European Chamber Report Launch | The Shape of Things to Come: The race to control technical standardisation Go back »
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Time2021-12-02 | 15:00 - 16:30
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Venue:Zoom Online
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Address:Zoom Online
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Fee:Members: 150 |
Non Members: 300
Technical standard setting has emerged in recent years as one of the key battlegrounds in the struggle among states to gain dominance in high-technology sectors. While the core competition is between China and the United States, there are serious implications for the European Union and European enterprises as well. This is one of several factors that is leading to increased politicisation of technical standardisation, which has raised the risk of bifurcation, fragmentation and decoupling of standards.
While the European Union maintains a vital interest in China’s integration into international standard developing organisations, China’s growing influence presents challenges to the current predominant model of standardisation, which is private, voluntary and self-regulatory in nature. China’s recently published standardisation strategy is indicative of the future direction it will take in this realm, and outlines its ambition to engage even more in international standard setting.
The European Chamber, in partnership with the Swedish Institute of International Affairs (UI) and the Swedish National China Centre, is releasing a report on China’s domestic and international standardisation activities, and their impact on European business. The European Chamber is delighted to invite you to the online launch of The Shape of Things to Come: The Race to Control Technical Standardisation on 2nd December.
Agenda
15:00 – 15:05 Opening Remarks
- Dr Björn Fägersten, senior research fellow and director of UI's Europe Programme
15:05 – 15:40 Presentation of the Standardisation Report key findings
- Jörg Wuttke, President, European Chamber
- Dr Tim Rühlig, former research fellow at the Swedish Institute of International Affairs
15:40 – 16:15 Q&A
Terms & Conditions
Events and webinars have limited seating so to ensure your attendance we encourage advance online registration and payment. We cannot guarantee entry to anyone not registered in advance. A confirmation email with instructions on how to join the webinar will be sent to registrants who have paid.
- Members can pay via WeChat QR code once registered.
- Non-members will receive an email with the payment code.
- Fapiao will be distributed to participants within 5-10 working days after the webinar.
Cancellation Policy
If you cannot attend the registered event, please cancel your registration no later than one business day prior to the event. If you fail to communicate your cancellation in a timely fashion, registration fee will not be refunded.
To cancel you can: 1) email bj_events@europeanchamber.com.cn, or 2) cancel online if you registered to the event through the website.
Advisory Council Policy
Members of Advisory Council may enjoy complimentary admission to this event. For further information please contact Mr. Luyang Syvänen at lsyvanen@europeanchamber.com.cn.
Speakers
Dr. Björn Fägersten
Dr. Björn Fägersten
Björn Fägersten is Senior Research Fellow and Director of UI's Europe Programme. He conducts research on European integration, security policy, intelligence, international institutions and political risk. Current projects involve Geopolitical consequences of Brexit, intelligence cooperation within international security institutions, and the concept of political risk in public and private sectors.
Björn Fägersten has a PhD in political science from Lund University, Sweden, and has held research fellowships at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government and at the European University Institute. He has published in peer-reviewed journals on European security cooperation and the design of intelligence institutions.
Dr. Tim Rühlig
Dr. Tim Rühlig
im Rühlig is a Research Fellow at the Swedish Institute of International Affairs since 2018. His work focuses on EU-China relations as well as Chinese foreign policy. He is researching China’s foreign economic policy and its implications for Europe in general and the role of technical standardisation in particular. Mr. Rühlig holds a PhD from the University of Frankfurt in which he investigated how the Chinese party-state copes with globalization and the transformation of the state. In 2018, he was the coordinator of the European Think Tank Network on China (ETNC) and lead editor of the network’s annual report assessing the role of political values in Europe-China relations. Mr. Rühlig is also a management committee member of the new-found "China in Europe Research Network" funded by the European Union. He has been a visiting research fellow to several institutions including the China Foreign Affairs University in Beijing and the European Institute for Asian Studies in Brussels. Previously, he has studied political science, cultural anthropology, international relations and peace and conflict research. He was a research associate at the Cluster of Excellence “The formation of normative orders” in Frankfurt and has worked on political implications of social media discourses in China.
Mr. Jörg Wuttke
Mr. Jörg Wuttke
Jörg Wuttke is Chief Representative of BASF China, based in Beijing.
Jörg Wuttke was President of the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China from 2007 to 2010, 2014 to 2017 and again from 2019 to 2023. From 2001 to 2004 Mr. Wuttke was the Chairman of the German Chamber of Commerce in China.
Since its establishment in 2013, Mr. Wuttke is member of the Advisory Board of Germany’s foremost Think Tank on China, Mercator Institute for China Studies (MERICS), in Berlin. He lived in China for more than 30 years.