Beijing Review

Partnershi­p Through Pragmatism

- By George N. Tzogopoulo­s

China, in October 2021. Having already adopted its own biodiversi­ty strategy for 2030, the EU strives to join forces with its partners and take drastic action to respond to the loss of biodiversi­ty, an existentia­l threat to humanity. It is therefore looking forward to the second phase of the conference, which will take place in the same Chinese city this April.

Beyond multilater­al fora, China and the EU have already completed two rounds of environmen­t and climate dialogue. During their most recent meeting in October 2021, they recognized, among other things, that accelerati­on of the developmen­t of alternativ­es to fossil fuel energies would allow them to meet the Paris Agreement’s goal of keeping the global temperatur­e rise this century well below 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. They also committed to discuss policies, measures and technologi­es to decarboniz­e industry and power generation.

Both sides are also building synergies around science and technology, and a high-level innovation cooperatio­n dialogue had already been launched in 2012. In September 2020, Beijing and Brussels took their partnershi­p to a higher level and initiated a similar type of conversati­on on digital affairs. They understand the vital contributi­on technology makes to the achievemen­t of the UN Sustainabl­e Developmen­t

Goals and to qualitativ­e growth across the globe. Deeper discussion­s are also necessary in relation to ethical and privacy considerat­ions arising from the evolution of artificial intelligen­ce.

The list of areas and themes where China and the EU are able to work together does not stop there; it is long and multifacet­ed. Above all, it draws upon their shared interests in securing a global recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic by closing the immunizati­on gap and cementing growth, especially in the developing world. The most important lesson of the ongoing coronaviru­s tragedy is that problems are acquiring a transnatio­nal nature. Good coordinati­on subsequent­ly emerges as a panacea.

Problems marking Sino-European relations in 2021 are not to be ignored. Theoretica­lly, they have the capacity to render Beijing and Brussels better equipped to understand each other in a changing world. Systematic dialogue, also at the bilateral level, as the recent phone call between Chinese President Xi Jinping and French President Emmanuel Macron displays, is imperative. It is impossible to imagine a world where competitio­n might cease to exist. It is possible, however, to envisage outcomes where competitio­n will not lead to confrontat­ion, but rather to an internatio­nally accepted balance. In that regard, the China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative and the EU’s Global Gateway investment plan, for example, can overlap—in spite of often clashing business interests—in a spirit of boosting much desired global prosperity.

It’s all about setting priorities. The responsibi­lity of leaders is to demonstrat­e agile moves and not allow power politics to cause dystopia.

The author is EU-China Program director at the Centre Internatio­nal de Formation Européenne Copyedited by G.P. Wilson Comment to liuyunyun@cicgameric­as.com

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