We had a big meeting of the China network's top management on Friday, to review progress on our China strategy, and agree on future work. I thought you might be interested by the highlights, because it shows the scale of what we are doing across China, and how much it matters to us. There are three pillars to our strategy. The first is to get the best for the UK from China's rise. Some highlights. In education, we are now issuing more student visas than ever before (see my last blog). In science co-operation, we are on track for almost 12,000 joint research papers between British and Chinese scientists between 2006 and 2010 - we have more substantive co-operation in this area than any other country in Europe. We are making progress on migration - both legal, with the introduction of a points based system a bit like Australia's, plus by allowing students to stay and work in the UK for two years after gradulation, and in combatting illegal migration, where we, wiht the help and support of the Chinese authorities, are now sending many more people back. Our exports to China are up 40% this year, in particular in the automotive, power generation, and retail sectors. And we are now seeing higher numbers of Chinese companies investing in the UK - we were the biggest source of Chinese investment in the EU in 2007. This is good news for the UK. We worked closely on the devastating earthquake in Sichuan, and successfully located over five hundred British citizens registered as missing. China and the UK both had a good Olympics, and we will be working together on 2012 (a big group from the Beijing Organising Committee is coming across to London to share expertise, next month). The UK and the companies and regions involved have great plans for our unique pavilion at Shanghai EXPO in 2010, based round the theme "better city, better life". We are doing more, and plan to do still more, in China's secondary cities, which are growing fast, and offer great opportunities. The second pillar is to work with China on issues where we both have a global responsibility to act. We are doing a lot together on climate change, and we have dramatically expanded our climate change network in China in the last six months. China is doing a lot domestically - the only developing economy with really tough energy efficiency and afforestation targets, that it is now coming closer to meeting. But there is much still to do, including on carbon capture and storage power stations (China is building between one and two power stations a week), and the idea that China look at low carbon development zones which would benefit us all. We are pursuing a number of initiatives that were kick started by a unique meeting in April, when our Ambassadors to other P5 countries, the UN and the EU all came to Beijing for high level discussions on key issues, including proliferation, the millennium development goals, and China/European issues. We see reform of the international financial institutions in a similar way. We are co-operating on what China calls 'hotspot issues', week by week, in particular on Iran, Sudan, and Burma, tho' on all three there is much, much more to be done. The third pillar is working together on sustainable development, modernisation and reform. We have extensive co-operation on sustainable development, backed up by a powerful contribution from Alistair Darling's China Task Force in the UK. We now have a strong political dialogue between our countries, at a number of levels (I blogged recently about our Leadership of the Future Forum, which is just one of them). We have a human rights dialogue, which is critically important. Progress in this area is slower than in so many other areas of Chinese life, and on some issues we profoundly disagree. But that makes conversation between us important, and should not mask the areas where there is movement - for example, China's death penalty reforms, which have reduced the number of crimes to which it applies, and given the Supreme Court the obligation to review all sentences. We hope that the media freedoms introduced for the Olympics are extended. China's stability is an important interest for the rest of the world. Continued reform is vital to that. The Consul Generals from Hong Kong, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Chongqing, and the head of the Far Eastern Department in London, all came over for this meeting. We are a big network now - over seven hundred people, from sixteen different government departments. China's a good place to work if you are a British diplomat, too - four different centres to work in, covering the issues that most matter to us, careers at all levels, and we are expanding. So my advice to my younger Foreign Office (and other civil service) colleagues, and those thinking about joining, is - learn Chinese, while your brain is young enough to get it in, or if you are not good at languages, or are a bit older and have a particular expertise, come to China anyway (we don't run an exclusive club) - this really is a good place to work. James, thank you very much for your kind comment, and the link to your blog. It is great both you and John are doing this! I'd like to come over and see you and the rest of your group, and learn more about what you are seeing in China, if you are up for that.
Posted at 08:16 13 October 2008 by Peter Wilson | Comments[1]
China - where change is a constant theme
Today is my first day blogging. I am the British Embassy's Political Counsellor in China . That means I run a team that covers China's internal politics, its relationship with the rest of the world, our press and public affairs operation here, and our bilateral relationship with China. I am also responsible for the Olympic attache at the Embassy (one of the more unusual Foreign Office jobs) and his team.
I am just back from two weeks away in Europe. It was just under a month to go at the Olympics. Even with only two weeks to go, there's been change. I just got off at Beijing's new terminal three that opened in March - a Norman Foster design, that is bigger than the whole of Heathrow, tho' nowhere near as full. The airport is gearing up: young Olympic volunteers, friendly airport staff, and luggage out five minutes after I was. Not many using the Olympic channel yet, said one of the border control officials, but better to be prepared. A lot of smiles and friendliness.
Now coming back into town. Coming in on a new road, that was not open when I left two weeks ago - not unusual for Beijing!. A second airport express way, just opened for the Olympics. It is good, tho' I am getting a bit lost now coming in a new way, past buildings that were not here a year and a half ago. The one thing I already miss, tho', is the blue skies I have been enjoying on holiday. Most Chinese still live in the countryside. But the cities, which are growing as rapidly as the economy, are polluted. Beijing's skies are grey (and it is double the size it was a decade ago). Climate change is a big issue for this Embassy. Domestic environmental pollution, and energy conservation, are key issues for China's top politicians, because the public cares about it now, and because it makes economic sense.
Change is a constant theme here. It is hard to get perspective on a place moving as fast as China is . I've now been back in China a year and a half, after almost ten years working on other things. I first came to Beijing in 1981, briefly, when I was 13. I came back in March 1989 as a student on vacation. And then not again until 1994, when I was studying Mandarin in the Foreign Office (I had two years training, full time, one in London and one in Beijing) . My first posting was here , in our Commercial Section , helping British companies enter the China market . I left in 1998. Even if blogs had existed then, the political climate here would have made it impossible to write one. That is not so true any more - although I am not sure this will be easy to access from a Chinese terminal. But I thought it would be worth having a go, to see.
There is plenty of material out there now in English to help form an impression of this country that now matters so much for all of us. And there are some really excellent British perpectives. James Kynge's China Shakes the World, published three years ago now, is still my favourite book about modern China. Rana Mitter's Short Introduction to Modern China, which came out earlier this year, is really imaginative. More and more British people are coming to see China for themselves: 600,000 visited last year. That exchange is two way - Chinese students are the largest foreign student community in the UK, with more than 60,000 students. I do not know who might read this, but I hope that perhaps some of those students will, and will comment.
Posted at 15:13 10 July 2008 by Peter Wilson | Comments[4]
