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EU reaches provisional deal on screening foreign investment

EU reaches provisional deal on screening foreign investment
EU reaches provisional deal on screening foreign investment

The European Union has reached a provisional agreement on Thursday regarding new rules that will require all of its members to screen foreign investments into the EU?in sensitive sectors like defence, AI, or critical minerals to determine if it threatens economic security.

Representatives from the European Parliament and Council, the grouping EU governments, have reached agreement on a draft text for re-evaluating its?existing FDI screen regulations. The text will still need to be approved by both bodies.

All EU countries will be required to screen investments and block them if they pose a risk. The screening will extend to investments made within the EU, if an investor is controlled by a foreign firm.

The original proposal?did not name any countries,?but contrasts'reliable partners' with 'countries of concern,?and highlights "de-risking", which is the policy of the bloc to reduce economic dependence on China.

Export restrictions

Rare earths and Chips

Foreign investments in critical raw materials and energy, voting systems and databases, and critical raw materials and technologies, such as AI and quantum?technologies, will need to be screened.

Included are central counterparties, central securities depositories, operators on regulated markets, payment systems, and systemically significant financial institutions.

The screening decisions are still the responsibility of EU member states where the investment is being made. However, the European Commission may give its opinion.

Morten Bodskov (Danish Business and Industry Minister), whose country currently holds the rotating EU Presidency, made a statement. (Reporting and editing by Inti, Landauro, and Toby Chopra.)

(source: Reuters)