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Margrethe Vestager serves as executive vice-president of the European Commission. Photo: EPA-EFE

EU plans new steps to combat threats from Chinese tech, says European Commission Executive Vice-President Margrethe Vestager

  • Investigations into TikTok’s data transfer to China and its advertising aimed at children. are ‘really not enough’, says European Commission’s executive vice-president
  • EU is considering an outbound investment screening mechanism targeting China, according to Vestager

The European Union should adopt “a broad, legally based approach” beyond current bans and investigations against risks posed by TikTok, the bloc’s digital chief said on Friday.

Margrethe Vestager, the European Commission’s executive vice-president, said the EU was considering an outbound investment screening mechanism that would target China, and that it would introduce a collective response to risks from Beijing’s malign use of technology.

TikTok, the popular short-form video app, is owned by Beijing-based ByteDance.

In February, the European Commission and the EU Council banned TikTok from staff phones, after the US federal government and more than two dozen states prohibited government employees from using the app on official work devices. Canada, Belgium and Britain have taken similar actions.

The EU has confirmed investigations into TikTok’s data transfer to China and its advertising aimed at children. “That is really not enough,” Vestager told an event at the Atlantic Council think tank in Washington.

She called for a “legally based approach”, saying that such efforts were imperative “as long as the same kind of data is for sale and China can buy it everywhere anyway”.

Her remarks came after TikTok launched “Project Clover” as its European counteroffensive to assuage politicians’ fears over Chinese surveillance. That plan to process European data in Ireland is an analogy to its “Project Texas”, which promised similar controls to US lawmakers in 2020.

Members of a US congressional committee peppered TikTok’s chief executive Chew Shou Zi with questions during a hearing on March 23, focusing on the app’s ties to the Chinese Communist Party, danger to teenagers and risk to American national security and data privacy.

On Thursday, European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen spoke about EU-China relations ahead of her trip next week to Beijing, where she and French President Emmanuel Macron will meet Chinese leader Xi Jinping.

Von der Leyen has accused China of pursuing a “systemic change of the international order” and called for stronger policies in response.

On Friday, Vestager reiterated the message that Brussels has no interest in decoupling from the world’s second largest economy, but rather needs to build a “de-risking” strategy to manage the relationship with Beijing. Reducing strategic dependencies on China is one of the most important components for doing so, she said.

“If one was ever in doubt, look at how the dependency on Russian gas, how that affected Europe,” she said. “We should only need to learn this once. Now we need to act upon it.”

Brussels has viewed Beijing as a “systemic rival” and “economic competitor”. Vestager said the two labels “come closer and closer together” since China shifts from focusing on economic growth to being much more ideological.

This requires more strategy to take action, she said. “We need to have a European approach to this.”

She said in light of the risks from China’s use of technology – including the integrity of data, disinformation and the protection of human rights – the EU would present a strategy in the next few months that will include “looking at outbound investment”.

“But the thing is, it’s not enough to address the risk of autocracies when they use digital technologies,” she added, emphasising more efforts on data protection – like those targeting TikTok – and big tech’s responsibility for the content and keeping the digital market open and contestable.

US President Joe Biden’s administration said this week that it was considering the establishment of an outbound investment review board to counter “malign actors” including China.

The Netherlands has joined a US push for export controls to limit China’s access to equipment for making advanced chips.

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