The EU has agreed to ban shipments of Russian LNG following Putinâs illegal invasion of Ukraine – MAXIM SHIPENKOV/Shutterstock
In 2018, Mr Trump and then Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker agreed a deal to import more US LNG, which helped ward off new tariffs on EU goods beyond those the then-president imposed on European steel and aluminium.
Giorgia Meloni, the prime minister of Italy, has been tipped to act as a mediator between the US and EU.
The hard-Right leader says she has a good relationship with Elon Musk, the Trump-backing owner of X, who is expected to join the next US administration.
Ms Meloni said: âI can tell you that I consider Elon Musk an added value at this time.
âA person who has certainly done some extraordinary things, some important things, and I think that he should and can be an interlocutor, a person with whom one can deal.â
Viktor Orban, the Trump-supporting prime minister of Hungary, said the trade issue âwill not be easyâ because the president-elect is âthe master of dealmakingâ.
âHe is a tough negotiator on trade issues,â he said on Thursday night. âIt will be a serious negotiation between the US and EU.â
âWe have to stand up and we have to negotiate and at the end of the day we have to make a deal. If we are good enough, we will make a good deal,â he added.
Alexander De Croo at the informal EU Summit at the Puskas Arena, in Budapest, on Thursday – MARTON MONUS
Mr Trump has also vowed to hit Beijing with 60 per cent tariffs, which has sparked fears that Europe could be flooded with Chinese products priced out of the US market.
The EU could also help the US in its trade battles against âcommon competitorâ China if Donald Trump does not hit the bloc with âsillyâ tariffs, the prime minister of Belgium said.
Alexander De Croo said EU leaders discussed the need for unity in the face of the president-electâs threats.
âI think we need to have a clear dialogue with him and explain what the effect could be for Europe and the United States,â Mr De Croo said as he arrived for a second day of summit talks in the Hungarian capital on Friday.
âI think that we have a common competitor, and the common competitor we have is China.â
âSo if the United States wants to do something about the competitive behaviour of China, where you could ask questions on if it is within WTO [World Trade Organisation] rules, there we can work together.
âWeâre actually allies and it would be a bit silly if allies would impose tariffs on each other.
âWe should have an open dialogue with the United States on that, but I think our common competitor is China. Weâre not competitors with one another.â
Donald Trump pictured here in 2019 with Xi Jinping, the Chinese president, has vowed to hit Beijing with 60 per cent tariffs – SUSAN WALSH
A European diplomat also told the Telegraph: âChina was broadly identified as an area where the EU could work with the US.â
Mette Frederiksen, the prime minister of Denmark, said: âWe are close friends. I would prefer no competition between us in this world with so much insecurity.
âI think we have to stick together but, of course, Europe has to do what Europe has to do.â
The United States was the largest market for EU exports of goods, at 19.7 per cent, in 2023. The US is the EUâs second-largest trading partner for imports.
Putting goods and services together, EU-US trade was worth $1.3 trillion (ÂŁ1 trillion) in 2022.
Other EU leaders called on Europe to ramp up its arms manufacturing and common defence policy amid fears Mr Trump will cut off support to Ukraine.
âThe world is made up of herbivores and carnivores. If we decide to remain herbivores, then the carnivores will win and we will be a market for them,â Emmanuel Macron, the French president, said on Thursday.
He added: âI think, at the very least, we should choose to become omnivores.â
Europe must âuniteâ to survive
Josep Borrell, the EUâs chief diplomat, said Europe would face a more âcontractual approachâ after Mr Trumpâs return to the White House following his victory in this weekâs US presidential election.
Speaking on Friday, Mr Borrell said: âThe only recipe for Europe to survive is to be more united and to build a stronger union, a sovereign union, able to face the challenges of the world without outsourcing our security to anyone else.
âIf you are not at the table, you will be on the menu,â he said and added, âWhatever happens, we have to continue fulfilling our commitment with Ukraine.â
âWe need more Europe. We need a stronger Europe,â said Luc Frieden, the prime minister of Luxembourg.
Europe could be flooded with Chinese products if priced out of the US market – GETTY
Charles Michel, European council president, and Ursula von der Leyen, European commission president, both spoke with the president-elect on Thursday.
âI passed the message yesterday to Donald Trump, that we would like to cooperate with him in all things, including on Ukraine,â Mr Michel said.
EU leaders are expected to agree a joint statement calling for âan ambitious, robust, open and sustainable trade policy, with the WTO at its core, which defends and promotes the EUâs interestsâ.
The statement also calls on Europe to increase âour defence readiness and capabilities, in particular by strengthening our defence technological and industrial base accordinglyâ.
It added: âThe commission will present without delay developed options for public and private funding.â
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Publish date : 2024-11-09 20:13:00
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