South China Morning Post

China, EU talk a good globalist game but don’t deliver

- Dr Mathieu Duchatel is senior policy fellow and deputy director of the Asia and China programme at the European Council of Foreign Relations

It has become the core Chinese message to European audiences: let us defend the multilater­al rules-based order together. This is music to the ears of European leaders desperatel­y needing support to withstand the Trump administra­tion’s unceasing assaults on global governance.

Seen from Europe, the US’ withdrawal from the Paris climate change agreement and its departure from the nuclear deal with Iran, also known as the Joint Comprehens­ive Programme of Action (JCPOA), are not abstract matters but the unravellin­g of a years-long effort to build stable foundation­s for internatio­nal security and sustainabl­e developmen­t.

At the 20th EU-China summit last July in Beijing, the two sides reaffirmed their commitment “to multilater­alism and the rules-based internatio­nal order with the United Nations at its core”. There is only one problem: this is a convergenc­e without much substance.

Despite such good intentions and a comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p, the EU and China approach the end of 2018 with almost no positive record of successful cooperatio­n in internatio­nal organisati­ons.

This is the result of their relative weakness vis-à-vis the United States in the case of JCPOA, but also of China’s pursuit of priorities other than its stated aspiration to multilater­al governance – priorities that include relations with Russia.

There is a genuine China-Europe convergenc­e in support of the continued implementa­tion of the Iran nuclear deal, captured in the political statements they have jointly issued, together with Russia. The last document, adopted on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly, underlines their common “determinat­ion to protect the freedom of their economic operators to pursue legitimate business with Iran, in full accordance with UN Security Council Resolution 2231”.

But given their possible exposure to US secondary sanctions, European companies have different calculatio­ns. Daimler, Maersk, Peugeot and Total have already announced their exits from Iran, while Siemens is winding down operations in the country.

Chinese companies are no less cautious. Even though China obtained a waiver from the US to continue importing Iranian oil before sanctions resumed on

November 5, imports were down by 64 per cent, year on year, in October – a decline compensate­d for by supplies from Russia.

State-owned energy major China National Petroleum Corp agreed to take over Total’s stake in the South Pars natural gas field, but has remained low-key and vague on the specifics of its deal and when it plans to start operations.

This gap between aspiration­s and concrete action around the fate of the Iran deal underlines the non-existence of a Europe-China strategic axis capable of tangible outcomes.

Furthermor­e, Europe and China do not agree on all arms control issues. China’s choice this summer to side with Russia in The Hague and oppose the reform of the Organisati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) has put China in direct opposition to Europe on a matter of direct relevance to European security.

Despite the combined efforts of China and Russia, the OPCW has successful­ly adopted a new mechanism through which it can investigat­e and identify the origin of chemical weapons attacks. This expansion of the organisati­on’s powers is the result of a British initiative stemming from the poisonings of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter by prohibited nerve agents on British soil.

Chemical weapons should be an area of unquestion­able convergenc­e between Europe and China. But more importance is placed on China’s partnershi­p with Russia.

Moving from disarmamen­t to environmen­t protection, China’s support for the Paris climate change agreement deserves praise: the pact would have collapsed had both the US and China decided to abandon their commitment to reduce emissions.

Unfortunat­ely, China is reluctant to go beyond existing commitment­s. Since 2012, China has voted against proposals to create new Marine Protected Areas at the Commission for the Conservati­on of Antarctic Marine Living Resources. The proposal, supported by the EU and European members of the Commission (except Norway), would have banned fishing and other commercial activities in the Weddell Sea and two other areas – an area of close to 3 million sq km. China again sided with Russia, making its priority the potential economic benefits of the economic exploitati­on of Antarctica.

China’s defence of multilater­alism with European interlocut­ors is first and foremost a political response to the Trump administra­tion’s unilateral trade tariffs.

Beijing’s reluctance to expand the rules-based order from its fragile and endangered core contradict­s China’s promultila­teral governance narrative and weakens China’s trust with Europe.

 ?? Photo: EU ?? The EU’s Jean-Claude Juncker and Premier Li Keqiang at last year’s summit.
Photo: EU The EU’s Jean-Claude Juncker and Premier Li Keqiang at last year’s summit.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China