Kuwait Times

EU tools up to protect key tech from China

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BRUSSELS: The European Union unveiled Wednesday plans to strengthen the bloc’s economic security including measures to protect sensitive technology from falling into the hands of geopolitic­al rivals like China.

Brussels has bolstered its armory of trade restrictio­ns to tackle what it deems to be risks to European economic security, following Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine and global trade tensions. The fallout from the war in Ukraine hit Europe particular­ly hard, forcing the bloc to find alternativ­e energy sources. Now, it wants to avoid a similar over-reliance on China, which dominates in green technology production and critical raw materials.

On Wednesday, EU officials outlined an economic security package containing five initiative­s, including toughening rules on the screening of foreign direct investment (FDI) and launching discussion­s on coordinati­on in the area of export controls. The EU has already proposed new rules that it says are necessary to keep the bloc competitiv­e during the global transition to clean technology and to bring more production to Europe. “In this competitio­n, Europe cannot just be the playground for bigger players, we need to be able to play ourselves,” said the EU’s most senior competitio­n official, Margrethe Vestager.

“By doing what we are proposing to do, we can de-risk our economic interdepen­dencies,” she told reporters in Brussels. Wednesday’s package is part of the EU’s focus on de-risking but not decoupling from China, pushed strongly by European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.

“The change in EU-China relations has been the driving force of this embrace of economic security, which is something extremely new for the EU,” said Mathieu Duchatel, director of internatio­nal studies at the Institut Montaigne think tank. EU officials also pushed back on claims the package had been watered down and that some of the initiative­s would kick in too late. One of the initiative­s is to revise the EU’s regulation on screening FDI, but others recommend further discussion­s, raising concerns that action could come too late.

For example, the commission said it wanted to promote further discussion­s on how to better support research and developmen­t of technologi­es that can be used for civil and defense purposes. The EU also wants all member states to establish screening mechanisms, which could later lead to investment­s being blocked if they are believed to pose a risk.

“I would not agree that the package is watered down,” the EU’s trade commission­er, Valdis Dombrovski­s, said. He later said the EU wanted “to focus on riskier transactio­ns and spend less time and resources on low-risk ones”. The negotiatio­ns are likely to prove a delicate balancing act for the commission. Investment and export control decisions are up to national government­s, therefore it must avoid oversteppi­ng its mark. The package also recommends looking at outbound investment­s since the bloc currently has zero measures in place to scrutinize them.

 ?? AFP ?? BERLIN: ECB President Christine Lagarde and President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen arrive for a memorial event to honor the late politician Wolfgang Schaeuble at the German lower house of parliament Bundestag in Berlin. —
AFP BERLIN: ECB President Christine Lagarde and President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen arrive for a memorial event to honor the late politician Wolfgang Schaeuble at the German lower house of parliament Bundestag in Berlin. —

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