Beijing – President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen and French President Emmanuel Macron are to land in China on Wednesday seeking to q
Beijing – President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen and French President Emmanuel Macron are to land in China on Wednesday seeking to ‘reset’ ties with an important economic partner while broaching thorny issues like Ukraine and trade risks.
Macron last visited China in 2019. It will be von der Leyen’s first trip since becoming European Commission president that year.
Since then, China’s strict pandemic controls forced all diplomatic meetings online as relations with Europe soured: first because of a stalled investment pact in 2021 and then Beijing’s refusal to condemn Russia over its invasion of Ukraine.
For Macron, facing embarrassing pension protests at home, the trip offers a chance to land some economic wins as he travels with a 50-strong business delegation, including Airbus, which is negotiating a big plane order, Alstom and nuclear giant EDF.
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However, some analysts said ostentatious deal-signing would appear opportunistic at a time of heightened frictions between the United States and China.
‘It’s not the time to announce business deals or big new investments,’ said Noah Barkin, an analyst with Rhodium Group. ‘It would essentially be a vote of confidence in the Chinese economy and send the message that France is not on board with the U.S. approach.’
Von der Leyen has said the EU must reduce risks in ties with Beijing, including limiting Chinese access to sensitive technology and reducing reliance for key inputs such as critical minerals, as well as batteries, solar panels and other clean tech products.
Macron invited von der Leyen on the trip as a way to project European unity, after French officials criticized German Chancellor Olaf Scholz for going solo to China late last year.
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He has pushed the EU to be more robust in trade relations with China and is broadly supportive of von der Leyen’s stance, Macron advisers said, but the French leader has publicly refrained from using strong anti-China rhetoric, Beijing being prone to bilateral retaliatory measures.