logo
EU to seek trade ‘rebalancing' at Beijing summit

EU to seek trade ‘rebalancing' at Beijing summit

Kuwait Times3 days ago
BRUSSELS: EU High Representative and Vice-President for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Kaja Kallas (right) and China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi (left) attend a meeting as part of the 13th EU-China Strategic Dialogue, in Brussels.-- AFP
STRASBOURG: The EU will seek to rebalance economic ties with China, demanding it eases market access for European firms and loosen export controls on rare earths at a summit this month, the bloc's chief said Tuesday. European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said overcapacity concerns and China's support for Russia's war effort in Ukraine will also be on the table at the talks with Chinese leader Xi Jinping.
Addressing the European Parliament in Strasbourg, von der Leyen said Beijing was running the largest trade surplus 'in the history of mankind' exporting vast amounts to the EU while making it harder for European companies to do business in China. 'If our partnership is to move forward, we need a genuine rebalancing, fewer market distortions, less overcapacity exported from China, and fair, reciprocal access for European business,' she told lawmakers.
Beijing has sought to improve relations with the European Union as a counterweight to superpower rival the United States, but deep frictions remain over their economic relationship.
The trade deficit between China and the EU was a yawning $357 billion in 2024. Brussels is worried that a manufacturing glut propelled by massive state subsidies could add to it, and result in a flood of cheap Chinese goods undercutting European firms. 'China cannot rely on exports to solve its domestic economic challenges. Overcapacity must be addressed at its source, it cannot simply be offloaded onto global markets,' von der Leyen said.
The commission leader, who will travel to Beijing with European Council President Antonio Costa, said the pair will seek to loosen export restrictions on rare earths — while Brussels also looks at 'developing alternative supply resources'. The curbs have caused concern among businesses worldwide as China accounts for almost two-thirds of rare earth mining production and 92 percent of global refined output, according to the International Energy Agency.
China's close relations with Russia have also been the cause of discord. 'China is de facto enabling Russia's war economy, and we cannot accept this,' von der Leyen said. 'How China continues to interact with Putin's war will be a determining factor for EU China relations going forward.' The summit is scheduled to take place later on July 24-25 to mark the 50th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic ties between China and the EU. – AFP
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

UK, France unveil migrants deal as Macron ends visit
UK, France unveil migrants deal as Macron ends visit

Kuwait Times

time18 hours ago

  • Kuwait Times

UK, France unveil migrants deal as Macron ends visit

NORTHWOOD, United Kingdom: London and Paris unveiled a 'pilot' program on Thursday to return to France some of the migrants arriving in the UK on small boats across the Channel, as President Emmanuel Macron wrapped up his state visit. Prime Minister Keir Starmer called the deal, hammered out during the French leader's three-day visit, 'groundbreaking' and capable of stemming the record numbers of people who have embarked on the perilous journey so far this year. 'This is groundbreaking, because this is a scheme intended to break the model, and to make it clear that if you cross in a small boat, then you'll end up where you started,' he said in a joint press conference with Macron. 'In exchange for every return, a different individual will be allowed to come here' in a safe manner, Starmer said, adding that the scheme would start within 'the coming weeks'. Although Starmer did not say how many people might be returned to France, media reports suggest it could initially total around 50 people a week. In comments likely to infuriate pro-Brexit groups, Macron said Britain's 2020 departure from the EU had worsened the situation in the Channel, cutting off legal migration routes and access to the bloc's own returns agreements. 'So for people wanting to cross, there is no legal way, nor a way of sending people back after a crossing,' Macron said. 'This is a pull factor to attempt the crossing — exactly the inverse effect of what Brexit promised.' Meanwhile, Macron urged joint UK-France recognition of a Palestinian state, calling such moves 'the only hope for peace' in the conflict-ridden region. Alongside migration, the two leaders used the visit to work on a raft of initiatives and shared concerns over defense, trade and culture. They included addressing the volatile situation in the Middle East, continued support for Ukraine and a 'reboot' of defense ties, including joint missile development and nuclear cooperation. Among the announcements was a commitment to increase from 10,000 to 50,000 troops a Combined Joint Expeditionary Force (CJEF) established more than a decade ago. The cross-Channel allies also said they would order more Storm Shadow cruise missiles — long-range, air-launched weapons jointly developed by the allies — while stepping up work on a replacement system. The missiles have been shipped to Ukraine in significant numbers to help Kyiv in its war with Russia following Moscow's full-scale 2022 invasion. Starmer and Macron dialed into a meeting Thursday of the so-called 'coalition of the willing' on Ukraine, announcing that new headquarters for the European-led, 30-nation grouping had opened in Paris. Britain and France are spearheading talks among the coalition on how to support a possible ceasefire in Ukraine, including potentially deploying peacekeeping forces. The visit also saw the typical British pomp and pageantry of such occasions, with King Charles III and Queen Camilla welcoming Macron and his wife Brigitte to Windsor Castle on Tuesday. The entourage enjoyed a horse-drawn carriage procession, a 41-gun salute and a banquet at Windsor Castle, west of London, where the Francophile king and French leader toasted a new 'entente amicale'. However, much of the attention over the three-day visit focused on the vexing issue of cross-Channel migration. It has become a major headache for Starmer's year-old Labour government, as support for the upstart anti-immigrant Reform UK party soars. More than 21,000 migrants have made the Channel crossing in rudimentary vessels this year alone. As the leaders met Thursday, the UK Coastguard said a number of the small boats headed to southeast England had been sighted in the Channel. Meanwhile, Reform UK leader Nigel Farage reacted to the returns deal, branding it 'a humiliation for Brexit Britain'. 'We have acted today as an EU member and bowed down to an arrogant French President,' Farage said on X. The main opposition Conservative Party also criticized the plan, accusing Starmer of 'weak and ineffective gimmicks'. The mooted migrant-exchange scheme has also sparked 'serious concerns' among some other European nations. – AFP

Volkswagen US deliveries fall as Trump tariffs bite
Volkswagen US deliveries fall as Trump tariffs bite

Kuwait Times

timea day ago

  • Kuwait Times

Volkswagen US deliveries fall as Trump tariffs bite

WOLFSBURG: A Volkswagen (VW) Passat R and a Golf GTI are pictured in the tower storage facility of German carmaker Volkswagen at the company's headquarters plant in Wolfsburg, central Germany. The European Union must 'respond firmly' to US import tariffs on cars announced by President Donald Trump, German Economy Minister Robert Habeck said on March 27, 2025. - AFP FRANKFURT: Europe's largest automaker Volkswagen said Wednesday that sales into the United States had taken a hit, underscoring the impact of President Donald Trump's drastic trade measures. Total vehicle deliveries into North America fell almost seven percent in the first half of the year, the German group said, even as overall deliveries worldwide notched a rise of 1.3 percent. In the three months to June—a period dominated by the fallout of Trump announcing 25-percent tariffs on cars in late March and further sweeping duties in April—deliveries to North America plunged 16.2 percent. In China, a key market where European carmakers are struggling against the electric models of local competitors such as BYD, first-half deliveries fell just over two percent. Marco Schubert, board member for sales at the firm, said the declines were 'expected' and that 'gains in South America and Europe more than offset' the impact. Trump has announced a wide range of duties in a bid to boost US manufacturing, but promptly suspended the implementation of many of them before inviting countries to seek trade deals after markets plunged worldwide. Though April's 'Liberation Day' tariffs have been paused until August 1, a 25-percent tariff on imported cars that are not largely made within North America remains in force. Carmakers have rushed to find ways to minimize the impact of the levies, with high-end automaker Mercedes-Benz on Monday saying it had delayed some US deliveries in the expectation of tariffs coming back down. Stuttgart-based Porsche reported Tuesday a 10-percent rise in its first-half North American sales, saying it had plentiful stocks in the region and that increased import tariffs had offered a degree of 'protection' for its cars. But overall first-half sales fell at both firms after being dragged down by China, with Porsche's deliveries in the country down 28 percent and Mercedes-Benz's car sales falling 14 percent. – AFP

Dutch art sleuth recovers stolen trove of UNESCO-listed documents
Dutch art sleuth recovers stolen trove of UNESCO-listed documents

Kuwait Times

timea day ago

  • Kuwait Times

Dutch art sleuth recovers stolen trove of UNESCO-listed documents

A Dutch art sleuth has recovered a priceless trove of stolen documents from the 15th to the 19th century, including several UNESCO-listed archives from the world's first multinational corporation. Arthur Brand, nicknamed the 'Indiana Jones of the Art World' for his high-profile recovery of stolen masterpieces, said the latest discovery was among his most significant. 'In my career, I have been able to return fantastic stolen art, from Picassos to a Van Gogh... yet this find is one of the highlights of my career,' Brand told AFP. Many of the documents recount the early days of the Dutch East India Company (VOC), whose globetrotting trading and military operations contributed to the Dutch 'Golden Age', when the Netherlands was a global superpower. The 17th century VOC documents contain a 'fascinating glimpse into the events of that time in places like Europe, India, Indonesia, South Africa and Latin America,' said Brand. This handout photograph shows Dutch art detective Arthur Brand holding stolen documents from the 15th to the 19th century, including several UNESCO-listed archives from the world's first multinational corporation Dutch East India Company (VOC), in Amsterdam. --AFP photos One document from 1602 recounts the first meeting of the VOC, during which its famous logo -- considered the world's first corporate logo -- was designed. VOC merchants criss-crossed the globe, catapulting the Netherlands to a world trading power but also exploiting and oppressing the colonies it conquered. The company was also a leading diplomatic power and one document relates a visit in 1700 by top VOC officials to the court of the Mughal emperor in India. 'Since the Netherlands was one of the most powerful players in the world at that time in terms of military, trade, shipping, and colonies, these documents are part of world history,' said Brand. UNESCO agrees, designating the VOC archives as part of its 'Memory of the World' documentary heritage collection. 'The VOC archives make up the most complete and extensive source on early modern world history anywhere,' says UNESCO on its website. The trove also featured early ship logs from one of the world's most famous admirals, Michiel de Ruyter, whose exploits are studied in naval academies even today. De Ruyter gained fame for his daring 1667 raid to attack the English fleet in the River Medway, one of the greatest humiliations in world naval history. The ship's logs, written in his own hand, relate the admiral's first experience of naval warfare, the 1641 Battle of St Vincent against the Spanish fleet. This handout photograph shows a page of a ship's log of 1767 recovered by Dutch art detective Arthur Brand, in Amsterdam. 'An extraordinary treasure' No less enthralling is the 'who-dunnit' of how Brand came by the documents. Brand received an email from someone who had stumbled across a box of seemingly ancient manuscripts while clearing out the attic of an incapacitated family member. This family member occasionally lent money to a friend, who would leave something as collateral -- in this case the box of documents. 'I received some photos and couldn't believe my eyes. This was indeed an extraordinary treasure,' Brand told AFP. Brand investigated with Dutch police and concluded the documents had been stolen in 2015 from the vast National Archives in The Hague. The main suspect -- an employee at the archives who had indeed left the box as collateral but never picked it up -- has since died. Brand compared the theft to a daring heist by a curator at the British Museum, who spirited away some 1,800 objects, selling some of them on eBay. The art detective said he spent many an evening sifting through the documents, transported back in time. 'Wars at sea, negotiations at imperial courts, distant journeys to barely explored regions, and knights,' he told AFP. 'I felt like I had stepped into Robert Louis Stevenson's 'Treasure Island.'—AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store