
On July 24, 2025, the European Union and China will meet in Beijing for the 25th EU-China leaders’ summit, marking the 50th anniversary of diplomatic relations between the two powers. While the occasion is ceremonially significant, the realpolitik behind the scenes reveals a strained partnership and a summit with limited strategic outcomes.
🧭 Who’s Attending – and Who’s Not?
The EU will be represented by:
- Charles Costa, President of the European Council
- Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission
They will meet with:
- President Xi Jinping, head of the People’s Republic of China
- Premier Li Qiang, who will co-chair the summit
However, the absence of key European heads of state — including those of France, Germany, Italy, and Spain — is no accident. It signals a deliberate distancing by major EU players from Brussels’ increasingly confrontational tone toward Beijing.
⚠️ This scaled-down diplomatic presence reflects internal EU divisions on how to engage with China.
💼 Trade Tensions Front and Center
Trade relations dominate the agenda — and the friction:
- The EU accuses China of state-subsidized overproduction in key sectors like electric vehicles and solar panels.
- The EU-China trade deficit now surpasses $350 billion, a cause of mounting concern in Brussels.
- Beijing maintains near-total control of critical raw materials, especially rare earth elements essential for European industries.
European countermeasures include:
- New anti-subsidy investigations and tariffs on Chinese EVs
- Limits on Chinese firms in public procurement markets, especially in medical devices
🌍 Strategic & Geopolitical Tensions
Beyond trade, the summit will confront stark geopolitical disagreements:
- China’s proximity to Russia in the Ukraine conflict
- Heightened tensions around Taiwan
- Beijing’s growing influence in Africa and the South China Sea
The EU remains skeptical of China’s non-aligned diplomacy while viewing its assertive foreign policy as increasingly threatening to Western interests.
🌱 Climate: The Only Common Ground?
The environment remains one of the few areas for potential cooperation:
- Both sides aim to release a joint statement on climate action
- However, the EU expects concrete commitments, not just vague declarations
The Global Gateway initiative, the EU’s alternative to China’s Belt and Road, will also be on the table — a subtle battle for global influence in infrastructure and investment.
⚖️ A Symbolic Summit with Limited Outcomes
While the summit serves as a diplomatic milestone, expectations for breakthroughs are low:
- No major trade deals or strategic pacts are expected
- The format and absences suggest a fragile and fragmented relationship
For China, it’s an opportunity to show openness and multilateral engagement. For the EU, it’s a chance to maintain dialogue without surrendering to economic or political dependency.
🔍 Conclusion: The EU-China Balancing Act
This 2025 summit reveals the EU’s delicate balancing act:
- Defend its economic interests
- Limit dependency on Chinese resources
- Engage diplomatically without endorsing Beijing’s global ambitions
Whether this symbolic engagement leads to tangible cooperation or simply masks growing strategic divergence remains to be seen.
Image credit:
© Reuters / Thomas Peter
