The recent EU-China summit in Beijing, marking 50 years of diplomatic relations, exposed significant tensions between the two powers. While both sides issued a joint statement on climate action and made limited progress on rare earth exports, the summit was dominated by disagreements over trade, market access, and China's stance on the Ukraine war. European leaders described the relationship as being at an 'inflection point,' with concerns over Chinese subsidies, economic imbalances, and Beijing's ties to Russia straining cooperation. Despite calls for pragmatism and cooperation, the summit ended early and yielded few concrete results, underscoring the growing divide. The outcome signals that while climate change remains a shared priority, broader strategic and economic issues are driving the EU and China further apart.
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