Independence

China’s Xi, Spain’s Sanchez Seek To Ease EU-China Trade

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Chinese President Xi Jinping urged visiting Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez to play a “constructive role” in improving strained ties between Bejing and the European Union.

Sanchez for his part said he hoped the EU could avoid a trade war with China even as Brussels weighs imposing tariffs on China-manufactured electric vehicles.

In their meeting, Xi also talked up deepening commercial ties between China and Spain in sectors such as artificial intelligence, digital economy, new energy, and other high-tech fields.

The Chinese leader said Beijing wanted to work with Brussels to further develop a China-EU relationship where the two maintain their independence and autonomy but also succeed together and bring benefit to the world, a Chinese readout said.

“It is hoped Spain will continue to play a constructive role in this regard,” Xi added.

Sanchez responded: “Spain wants to work constructively so that relations between the two are closer, richer and more balanced.”

Meanwhile, Beijing in June said that frictions with the EU over its plans to impose tariffs of up to 36.3% on its electric vehicles (EVs) could trigger a trade conflict, days after China announced a retaliatory anti-dumping probe into European pork imports.

China then raised the stakes in August by opening an investigation into the 27-strong bloc’s dairy subsidies.

Prior to meeting Xi, Sanchez told business events Spain would work for a negotiated consensus to the EV dispute within the World Trade Organization and that a “trade war would benefit no one,” a government source said.

Spain in 2023 exported $1.5 billion worth of pork products that China will investigate, Chinese customs data showed, dwarfing the outbound shipments from second and third-ranking the Netherlands and Denmark.

Spain also sold just under $50 million worth of targeted dairy products to China last year.

However, in a promising sign for Spain’s pork producers, a separate source with direct access to Xi’s meeting with Sanchez said the two leaders had “found harmony and understanding,” when asked about possible curbs on Spain’s outbound pork shipments.

“The meeting went extremely well,” the source said, adding that both defended their positions while seeking agreements.

Fair Trade

“We want to build bridges together to defend a trade order that’s fair,” Sanchez told China’s second-ranking official, Premier Li Qiang, before meeting Xi.

Sanchez is expected to meet representatives of SAIC Motor, one of the Chinese automakers most affected by the EU tariffs, and sign a Memorandum of Understanding with Greentech Envision, which is building an EV battery plant in Spain.

“In this increasingly geopolitical and economic context, as you have pointed out, we must work together to resolve differences through negotiation,” Sanchez told Xi.

In an advisory vote in July, Spain along with France and Italy, supported the European Commission’s proposal to adopt additional duties on Chinese-made EVs on top of the bloc’s standard 10% tariff.

But Beijing has been canvassing the EU’s member states to reject the curbs at a final vote on it in October.

The tariffs would be implemented in addition to the EU’s standard 10% import tariff unless a qualified majority of 15 EU members representing 65% of the EU population vote against them.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

REUTERS/Christopher Ojilere

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