Welcome to At the Foot of Mount Kunlun, where we explore the intricate tapestry of China’s geopolitics and its profound impact on the world. Join us in uncovering the layers of history and culture that shape our understanding of this dynamic nation.

🇨🇳 EU-China Summit 2025: Symbolism Over Substance?

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

en_USEnglish