EU and China should increase cooperation to fight climate change

Published: 27 July 2010 y., Tuesday

Klimato kaita
Following on from the meeting of the EU-China Civil Society Round Table in Chongqing, a seminar on Trade and Development took place in Shanghai from 22 to 24 July 2010. Linked to the EU Trade Days, this seminar touched upon three main topics: Trade and Development, Trade and Climate Change and Investment and Cooperation.

Welcoming representatives from non state actors, the academic community and public authorities,

Mr Filip Hamro-Drotz, President of the External Relations Section of the EESC, pointed out that 2010 marks the 35th anniversary of the establishment of relations between the European Union and China.

On the issue of trade and climate change, participants underlined the following:

The EU and China should increase their cooperation to fight against climate change, whilst trade can be a useful instrument to promote green growth.

It is important to promote the trade of environmental goods and services, in particular wind and hydroelectric turbines, solar-powered boilers, solar panels, seawater desalination plants and wastewater reuse and treatment.

With reference to the WTO negotiations, the EU and China should cooperate to find an agreement to lower tariff barriers, concentrating on reducing obstacles to investment and non tariff barriers which continue to seriously hamper the spread of environmentally friendly products.

In his concluding remarks, Mr Sukhdev Sharma, President of the EU-China Follow-up Committee of the EESC underlined that trade alone is not enough to ensure sustainable development. Both China and the EU have a big part to play in this, considering the leading role they take in trade negotiations. This seminar clearly illustrates the benefit of and the need to involve social partners and other civil society organisations in trade discussions.

Mr Guan Chengyuan, standing member of the Economic and Social Council of China, reiterated that the EU and China are partners, not competitors and that the EU-China civil society Round Table can play a major role in promoting EU-China relations.

 

Šaltinis: europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Pakistan flood survivors await food

Desperate flood survivors in Pakistan's northwest fight for food, as Ramadan begins. more »

IMF and Honduras Hold Discussions over the Government's Economic Program

Mario Garza, resident representative of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in Honduras, issued the following statement in Tegucigalpa more »

EU Monitoring Mission (EUMM) in Georgia

The Council adopted a decision extending the mandate of the European Union monitoring mission in Georgia (EUMM Georgia) by twelve months until 14 September 2011. more »

Man freed after China mudslide

Chinese rescuers free a man trapped in a collapsed building for more than 58 hours, following mudslide in Zhouqu county. more »

Floods in Pakistan: Commission provides additional €10 million in emergency aid to address humanitarian needs

Today, the European Commission has adopted a €10 million emergency decision to further assist the most vulnerable people in Pakistan affected by the disastrous floods. more »

Moscow smoke cloud remains

Wildfire smoke in Moscow shuts down businesses and disrupts work at airports. more »

'Ice island' breaks off glacier, ice chunk

A massive ice chunk four times the size of Manhattan has broken off one of Greenland's two main glaciers more »

World Bank Group President Zoellick to Visit Bulgaria, Moldova, Latvia, August 9 - 13

World Bank Group President Robert B. Zoellick will visit Bulgaria, Moldova, and Latvia on August 9 – 13, to meet with government leaders, business people, think tanks, civil society, and visit projects to discuss development issues and the impact of the global economic crisis. more »

State aid: Commission approves aid to compensate damages caused in Poland by floods

The European Commission has approved an aid scheme that allows to grant compensation for the damage caused by the floods of May and June 2010 in Poland. more »

Flooding in Poland and Germany

Floods in Poland and Germany leave behind a wake of destroyed homes and lives. more »