Chinese President Xi Jinping and top EU officials mark 50 years of diplomatic ties in Beijing at a rocky time in relations.
Chinese President Xi Jinping has said Europe and China must make the “correct strategic choices” in the face of recent global challenges during asummitwith top European Union officials, which comes at a particularly rocky time in their relationship.
“The current challenges facing Europe do not come from China,” Xi told visiting European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and European Council President Antonio Costa at the 25th EU-China Summit, state news agency Xinhua said.
The EU and China are marking 50 years of diplomatic relations amid thorny disagreements ranging from the EU-China trade deficit to Beijing’s ongoing support for Russia’s war in Ukraine.
The event is the first in-person summit for Chinese and EU leaders since 2023, and more modest than initial plans for a two-day meeting in Europe.
During the meeting in Beijing’s Great Hall of the People, von der Leyen focused on trade disagreements and told Xi that as “cooperation has deepened, so have imbalances,” according to a pool report.
“We have reached an inflection point,” she added, urging China to “come forward with real solutions”.
She was referring to the EU’s trade deficit with China, which ballooned to a historic 305.8 billion euros ($360bn) last year.
EU trade actions in the past year have targeted Chinese exports of electric vehicles (EVs), among other goods, and its officials have repeatedly complained about Chinese industrial overcapacity.
Xi urged the EU to “adhere to open cooperation and properly handle differences and frictions”, after von der Leyen earlier called for a rebalancing of trade ties with the world’s second-largest economy.
“Improving competitiveness cannot rely on ‘building walls and fortresses’,” the Chinese President added, according to Xinhua. “‘Decoupling and breaking chains’ will only result in isolation.
“It is hoped that the European side will keep the trade and investment market open and refrain from using restrictive economic and trade tools,” Xi said.
In a further veiled criticism of Brussels’ recent hawkish stance on China, Xi also warned EU leaders to “make correct strategic choices”.
A second key source of friction is Russia’s war in Ukraine. Brussels says China’s deepening political and economic relations with Russia since the 2022 invasion represent tacit support for Moscow that has helped its economy weather sweeping Western sanctions.
Meeting Xi on Thursday, Costa urged China to “use its influence” to help end Russia’s “war of aggression”.
Last week, the bloc adopted a new package of sanctions on Russia – including on two Chinese banks, leading Beijing’s commerce minister to issue “solemn representations” to his EU counterpart.
“This is a core issue for Europe,” the senior EU official said.
The two EU officials are set to meet Chinese Premier Li Qiang later in the day. While expectations were low heading into the summit, Brussels and Beijing are expected to sign an agreement on climate change and carbon emissions, the Reuters news agency reported, quoting European diplomats.
Chinese state media and officials have also billed the summit as a chance for Beijing and the EU to normalise relations at a time of global uncertainty, stirred by United States President Donald Trump and others.