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China and the European Union (EU) have deepened their strategic partnership
in an all-around way in 2005, a year that marks the 30th anniversary of the
establishment of diplomatic ties between the two sides.
CHINA-EU
POLITICAL DIALOGUE ENHANCED
Celebrating the 30th anniversary of the
bilateral diplomatic ties has offered plenty of opportunities for China and the
25-member bloc to strengthen their political dialogue.
The China-EU summit,
initiated in 1998 by then Chinese Premier Zhu Rongji and British Prime Minister
Tony Blair, is the highest level of regular political dialogue mechanism between
China and the EU.
In September, the 8th China-EU summit was held in Beijing.
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao, Blair, whose country holds the current EU
presidency, and European Commission (EC) President Jose Manuel Barroso held
talks and signed a series of cooperation agreements, including those on climate
and space programs.
The summit has injected "important impetus" into the
development of the all-around strategic partnership between the two sides, EU
foreign policy chief Javier Solana said.
During the summit, China and the EU
also agreed to set up another regular political dialogue mechanism -- vice
ministerial-level strategic dialogue.
Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Zhang
Yesui visited London in December to hold the first such strategic dialogue with
the EU president.
Apart from regular political dialogues, leaders from China
and the EU have exchanged frequent visits this year.
Chinese President Hu
Jintao attended the Group of Eight (G8) summit in Scotland in July and also
visited Britain, Germany and Spain in October.
In December, Premier Wen made
a tour of four EU member states -- France, Slovakia, the Czech Republic and
Portugal -- and signed many agreements of cooperation. China and Portugal
announced the establishment of an all-around strategic partnership.
For the
EU, besides leaders from its member states, eight commissioners from the EC,
including Barroso himself, visited China this year, which was described within
the EU headquarters as a "China year."
For Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson
alone, he has visited China three times in 2005.
In addition, scholars from
China and the EU also conducted a series of symposiums, increasing
communications and exchanges among academic circles of the two
sides.
TRADE SOARS DESPITE QUARRELS
After the
biggest-ever enlargement in May last year, the EU has become the largest trading
partner of China, and China the second largest trading partner of the EU.
In
2005, trade between the two sides remained robust.
According to statistics
issued by China's customs authorities, China-EU trade from January to November
hit US$196.77 billion, up 23.6 percent from that of the same period last
year.
In November, Chinese Commerce Minister Bo Xilai, during a visit to the
EU headquarters, said bilateral trade would surpass US$200 billion for the whole
year.
During Premier Wen's four-day official visit to France early December,
China and France signed a deal on purchasing 150 mid-range Airbus A-320 jets
worth nearly US$10 billion, the biggest single deal in the history of
Airbus.
However, despite the achievements made by the two sides, there are
still disputes between China and the EU over some trade issues.
Over the
year, the EU has launched several anti-dumping investigations against various
Chinese products such as shoes, while quotas on China's textile remain one of
the knottiest issues in their trade ties.
In view of the good atmosphere of
the Sino-EU relations, the two sides have properly dealt with their trade
disputes over textile products.
The EU will set a transition period for
canceling quotas, while China agreed to properly handle stockpiles of textile at
EU ports.
Just as Bo Xilai put it, the number of disputed areas in the
China-EU trade is "very small," which does not hamper a smooth expansion of the
China-EU economic cooperation.
In addition, China and the EU have made more
progress in scientific cooperation and cultural exchanges.
Highlighting the
2005 Sino-European high-tech cooperation is China's active participation in the
Galileo satellite navigation system, a major European project.
In July, the
two sides signed three application contracts, making China the first country
outside Europe to join the Galileo Project.
Moreover, China and the EU,
together with four other partners, decided in June to locate a 12-billion-dollar
project for International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor at Cadarache in
southern France, a site proposed by the EU and backed by China.
TALKS
ON NEW PARTNERSHIP PACT EXPECTED
Looking ahead, China and the EU are
facing an impending job to launch talks on a new partnership framework
agreement, in a bid to replace the 1985 Trade and Economic Cooperation
Agreement.
In May, EC external relations commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner
said the EU hoped to start the talks within the year.
According to
well-informed sources, both sides are currently making preparations for
launching the talks.
For the EU side, it has invited at least two institutes
in Brussels to conduct studies on China and the EU-China relations, aiming to
solicit advice on launching the talks.
"A new agreement will make it much
easier for us to realize the full potential of our partnership and will be a
strong signal of our mutual commitment to deepening our relationship," Solana
said.