EU-ASEAN Trade Deal Remains Long-Term Objective: Envoy
Jakarta. The European Union (EU) recently said that reviving the regional trade pact with ASEAN remained a “long-term objective” as the group tried to finish similar negotiations with the individual members of the Southeast Asian bloc.
ASEAN and the EU began negotiating a region-to-region free trade agreement (FTA) back in 2007. The talks were suspended two years later after seven negotiating rounds. Since then, the EU has been pursuing bilateral trade deals with the individual ASEAN economies, including Indonesia. Although years have passed since the negotiations stopped, a regional FTA is still on the agenda, according to EU Ambassador to ASEAN Sujiro Seam.
“The answer is in the joint leaders’ statement. There is a recognition that an EU-ASEAN FTA remains a long-term objective,” Seam told reporters in Jakarta on Thursday evening, when asked if there were plans to relaunch the talks.
Seam was referring to the joint leaders’ statement that came out of the EU-ASEAN summit in 2022. A copy of the statement showed that both sides reaffirmed a future FTA as a common long-term objective. At the same time, they agreed to explore cooperation in the digital economy, green technologies and services, as well as supply chain resilience.
“So there is an agreement to focus on dialogue on those three particular areas, … while at the same time, continuing with the bilateral FTA negotiations,” Seam said.
Indonesia is trying to finish a comprehensive economic partnership with the EU by later this year. Thailand last year agreed to restart the talks on a similar deal with the EU. The FTAs are already in effect for Singapore and Vietnam. Negotiations with the Philippines and Malaysia are put on hold.
“We are reassessing the opportunities of reopening those negotiations with the Philippines and Malaysia,” Seam told the press.
“The point is we are using these bilateral FTAs as building blocks towards a regional trade agreement between the EU and ASEAN,” Seam said.
Data shows that ASEAN represents the EU's third largest trading partner outside Europe (after China and the US) with more than €271.8 billion ($294 billion) of trade in goods in 2022.
Tags: Keywords:Related Articles
‘Palm Oil Just A Fraction of Our ASEAN Trade’: EU Says Ahead of Deforestation Law
The EU has postponed its deforestation law EUDR until end of 2026 for large operators.EU Signals Trade Pact Talks with ASEAN to Begin After 2027
The EU wishes to focus on sealing bilateral trade deals with the individual ASEAN members first before discussing a regional pact.The Latest
Ayase Ueda Scores Twice in Japan’s 4-0 Win Against Tunisia
Japan’s four goals were the most the Samurai Blue had ever scored in a World Cup game.Jakarta Completes Rasuna Said Revamp, Removes 109 Derelict Pillars
Jakarta has completed the transformation of Rasuna Said, removing 109 abandoned monorail pillars and upgrading public spaces.Curacao Earns First-Ever World Cup Point after Goalless Draw with Ecuador
Curacao goalkeeper Eloy Room made 15 saves against a relentless Ecuador attack, allowing The Blue Wave to earn a 0-0 draw.Germany Beats Ivory Coast 2-1 to Advance to World Cup Knockout Phase
Four-time champion Germany has come back from disappointing group stage exits in 2018 and 2022.Netherlands Routs Sweden 5-1 to Lead Group F
Sweden coach Graham Potter said the defeat was less about what his team did and more about just how good Netherlands played Saturday.Most Popular
