Europe and China: rebuilding trust in a fractured world - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
中欧关系

Europe and China: rebuilding trust in a fractured world

00:00

{"text":[[{"start":7.73,"text":"As the July summit approaches, we must choose cooperation over confrontation"}],[{"start":13.530000000000001,"text":"The EU–China summit on July 24–25 couldn’t come at a more delicate moment. Tensions are rising, mistrust is growing, and economic protectionism is making a comeback. Yet behind the headlines and political slogans, there is a quieter truth: Europe and China need each other more than ever. Our economies are deeply intertwined. Our challenges—climate, technology, supply chains—are too big for either side to face alone. And despite recent friction, there’s still time to reconnect."}],[{"start":52.82,"text":"A relationship worth saving"}],[{"start":55.17,"text":"In 2024, trade between the EU and China nearly hit €800 billion. That number alone shows how important we are to one another. But trade isn’t everything. Over the past few years, direct investments have slowed, and companies on both sides are finding it harder to trust each other. Some of this is political. Some is structural. But the result is the same: we’re drifting apart."}],[{"start":86.57,"text":"It doesn’t have to be this way. There are real success stories—European R&D centers in Shanghai, joint ventures in electric mobility, innovative AI labs connecting researchers from Berlin to Shenzhen. These are not just projects—they’re bridges. And now is the moment to build more of them."}],[{"start":109.27,"text":"What should change—starting now"}],[{"start":112.07,"text":"First, we need a better investment framework. The Comprehensive Agreement on Investment, stuck for years, needs a reboot. Let’s call it “CAI 2.0”—updated for today’s world, with clearer rules on sustainability, digital trade, and dispute resolution. Investors don’t need perfection; they need clarity and confidence."}],[{"start":136.51999999999998,"text":"Second, let’s talk honestly about market access. European firms want to do more in China—in logistics, energy, digital services. Chinese firms seek greater access and opportunities in the European market for their international growth. That’s a reasonable ask. But to make it work, we have to move past the idea of “decoupling.” Splitting our economies apart is not only unrealistic —it’s dangerous. What we need is smarter interdependence: resilient supply chains, open standards, and real opportunities for small and medium-sized companies."}],[{"start":174.92,"text":"And more than anything, we need courage. It’s time for both sides to sit down, drop the rhetoric, and co-design a realistic roadmap for mutual benefit. That means confronting the hard issues, accepting asymmetries, and putting long-term goals above short-term pressure."}],[{"start":194.45999999999998,"text":"Third, we have to rethink how we deal with technology. We’re both leaders—in different ways in the field of AI, 5G, clean tech, and electric vehicles. But instead of turning technology into a weapon, we should use it as a tool for trust. Imagine joint research labs, shared standards for trustworthy AI, cooperation on cloud infrastructure and quantum computing—though aligning regulatory frameworks and political priorities will require sustained effort. Imagine what we could achieve if we built together instead of racing apart."}],[{"start":232.04999999999998,"text":"Finding common ground on climate"}],[{"start":235.29,"text":"Here’s something else we share: the planet. Europe and China have both set ambitious climate goals. That’s not just a responsibility we have in common—it’s also a powerful opportunity to shape a greener future together. Why not create a Green Economy Alliance—a platform for working together on green hydrogen, energy efficiency, smart grids, and recycling technologies? We could align our environmental rules, recognize each other’s certifications, and build shared projects with real impact. A cleaner future isn’t just good diplomacy—it’s good business."}],[{"start":273.21999999999997,"text":"Rewiring the connection"}],[{"start":275.15,"text":"Connectivity is no longer just about roads and railways. It’s also about digital cables, smart ports, and trusted data routes. We need better infrastructure between Europe and China—not just to move goods, but to move ideas, services, and people. A joint Smart Connectivity Agenda could open the door to faster trade, better digital cooperation, and a more inclusive economy—especially for startups and SMEs that often get left behind."}],[{"start":309.28999999999996,"text":"That’s why we should also launch a EU–China SME Innovation Platform—a dedicated mechanism to support cross-border collaboration, access to finance, and joint ventures in key sectors such as digital services, advanced manufacturing, and green technology. While large corporations dominate headlines, it is SMEs that drive employment, resilience, and grassroots innovation. Strengthening their role would make the partnership more dynamic, diverse, and future-oriented."}],[{"start":342.06999999999994,"text":"Of course, none of this will happen without trust. And trust doesn’t grow in the dark. It grows through transparency, rule of law, and shared standards. It means protecting intellectual property, respecting contracts, and giving investors—on both sides—reasons to believe in the system."}],[{"start":364.60999999999996,"text":"People matter, too"}],[{"start":366.53999999999996,"text":"We talk a lot about companies and governments. But what about people? If we want long-term cooperation, we have to invest in it—not just with money, but with relationships. Let’s support student exchanges, joint university programs, youth entrepreneur labs. Let’s open up our cultural spaces and fight misinformation with real dialogue. A new EU–China Talent Initiative could give the next generation of leaders the chance to shape this relationship—not inherit its problems."}],[{"start":402.16999999999996,"text":"A different kind of summit"}],[{"start":404.59999999999997,"text":"Too often, EU–China summits end in vague statements and handshakes. This time must be different. The business world is watching. Entrepreneurs, researchers, workers—they all need signals, not slogans. We should walk away from this summit with a clear action plan, a shared roadmap, and a promise to meet again—not once a year, but on a regular basis, ensuring continual review and concrete progress.."}],[{"start":434.33,"text":"This is not just about geopolitics. It’s about growth, stability, and shared progress. It’s about whether we choose to turn inward or move forward—together."}],[{"start":446.65999999999997,"text":"A choice that will define a generation"}],[{"start":449.55999999999995,"text":"If the last century was shaped by the Atlantic, Eurasia will play a defining role in this one. Europe and China can either build walls—or build bridges: digital, green, and human."}],[{"start":463.94999999999993,"text":"A new economic pact is not just a policy option. It’s a necessity. And the decisions we make this July may well shape the future—for both sides, and far beyond."}],[{"start":484.1199999999999,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftmailbox.cn/album/a_1753279843_1933.mp3"}

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

从温泉到米饼:海湾能源危机重创日本小企业

对进口燃料的依赖正在扼住全球第五大经济体的喉咙,暴露了作为其经济核心的小企业的脆弱性。

软银追加300亿美元OpenAI投资,考验自身借贷上限

孙正义将巨额资金投入人工智能领域,需要面对投资者的不安情绪。

特朗普能否与伊朗达成协议?

任何结束战争的外交努力都面临重重障碍。

特朗普因新关税计划面临法律挑战

在最高法院裁定先前关税非法后,美国总统转而援引一些鲜为人知的法律。

整顿还是圈地?印尼领导人瞄准资源公司

印尼总统普拉博沃•苏比延多誓言将对违反环境法规的资源企业采取强硬措施。

伊朗战争威胁海湾资金的全球流动

海合会六个成员国数十年来已集体成长为全球金融领域最具影响力的力量之一,投资足迹遍及全球。世界对中东资本的依赖程度比许多人意识到的更深。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×