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EU unveils plan to de-risk ties with China, but faces fight to get members on board

  • Outbound investment screening and broader export controls proposed in plan that does not directly refer to China but created with Beijing in mind
  • Proposal comes days after Brussels urged member states to kick Chinese companies out of their 5G networks

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A new European Union economic plan does not name China directly, but can be seen as the first crystallisation of EU Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen’s concept of “de-risking”. Photo: EPA-EFE

Brussels unveiled a plan to inject some steel into economic ties with Beijing on Tuesday, but faced a fight to convince European Union member countries that controls on investments in and exports to China are a good idea.

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The bloc’s first economic security strategy is intended to restrict autocratic governments’ access to European technologies that are seen as key to economic security, such as quantum computing and artificial intelligence.

Jolted into action by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine last year, which revealed its reliance on Russian energy and a painful partial decoupling on that front, the EU has scrambled to investigate its dependencies on China, spooked by its close ties to Moscow.

IN A MINUTE: Europe is ‘counting on China’ to help end Russia-Ukraine war #shorts

“With geopolitical tensions rising and global economic integration deeper than ever before, certain economic flows and activities can present a risk to our security,” the strategy read.

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