The 14th meeting of the China Ireland Joint Economic and Trade Commission was held in Dublin
On November 12th, Ling Ji, Deputy Minister of Commerce and Deputy Representative for International Trade Negotiations, and Peter Burke, Minister of Enterprise, Tourism and Employment of Ireland, co chaired the 14th meeting of the China Ireland Economic and Trade Joint Committee in Dublin.
Ling Ji stated that under the strategic guidance of the leaders of China and Ireland, the mutually beneficial strategic partnership between the two countries has been continuously consolidated, with bilateral trade in goods and services advancing simultaneously, balanced development of two-way investment, and both sides supporting free trade and the multilateral trading system. China and Ireland complement each other's economic advantages, and China is willing to strengthen strategic alignment with Ireland, deepen cooperation in areas such as digital economy, green energy, biomedicine, technological innovation, and financial services, and create new growth points for economic and trade cooperation. During the 15th Five Year Plan period, China will expand the opening up of the service industry, providing broad development space for enterprises to invest in China.
Burke stated that Ireland and China have developed mutually beneficial economic and trade relations for a long time. China is Ireland's largest trading partner in Asia, and its economic development brings certainty to global economic growth. Love is a highly open and free economy. Chinese enterprises and financial institutions are welcome to invest in love, conduct joint research and innovation, which is conducive to integrating into the global value chain.