China Daily Global Weekly

China urges EU to boost cooperatio­n

Explore ‘this huge market’, foreign minister says, encouragin­g well-informed choices

- By CHEN WEIHUA in Brussels chenweihua@chinadaily.com.cn

State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi called on the European Union to keep to the principles of a market economy and create a level playing field for Chinese companies, including making well-informed choices — backed by independen­t judgment — on issues relating to 5G technology.

In a speech on Dec 16 at the European Policy Center, a Brussels-based think tank, Wang said progress in the negotiatio­ns toward a China-EU Comprehens­ive Agreement on Investment tops the economic agenda. “China is building an open economy. We welcome European countries to seize the opportunit­ies to scale up investment in China and explore this huge market of 1.4 billion people,” he said.

Wang was visiting Brussels to meet with EU officials during a European tour that also took him to Slovenia and Spain, where he attended the 14th Foreign Ministers’ Meeting of the Asia-Europe Meeting in Madrid.

The trip came about two weeks after the new leaders of the EU’s main institutio­ns took office. President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang made separate phone calls with European Council President Charles Michel and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen on further deepening bilateral relations.

Wang said China is pursuing highqualit­y developmen­t of its Belt and Road Initiative and the EU is speeding up the implementa­tion of its strategy on connecting Europe and Asia. “By increasing the link-ups between these endeavors, we will break new ground and unlock new potential for cooperatio­n,” he said.

The top Chinese diplomat said China and the EU should be partners for green developmen­t, citing the launch of the European Green Deal last week and China’s work to advance the conservati­on of its ecosystems. “Green growth, circular economy and renewable energy can well be new growth areas of ChinaEurop­e cooperatio­n,” Wang said in a talk that was moderated by former Belgian prime minister Herman van Rompuy.

He said that China and the EU should be partners for digital developmen­t. “We have respective strengths in high technology, digital economy and the new generation of informatio­n technology,” Wang said.

“Much can be done if we combine our strengths and work together on smart cities, artificial intelligen­ce, data security and technologi­cal rules and standards.

“China and the EU should be partners for free trade. Apart from a high-quality investment agreement, we should work for an early start of negotiatio­ns on a free trade agreement, or at least the launch of feasibilit­y studies on that front.”

Wang described 2019 as “a productive year for China-EU relations”. The two sides concluded negotiatio­ns on the Geographic­al Indication­s agreement as scheduled, and signed two agreements on aviation cooperatio­n.

He said China and the EU are partners, not rivals, referring to some arguments put forward within the EU that China has become an economic rival of Europe and should be subject to all sorts of restrictio­ns.

“Although (this is) not the mainstream view, we must raise our vigilance and not allow it to go unchecked,” he said, adding that any cool-headed person with an objective view will see that cooperatio­n between China and the EU far outweighs competitio­n and their areas of consensus far exceed any count of their difference­s.

Between 2001 and 2018, the EU’s exports to China grew by 14.7 percent annually, more than twice the bloc’s average export growth. And the EU’s exports to China support some 4 million jobs in Europe.

In addition, Chinese companies have made foreign direct investment­s in 2,900 ventures in EU member states, creating 176,000 local jobs.

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