Closer ties between EU and Japan welcomed by senior MEP

Martin Banks
Credit: japan.go.jp

Belgium (Brussels Morning Newspaper) A senior MEP has welcomed the prospect of closer cooperation between the EU and Japan.

Reinhard Bütikofer, the European Parliament‘s Rapporteur on EU-Japan relations, was speaking after the “Hydrogen High-Level Business Forum” in the Japanese capital, Tokyo.

Japan is the EU’s second-biggest trading partner in Asia after China.

At the same time, Japan is the seventh largest partner for EU exports and imports of goods. Together, the EU and Japan account for about a quarter of the world’s GDP. The two sides also cooperate in each other’s regions: Japan contributes to the reconstruction of the western Balkans and the EU supports international efforts to maintain peace in Korea and the rest of Asia.

Bütikofer, a veteran German MEP, said,

“The announcement of closer cooperation in the field of renewable energies and dearly needed good news.”

He went on, “So far EU-Japan partnership had been somewhat underdeveloped in the green sector.”

He noted that the EU energy Commissioner Kadri Simson and Prime Minister Fumio Kishida have now agreed to put into practice what he says

“is obviously imperative: pragmatic, focussed and mutually beneficial cooperation in future technologies among trusted partners.”

The deputy added,

“This cooperation in the framework of the EU Japan Green Alliance is a prime example of the EU partnering with a like-minded country to achieve energy resilience and together advance the Green transition. This is not only helpful in combatting the climate crisis, it is also useful in order to jointly avoid a green tech dependency on players that might exploit a dominance in that sector for ulterior purposes.”

He said that, in the same vein, the recent signing by the EU and Australia of a Memorandum of Understanding for a bilateral partnership to cooperate on sustainable critical and strategic minerals is also an important step in the right direction.

The EU Commission‘s economic security strategy had already pointed out that playing defense against dumping and unfair subsidisation coming from China cannot be enough.

“We need to partner with others that are willing to adhere to the rules of the market. It is only positive that the EU is now walking the talk and also developing the external dimension of its industrial and economic policy. Supply chain resilience agreements are a crucial policy tool of the future. The Global Gateway Initiative could and should play an important role in this regard, too,”

added the Greens MEP.

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Brussels Morning is a daily online newspaper based in Belgium. BM publishes unique and independent coverage on international and European affairs. With a Europe-wide perspective, BM covers policies and politics of the EU, significant Member State developments, and looks at the international agenda with a European perspective.
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Martin Banks is an experienced British-born journalist who has been covering the EU beat (and much else besides) in Brussels since 2001. Previously, he had worked for many years in regional journalism in the UK and freelanced for national titles. He has a keen interest in foreign affairs and has closely followed the workings of the European Parliament and MEPs in particular for some years.
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