Hungary, China OK economic agreements in visit
Xi wraps up five days of travel in Europe
BUDAPEST, Hungary — Hungary and China signed several agreements on Thursday to deepen their economic and cultural cooperation during a visit to the Central European country by Chinese President Xi Jinping, a trip meant to solidify China’s economic footprint in the region.
Xi and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán held talks in the capital, Budapest, as part of the Chinese leader’s final stop on a five-day European tour that also took in Serbia and France. During a news briefing after the talks, Orbán praised the “continuous, uninterrupted friendship” between the two countries since his tenure began in 2010 and promised that Hungary would continue to host more Chinese investments.
“I would like to assure the president that Hungary will continue to provide fair conditions for Chinese companies investing in our country, and that we will create the opportunity for the most modern Western and the most modern Eastern technologies to meet and build cooperation in Hungary,” Orbán said.
Beijing has invested billions in Hungary and sees the European Union member as an important foothold inside the 27-member trading bloc. In December, Hungary announced that one of the world’s largest EV manufacturers, China’s BYD, will open its first European EV production factory in the south of the country — an inroad that could upend the competitiveness of the continent’s auto industry.
Hungary is also hosting several Chinese EV battery plants and hopes to become a global hub of lithium ion battery manufacturing and has undertaken a railway project — part of Xi’s Belt and Road Initiative — to connect the country with the Chinese-controlled port of Piraeus in Greece as an entry point for Chinese goods to Central and Eastern Europe.
On Thursday, Xi said he and Orbán agreed the Belt and Road Initiative “is highly consistent with Hungary’s strategy of opening to the east,” and that China supports Hungary in playing a greater role within the EU on promoting China-eu relations.
Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó later said in a video on Facebook that initial discussions had begun on China developing a freight railway bypass of Budapest and a rail link between the capital and Budapest Ferihegy airport.
Orbán, a nationalist populist leader who has pursued deeper ties with Beijing while distancing himself from his more mainstream partners in the EU, noted during the news conference that three-quarters of investments in Hungary last year came from China, and he spoke of Beijing’s role in the world’s shifting balance of power.
“Looking back at the world economy and commerce of 20 years ago, it doesn’t resemble at all what we’re living in today,” Orbán said.
He added that Hungary would seek to expand economic cooperation with China to the field of nuclear energy. Hungary is working with Russia on adding a new reactor to its Paks nuclear facility.