Development: China to step up free trade talks with Middle East
Trade negotiations to begin with Israel next year.

China and members of the Gulf Cooperation Council - Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates – started free trade talks in 2004, and a deal will help China cut costs on energy imports from the region, the official China Daily said.
“GCC countries consider China as a major market for their petrochemical products, and this (FTA) will assist those nations in their industrial development,” said Zhang Shaogang, head of the Commerce Ministry’s international trade and economic affairs department.
Zhang added that the ministry has finished a feasibility study on launching free trade talks with Israel, and hopes to sign it sometime in the next few years, the English-language newspaper said.
China inked major free trade agreements with Australia and South Korea this year, and already has deals with a handful of other countries, including Costa Rica, Peru, New Zealand and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.
Published in The Express Tribune, December 31st, 2014.
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