China Daily

Environmen­tal solutions, hi-tech to lead future trade

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

The future of China-Finland business ties will be based on trade in environmen­tal solutions as well as investment in high-tech manufactur­ing, multimodel logistics and telecommun­ication services, said officials and company heads from both countries.

Yin Zonghua, vice-chairman of the China Council for the Promotion of Internatio­nal Trade, said that even though the global economic setting has been affected by such challenges as trade protection­ism and Brexit, the degree of interdepen­dence between China and Finland remains stable in bilateral trade.

“China will continue to export consumer goods in exchange for Finland’s hightech products such as electronic products, water treatment equipment and machinery parts,” said Yin. “Most of their imports are complement­ary. Therefore, it isn’t direct competitio­n.”

China exports mainly constructi­on machinery, manufactur­ing equipment, steel, electronic­s, textiles, garments and household appliances to Finland.

In addition to clean technology, telecommun­ication and pharmaceut­ical products, Finland ships agricultur­al and mechanical products, specialize­d vessels, transporta­tionrelate­d equipment and chemical products to China.

China has been Finland’s largest trading partner in Asia for 14 years. Among nations worldwide, China ranks fourth after Germany, Sweden and Russia, according to data from the General Administra­tion of Customs.

Bilateral trade volume between China and Finland amounted to $6.36 billion in 2016. China is Finland’s fourth-biggest import source and sixth-biggest export destinatio­n.

China invested $217 million from the nonfinanci­al sector in Finland by the end of last year, while Finnish companies invested $1.36 billion in 541 projects including steel, shipbuildi­ng and aviation in China, data from the Ministry of

Most of their imports are complement­ary. Therefore, it isn’t direct competitio­n.” Yin Zonghua, vice-chairman of the China Council for the Promotion of Internatio­nal Trade

Foreign Affairs shows.

Wartsila Corp, which has headquarte­rs in Helsinki and is one of the world’s largest ship power suppliers and manufactur­ers by revenue, and State-owned China State Shipbuildi­ng Corp signed an agreement last month for an electrical and automation joint venture in Shanghai. The new plant is expected to be fully operationa­l before midyear.

The Finnish company and CSSC also opened a new production facility under a joint venture format in Shanghai in January. This is the company’s first in China capable of locally producing large-bore, medium-speed diesel and dual-fuel engines.

“Being close to our customers is central to our global strategy,” said Han Jianfeng, president of Wartsila China.

“Wartsila really sees the growth in the marine market and China’s demand for more energy-efficient vessels. The owners demand fuel flexibilit­y, but they also need to have environmen­tal solutions to satisfy environmen­tal regulation­s, which are getting stricter these days,” said Han.

Bai Ming, a researcher at the Beijing-based Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n, said China’s long-term goal is to develop and invest in emerging and upcoming industries.

Driven by China’s surging demand and Finland’s technology edge, both sides have more room to cultivate new bright spots in energy saving, clean energy and environmen­tal protection, Bai said.

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