Hoekstra’s
mano a mano with China wobbles climate summit
EU’s top
climate envoy’s war of words sparks fears of diplomatic discord ahead of COP30.
October
13, 2025 4:08 am CET
By Louise
Guillot, Karl Mathiesen and Mari Eccles
https://www.politico.eu/article/wopke-hoekstra-climate-plan-clash-china-cop30/
BRUSSELS
— The EU’s top climate envoy is picking a fight with China weeks before a
high-stakes United Nations summit on global warming, already undercut by the
United States’ withdrawal from the 2015 Paris Agreement.
Some
diplomats and observers were left wondering what Wopke Hoekstra hoped to
achieve when he attacked Beijing last month for what he described as a “clearly
disappointing” climate plan — especially after the EU had failed to present its
own strategy.
The move
raised fears of a rift between China and Europe heading into the United
Nations’ COP30 climate summit, where the two blocs will be dominant forces
after U.S. President Donald Trump declared in January that Washington would no
longer participate in the process and formally exit the Paris Agreement.
But the
Dutchman was unbowed. China’s promise to cut its climate pollution by between 7
and 10 percent by 2035 deserved straight talk, he said in an interview with
POLITICO. “As much as I’m in the domain of diplomacy, there’s no point in
suggesting that this is somewhere in the ballpark of almost being good enough.”
Every
country needs to take responsibility for their planet-cooking pollution, he
said, adding that he would keep seeking dialogue with China. “We’ll continue to
work with them, but this is a missed opportunity, in my view, of doing what is
needed and doing what also is related to a responsible actor of this importance
and this size.”
The EU,
racked by its own internal disagreement, has yet to submit a formal target, as
it is required to do under the Paris Agreement. Instead, it has released a
“statement of intent,” indicating that it will cut its greenhouse gas emissions
by between 66.3 percent and 72.5 percent below 1990 levels by 2035.
Hoekstra’s
criticism sparked an extraordinary riposte from China’s foreign ministry, which
complained to Reuters about the EU’s "double standards and selective
blindness" and warned “such rhetoric disrupts global solidarity in
addressing climate change and undermines the atmosphere of cooperation.”
On
Monday, Hoekstra, the European commissioner responsible for climate, will sit
across from Chinese negotiators for the first time since the spat broke out.
The talks in Brazil are the final preparatory meeting before COP30 kicks off in
the Amazon city of Belém in November.
With the
White House seeking every way possible to promote fossil fuels and downplay the
surging global investment in clean energy, much of the rest of the world is
looking to China and the EU to step in and send an alternative and unified
message about the shift away from coal, oil and gas.
Asked who
would win in a war of words between China and the EU, Li Shuo, director of the
China Climate Hub at the Asia Society Policy Institute, replied flatly:
“Trump.”
Hoekstra’s
response to China’s climate goal stood out among European and U.N. officials,
even many climate advocacy groups, who largely swerved conflict and accepted
Beijing had a track record of underpromising and overdelivering on its pledges.
“Criticism
of others can only be credible if we lead by example, and Hoekstra’s remarks
come across more as an attempt to deflect from Europe’s own shortcomings than
as a coherent climate strategy,” said European Green lawmaker Michael Bloss.
“Right
now, we talk a big game but have nothing to show for it,” Bloss told POLITICO,
referring to the EU missing the deadline to submit its 2035 climate plan.
“That’s not how you motivate the rest of the world to act,” he added, warning
that “without close EU-China cooperation, the COP30 process is in danger.”
But
“Commissioner Hoekstra's statement was walking a very fine line,” tempered
Sébastien Treyer, executive director of the French Institute for Sustainable
Development and International Relations, or IDDRI, a think tank.
“It would
have been unthinkable for the European commissioner for climate action to
simply welcome China's [climate plan] from a diplomatic point of view,” he
added.
What this
leads to, however, is “a statement that creates a rather harsh atmosphere of
mutual criticism, rather than a positive learning dynamic” ahead of COP30,
Treyer noted.
Punching
hard
Hoekstra's
approach has some support in Europe’s capitals, where pointing to China’s
continued coal expansion is a common excuse for doing less at home. French
officials, for example, have been adamant about the need for China to step up
its efforts in the global fight against climate change.
China’s
2035 climate target was “absolutely disappointing ... they can do a lot
better,” said a French government official, who, like others in this article
was granted anonymity to discuss sensitive diplomatic matters. They vowed to
keep “push[ing] China to fully embrace its role as a climate leader, which it
should logically assume” ahead of COP30, because it is the largest emitter of
greenhouse gases in the world, one of the top historical emitters, and has the
“economic and financial means” to have a “real climate leadership policy.”
Others
questioned whether Hoekstra’s strategy is the right one, especially after his
boss European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen had just endured the
embarrassment of turning up to a U.N. summit in New York without a formal plan
from the EU.
The rift
on climate policy between the two powers is coming at a moment when trade
tensions could be exacerbated as the EU looks to ramp up its trade defense
measures against China.
“Hoekstra
is a liability,” said a senior climate diplomat from a European country, who
disagrees with his aggressive approach toward China. "He always looks and
sounds as if he’s just walked off the 18th green and wants a glass of wine with
his Caesar salad. I don’t know anyone who thinks he has the requisite
gravitas.”
Hoekstra
brushed off the criticism toward his approach, telling an event in Brussels
earlier this month, that “we tend to overestimate our ability to, at scale,
influence [China's] decision-making.”
“I'm not
convinced at all that if we had tabled something earlier that it would have
moved the needle,” he said. But added that, when China is responsible for about
30 percent of global emissions, “if then the response is a 7 to 10 [percent
reduction of emissions], it's really hard, even if you want to make as much of
a diplomatic effort as possible, to do as if that is enough.”
A
Commission official, who was not authorized to speak on the record, said
Hoekstra’s team was in discussions with the Chinese over a bilateral meeting
ahead of COP30. But that won’t happen in Brazil on Monday because Beijing was
not sending a representative of Hoekstra’s ministerial rank, the official said.
Canada, China and the EU will lead a ministerial climate summit in Toronto,
Ontario at the end of the month, presenting a chance for a meeting.
The
climate commissioner’s relationship with China contrasts with that of Executive
Vice President Teresa Ribera, his direct overseer in the Commission structure.
Ribera, a veteran climate diplomat, recently held a meeting with the former
Chinese climate envoy Xie Zhenhua in Brussels — an unusual bending of protocol.
In July,
after Hoekstra signaled the EU would not sign a joint statement with China
unless it showed greater “ambition,” Ribera brokered a deal in which China made
no such concession.
Speaking
to POLITICO, Ribera emphasized the need for COP30 to project unity against the
fossil fuel revisionism of the Trump administration.
“In the
COP, in Belém this year, we need to come up providing a clear message on the
multilateral system being prepared to work together and being supported by all
parties — almost all parties,” she told POLITICO. She was not responding
directly to Hoekstra’s war of words with the Chinese.
Steffen
Menzel, program leader at the climate think tank E3G, said Hoekstra and Ribera
were representing “different voices, different tones in Brussels and across the
EU.” He saw no problem with Hoekstra’s tougher language.
“It's the
right way to go for the EU to be very clear with the Chinese engagement or
climate action when it is insufficient, and that doesn't rule out cooperation,”
he said. “The EU can and needs to be there with their own strong position.”
Nicolas
Camut contributed to this report.


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