China, Europe Pledge to Boost Ties, Heed EU Rules

W460

China and 16 Central and Eastern European countries pledged Tuesday to boost two-way investment and trade, insisting that EU regulations will be met.

"China eyes cooperation in infrastructure, communications, high-speed railway projects, which will lead to massive investment and a rise in commercial exchanges," with countries in the region, Chinese Prime Minister Li Keqiang told 16 CEE counterparts and hundreds of businessmen attending a meeting in Bucharest.

"We are prepared to discuss ways to finance these projects, within the lines traced by European Union regulations," Li stressed.

Brussels has warned countries in the region against crossing any regulatory red lines when concluding economic deals with China.

Li said he hoped $10.5 billion in credit lines committed by China last year would be put to use, proclaiming 2014 "the year of China-CEE investment and business ties".

The credit lines were announced by Li's predecessor Wen Jiabao during a summit in Warsaw.

But analysts say that 18 months later the promise the massive capital injections have yet to materialize.

The gathering in Bucharest comes less than a week after the 28-nation European Union held a summit with China at which the two sides launched negotiations for a landmark investment agreement.

The EU and China have seen their commercial relationship grow dramatically but also witnessed increasing trade disputes over issues ranging from solar panels to wine.

"Pragmatic cooperation between the CEE region and China is beneficial not only to the two sides but also to the consolidation of balanced development in Europe as a whole," Li stressed.

"China needs a powerful Europe, but Europe can only be strong if each and every one of its members attains rapid economic development," Romanian Prime Minister Victor Ponta said.

The prime ministers of 15 Eastern European states are attending the summit. Latvia is represented by its Foreign Minister.

On Monday, shortly after arriving in Romania, Li insisted "cooperation between China and the CEE was an important part in the relationship with the EU."

He added that China wanted "a strong euro currency and a united, prosperous EU."

China and Romania signed 13 cooperation agreements on nuclear, renewable and conventional energy, and on agriculture.

The accords on nuclear cooperation are expected to give China General Nuclear Power Group (CGN) a role in Romania's plans to build two new reactors at its sole nuclear plant, at Cernavoda.

The project, delayed for years for lack of funding, is worth more than $5.4 billion.

Ponta made a point of reassuring Brussels, stressing that Romania would "definitely observe the EU competition rules."

But he added that Chinese companies should not be discriminated against "when their bids were technically and financially better, which was the case in many fields."

Li and his Hungarian and Serb counterparts, Viktor Orban and Ivica Dacic, also announced an agreement on the modernization of a railway linking the two Central European countries.

"This will be a landmark project," Li said.

Orban hailed a "one-of-a-kind, never-before agreement," saying it embodied a "win-win-win-win situation, as Serbia, China, Hungary and the EU will all have to gain from it."

"China's investment policy is of assistance to the entire EU because it increases the competitiveness" of the European bloc, he added.

In the early 2000s, Chinese investment in the region was almost inexistent. In 2010 it topped $800 million, according to the Warsaw-based Central and Eastern European Development Institute.

Trade between China and CEE has also grown. While it amounted to $3.0 billion in 2000, it surpassed $41 billion in 2010, with China registering a net surplus.

Following the eurozone crisis, the CEE countries with their "hybrid economies, somewhere between emerging and developed markets... appear as more dynamic places to put Chinese money into," the CEED said.

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