China's charm offensive bypasses Brussels to soften EU trade push

China is intensifying bilateral diplomacy to ease trade tensions with the EU, offering market access, visa facilitations, and symbolic gestures to select member states. Even as ties with Brussels sour, Beijing courts European governments aggressively. Examples include aircraft orders in France and reopened beef and pork markets for Ireland and Spain.

This week, China's foreign vice-minister Hua Chunying beamed as she presented a leading Czech lawmaker with a decorative porcelain plate—a gift signaling a possible thaw in ties between Prague and Beijing. The image set tongues wagging in Europe: a symbol that a new Chinese charm offensive towards a Europe jilted by its erstwhile ally across the Atlantic had reached even its most hawkish capitals.

China has spent the opening weeks of the year courting European governments, offering market access, visas, and symbolic gestures to selected EU member states, even as relations with Brussels continue to sour. From aircraft orders in France to reopened beef and pork markets for Ireland and Spain, Beijing is leaning hard into bilateral diplomacy as the European Commission prepares for another confrontational year of trade action against China.

Several sources said Chinese diplomats were using these channels to disparage policies cooked up in Brussels and sow disunity among the 27-member bloc, which in recent years has pursued an increasingly tough trade and geopolitical approach to the world's second-largest economy. According to a senior EU source speaking on condition of anonymity, the charm offensive was “in full swing … they don’t like us here in Brussels but know they can get much more from the member states”.

This approach aims to soften the EU's trade push against China by engaging member states directly to undermine Brussels' unified front. Keywords include Ireland, Brussels, Beijing, African swine fever, Airbus, Europe, Czechia, EU, Antonio Costa, China, Elina Valtonen, European Commission, France, Emmanuel Macron, and Hua Chunying.

Liittyvät artikkelit

Piyush Goyal shakes hands with EU official at India-EU FTA signing, with economic symbols and subtle US criticism inset.
AI:n luoma kuva

India-EU free trade agreement finalized amid US criticism

Raportoinut AI AI:n luoma kuva

Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal defended the newly concluded India-EU free trade agreement against domestic criticism, emphasizing its benefits for economic growth. The deal addresses key issues like carbon tariffs and mobility for professionals. However, US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent expressed disappointment, accusing Europe of prioritizing trade over support for Ukraine.

Chinese Premier Li Qiang met with Irish Taoiseach Micheál Martin in Beijing on Tuesday, stating that China is ready to advance high-quality pragmatic cooperation with Ireland, consolidate political mutual trust, and elevate bilateral relations. Martin expressed Ireland's willingness to strengthen exchanges and welcome more Chinese investments, while playing a constructive role in EU-China dialogue. The meeting occurred during Martin's five-day official visit to China.

Raportoinut AI

After witnessing the effects of a tumultuous trade war with the United States this year, China's top leaders have issued a directive to fortify the domestic economy against persistent or even heightened trade frictions. Analysts see the leadership's language after the central economic work conference as an admission that trade tensions are expected to endure and expand beyond the US, including to partners like the European Union.

After several years of negotiations, 20 out of 24 chapters in the India-EU free trade agreement have been finalized. The aim is to conclude the deal before the EU leaders' visit to India this month, making it India's largest FTA. This pact would boost bilateral trade, though sensitive issues remain to be addressed.

Raportoinut AI

China's commerce ministry stated that trade cooperation with Japan has been severely damaged by Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's comments on Taiwan, urging her to retract them. The diplomatic spat intensified after Takaichi told parliament on November 7 that a hypothetical Chinese attack on Taiwan could trigger a Japanese military response. Beijing has reinstated a ban on Japanese seafood imports and called for a travel boycott.

The US-China race for hi-tech resources intensifies across the Global South, pressuring swing nations in the middle to strike a balance. The Venezuela crisis has laid bare the limits of China's economic-centric diplomacy in competing with the US, serving as a stark reminder that spheres of influence continue to shape global politics in this new era of great power rivalry.

Raportoinut AI

Following the Brussels summit postponement announced by Ursula von der Leyen, the EU now targets January 12 in Paraguay for initialing the Mercosur trade pact amid ongoing French and European farmer protests. France's Macron pushes for stronger safeguards, while Paraguay urges haste and Germany anticipates quick resolution.

 

 

 

Tämä verkkosivusto käyttää evästeitä

Käytämme evästeitä analyysiä varten parantaaksemme sivustoamme. Lue tietosuojakäytäntömme tietosuojakäytäntö lisätietoja varten.
Hylkää