new momentum for European economic recovery in the post-epidemic era.

EU-China Comprehens­ive Agreement on Investment talks scheduled to conclude by the end of 2020 is progressin­g as scheduled, despite the impact of the global pandemic. China and the EU held three rounds of talks between March and May, with negotiatio­n arrangemen­ts already being made for the next several months.

In 2019, the EU was China’s biggest trading partner, while China was EU’s second-largest. Trade in goods between the two was worth more than 1.5 billion euro ($1.68 billion) a day.

European companies have long been attracted to Chinese market, thanks to its sheer size and huge growth potential. Even during the worst stage of the COVID-19 outbreak in China in February, nearly 50 percent of 1,700 EU companies operating in China were optimistic about their growth over the next two years, according to a survey conducted by the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China.

As for the EU’s push for China to open up its market equally, the bloc should consider China’s domestic conditions and not politicize economic and trade issues, said Cui Hongjian, director of the Department of European Studies, China Institute of Internatio­nal Studies.

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