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EU beefs up powers to control China investment
By Alex PIGMAN
Brussels (AFP) May 5, 2021

China-EU investment deal 'important' despite 'difficulties': Merkel
Berlin (AFP) May 5, 2021 - German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Wednesday she remained convinced that the EU-China investment deal was an "important undertaking" even as strained relations complicate the agreement's ratification.

"Despite all the difficulties that will surely arise with the ratification, it is a very important undertaking," Merkel said in a speech to her conservative CDU/CSU alliance.

The massive investment pact laid the foundations for "mutually beneficial" trade, she said, citing more reciprocity on market access, compliance with international labour standards and the brand protection of regional products as some of the deal's advantages.

To the surprise of many, the European Union and China in late December approved a major investment pact, wrapping up seven years of painstaking negotiations thanks to a final push by Germany.

The pact has been defended as a much-needed opening to China's economy for European companies, but is sure to face a difficult ratification amongst the 27 member states as well as the European Parliament.

Ties between the EU and China are at a low point after an angry exchange of tit-for-tat sanctions over human rights concerns.

EU Executive Vice President Valdis Dombrovskis told AFP on Tuesday that the efforts to win EU approval for the deal were effectively on ice.

"It's clear in the current situation with the EU sanctions in place against China and Chinese counter sanctions in place, including against members of European Parliament (that) the environment is not conducive for ratification of the agreement," Dombrovskis said.

The EU sanctioned four Chinese officials in March over suspected human rights violations in China's far western region of Xinjiang.

China responded by imposing its own sanctions against European politicians, scholars and research groups.

The EU commission on Wednesday unveiled new powers to block state-backed companies making unfair inroads into Europe, as the bloc seeks new ways to respond to China's rise.

The new rules, once approved by member states and European Parliament, will give EU competition authorities fresh abilities to probe foreign companies seeking to snap up EU firms or public contracts.

The rules don't specifically mention China, but they land as ties between the EU and its second biggest trading partner are at a low point after an angry exchange of tit-for-tat sanctions over human rights concerns.

The bitterness has forced the EU commission to suspend its efforts to seek ratification of a German-backed EU-China investment deal, which had been billed as a key tool to pave the way towards smoother relations.

"Unfair advantages accorded through subsidies have long been a scourge of international competition. This is why we have made it a priority to clamp down on such unfair practices," EU vice president Valdis Dombrovskis said.

"China is certainly a challenge in this context but this ... can cover pretty much any country, and any situation, if it's found that there is a distorted position in the market," he said.

In the new rules, the bloc's powerful antitrust authority would investigate state-backed foreign companies seeking to acquire EU businesses with an annual turnover of more than 500 million euros.

State aid investigations would also be launched into subsidised companies bidding for large public contracts in Europe, such as in rail or telecommunications, worth more than 250 million euros.

If necessary, Brussels will be able to implement corrective measures to remedy possible distortions of competition, and in some cases even prohibit a merger or the award of a public contract to the company concerned.

Illegal aid could include interest-free loans, preferential tax treatment or simply direct subsidies.

The European employers' organisation BusinessEurope welcomed "a step in the right direction".

- Personal embarrassment -

The regulation comes shortly after the Commission, which manages trade policy for the EU's 27 member states, reached its surprise investment deal with Beijing in late December.

Dombrovskis, who is also the EU's trade supremo, told AFP that he had suspended efforts to promote the deal to the European Parliament given the sanctions and poisonous political context, a move that was welcomed by MEPs.

The dispute between the EU and China escalated suddenly in March when the EU imposed sanctions on four party and regional representatives of the Xinjiang region because of their actions against the Uyghur Muslim minority.

Beijing swiftly hit back with punitive measures on European politicians and academics, including German MEPs Reinhard Buetikofer and Michael Gahler.

On Wednesday, Buetikofer said the suspended investment deal was "a personal embarrassment" for Chinese President Xi Jinping who had "declared Europe a top priority" last year.

The commission also unveiled a new industrial strategy that would help the EU ease its dependence on China and others, especially after the lessons of the covid-19 pandemic.

EU industry commissioner Thierry Breton, a former tech CEO, has complained that the EU has been too naive in its approach to strategic sectors such as microchip making that depends heavily on manufacturing in Asia.

The commission said it was exploring ways to boost European independence in chip-making, as well as 5G, hydrogen energy and possibly rocket launchers and clean aviation

The pandemic "was so unbelievable" and taught us that the "partner for yesterday could not be the partner of today," Breton said, in reference to trouble in gaining supplies to covid vaccines, notably from the UK.

"We have to sit with our European companies and decide how we want to move forward" in key sectors, he said.

The EU says it is seeking an "open strategic autonomy" to strengthen is global position.


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TRADE WARS
EU China investment deal on ice after sanctions; As G7 seeks common position
Brussels (AFP) May 4, 2021
The European Commission said Tuesday that efforts to win approval for the EU's massive investment deal with China were effectively "suspended" given the soured diplomatic relations between both sides after tit-for-tat sanctions. "We now in a sense have suspended... political outreach activities from the European Commission side," EU Executive Vice President Valdis Dombrovskis told AFP in an interview. "It's clear in the current situation with the EU sanctions in place against China and Chinese c ... read more

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