Der beschleunigte Aufstieg der chinesischen Volkswirtschaft und die Vertiefung der Beziehungen des Landes mit der EU werden vermutlich eine Kräfteverschiebung im internationalen System erleichtern und eine Multipolarisation der internationalen Beziehungen fördern. Diese Meinung vertraten Diskussionsteilnehmer einer Konferenz des IFRI von 2006, die unter dem Titel „Die EU, China und die Suche nach einer multilateralen Welt“ stand.
The report first looks back at the thirty years of EU-China cooperation since formal diplomatic relations were established in 1975.
The second part looks to the future of the relationship, with regard to new global issues such as sustainable development and the internal evolution of both partners.
Following 25 years of continuous development, China has become the third-largest trader in the world. Meanwhile, the EU has expanded – both geographically and politically – and the world has experienced major changes, making countries in the globalisation process increasingly interdependent.
The report therefore concludes that the deepening of relations between China and the EU is the natural consequence of great changes in the international situation.
China and the EU, although very different, also share major strategic concerns whose solutions depend on the widening and strengthening of the multilateral system, states the report.
Multilateralism, as described by Professor Xu Jian, is the „mechanism by which nation states re-adjust the way in which sovereignty is performed so as to better define both state interest and the common interest of the international community.“
According to the panelists, China shares the European view of a world governed by rules created and monitored by multilateral institutions.
While China and the EU already have a complementary economic relationship in manufacturing activities, the energy sector could lead to growing mutual benefits in the future.
Moreover, as global players, the EU and China have a responsibility to work together to address the global challenges facing the world today – climate change, the non-proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and conflict resolution, say the authors; EU-China relations will therefore go from strength to strength, even if both must work hard to retain their position as global actors, concludes the report.
