Innovation-driven cooperation with China essential for European businesses, says expert-Xinhua

Innovation-driven cooperation with China essential for European businesses, says expert

Source: Xinhua

Editor: huaxia

2025-12-07 06:34:15

Tulips are seen during the 2024 Tulip Festival in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, April 10, 2024. (Photo by Sylvia Lederer/Xinhua)

For Dutch and European businesses, innovation-driven cooperation with China is essential for maintaining a meaningful role in the global economy, said the Netherlands China Business Council chairman.

THE HAGUE, Dec. 6 (Xinhua) -- China and the Netherlands should deepen collaboration on co-innovation initiatives across key industrial sectors to elevate bilateral economic ties to a new level, said Jochum Haakma, chairman of the Netherlands China Business Council.

In a recent interview with Xinhua during the Amsterdam roadshow of the fourth China International Supply Chain Expo, Haakma stressed that China remains a vital partner for the Netherlands and Europe, not only for its vast market, but also for its rapidly growing strengths in innovation, technology, and industrial upgrading.

"Many European companies, including Dutch firms, are in China not just to sell products, but to co-innovate and become part of a shared global ecosystem," said Haakma, who served as managing director of the Netherlands Foreign Investment Agency from 2006 to 2007.

"You may see a small startup or scale-up begin in the Netherlands, while large-scale development and rollout most likely takes place in China, because things move faster there," he explained.

A Dutch farmer works at a greenhouse of Triflor tulip farm in the Netherlands, Nov. 4, 2019. (Xinhua/Lin Liping)

According to Haakma, sectors including pharmaceuticals, artificial intelligence, and batteries offer particularly strong prospects for co-innovation between Chinese and Dutch industry players, which are opportunities supported by China's development strategy.

On Friday, Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Lin Jian told a briefing that China has long taken science and technology as its primary productive force. "China's innovation is open and open-source, and the country is willing to share indigenous technologies and innovation scenarios with the world," Lin said.

Haakma sees huge potential in China's openness. "With government support and strong engagement from industry, I believe the co-innovation in these sectors can be very successful," he said.

While expressing confidence in future cooperation, Haakma also pointed to challenges, including shifting geopolitics, volatile supply chains, and rising trade tensions. These global uncertainties, he said, make international business more complex, strengthening the case for collaboration.

A woman is seen inside a bicycle parking facility at Amsterdam Central Station in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, on Feb. 3, 2023. The newly-opened bicycle parking facility has space for some 7,000 bicycles. (Photo by Sylvia Lederer/Xinhua)

"The right response to global pressure is not isolation, but innovation, quality, and resilient cooperation," said Haakma, who is also the chairman of the EU-China Business Council in Brussels. "Our economies must remain both competitive and connected. The Netherlands is totally dependent on the rest of the world, so we cannot afford to be inward-looking or protectionist."

Sino-Dutch economic cooperation has expanded rapidly since the establishment of diplomatic relations more than 50 years ago. According to China's Ministry of Commerce, bilateral trade reached 110 billion U.S. dollars in 2024. The Netherlands is China's second-largest trading partner within the European Union, while China remains the Netherlands' largest trading partner outside the bloc. The Netherlands is also China's largest EU destination for investment and the second-largest source of EU investment.

"The Netherlands and China need each other and are deeply interdependent," Haakma emphasized.

Artists perform dragon dance to celebrate Chinese Spring Festival in the city hall of the Hague, the Netherlands, Feb. 17, 2018. Chinese and Dutch people celebrated the Chinese Lunar New Year in the Hague on Saturday. (XinhuaSylvia Lederer)

Applauding China's fast and high-quality development over the past two decades, Haakma noted that China has transformed its industrial base from "low-cost mass production into high-end, technologically advanced manufacturing, and has emerged as a global leader in the green economy."

"This offers an important lesson for Europe and for the Netherlands about the value of a clear, long-term vision," he said, adding that Dutch and European businesses alike are seeking exactly that kind of strategic direction.

For Dutch and European businesses, he concluded, innovation-driven cooperation with China is not just desirable, but essential for maintaining a meaningful role in the global economy. 

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