UK citizens will be able to travel visa-free to China for trips under 30 days, Keir Starmer announces during a visit to Beijing
Whisky sold from the UK to China will have import taxes halved from 10% to 5%, Downing Street says
Meanwhile, pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca, headquartered in the UK, announces a $15bn investment in China
Dharshini David analysis: There's much fanfare surrounding the deals, but in economic terms this will not be a game changer
Shadow home secretary Chris Philp accuses the government of trading "national security for economic crumbs off the Chinese table", saying Starmer went to Beijing to "kowtow to [China's President] Xi"
After meeting earlier, the PM said the UK-China relationship was in a "good, strong place" – Xi Jinping said there have been "twists and turns", but engagement was "unavoidable"
China is playing a long diplomatic game to try to restore its historical status as a global power in the hope that it can soon rival US influence, writes Laura Bicker
Edited by James Gregory and Angus Thompson, with political editor Chris Mason travelling with the prime minister
A string of announcements on trade and travel between the UK and China have rounded off the second day of Prime Minister Keir Starmer's trip to China.
The prime minister said the UK's relationship with China was in a "good, strong place" after speaking with President Xi Jingping in a meeting where trade co-operation was discussed, as well as issues such as the imprisonment of pro-democracy figure Jimmy Lai and the treatment of Uyghurs.
After Starmer also met China's Premier Li Qiang, the UK government announced several agreements, including:
Starmer said today's agreements would make it easier for British businesses to grow their footprints in China, which he described as "one of the world's economic powerhouses".
But his trip has been criticised by some Conservative MPs. Shadow home secretary Chris Philp accused Starmer of trading "national security for economic crumbs off the Chinese table".
We’re bringing our live coverage to an end now, but you can read more on Starmer's visit to China here.
As we've been reporting, Prime Minister Keir Starmer has unveiled a string of agreements after meeting China's President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Qiang.
But, speaking to the BBC's World at One, trade expert Allie Renison, of consultancy SEC Newgate, says the agreements do not represent "a Big Bang free-trade deal" between the two countries.
Instead, Renison describes the agreement on visa-free travel for UK citizens visiting China for under 30 days as "low-hanging fruit" to help the countries embark on a "first step towards wider discussions".
Part of today's swathe of agreements includes a “feasibility study” to work towards an agreement on trade in services between China and the UK.
Renison describes this as forging "incremental steps" towards making it easier for the UK's services industry to do business in China, rather than offering a "Big Bang" moment.
Whisky sold from the UK to China will have import taxes halved from 10% to 5%, Downing Street says.
We reported Keir Starmer saying earlier that delegations were negotiating the reduction of tariffs on whisky.
In 2022, sales of whisky in China were valued at $2.3bn. Last year, tariffs on whisky imports increased from 5% to 10%.
Downing Street says the deal will be worth £250m over five years for UK whisky exporters.
Starmer said earlier a move towards lower tariffs was an example of how he wanted a "much wider opening" for British businesses in China.
Shadow home secretary Chris Philp says that Keir Starmer "has gone to Beijing to kowtow to President Xi" and accused the government of trading "national security for economic crumbs off the Chinese table".
"A Conservative prime minister didn't go to China for the last eight years, as we concentrated our efforts on working with our allies," he says.
"China has engaged in industrial scale intellectual property theft; it has terrible environmental standards. Keir Starmer has failed to address any of that in his visit."
Philp also accuses of the government of granting permission for the new Chinese Embassy in London to "curry favour" ahead of Starmer's trip.
"That puts our national security at risk," he says.
A government spokesman said at the time of the embassy's approval intelligence agencies had been involved throughout, with an "extensive range of measures" to "manage any risks".
Starmer says his visit to China is in the UK's "national interest" and will open up opportunities for British business.
Laura Bicker
China correspondent, in Beijing
The flagship programme of Chinese state media, the mouthpiece of the Communist Party, spent 18 minutes on Keir Starmer's visit.
In one broadcast on channel CCTV, they edited President Xi's words of welcome over a video of both leaders while playing dramatic music underneath.
This is part of a big sell to domestic audiences in China who will see this visit as prestigious.
The UK is viewed by many as a country with a deep history.
Buckingham Palace, the Tower of London and the Royal Family all feature heavily in English textbooks in schools, and while some of the prevailing views are that Britain is a small country that often follows the United States, they also view it with affection.
Keir Starmer and Li Qiang attend a signing ceremony in Beijing
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer met with Chinese leader Xi Jinping in Beijing earlier today, where they agreed a number of deals.
Starmer said the meeting, which lasted one hour and 20 minutes, was productive with "real concrete outcomes".
Here's what has been announced:
Jacob Phillips
Live reporter
We don't yet know when visa-free travel for anyone visiting China from the UK for under 30 days kicks in.
Under the existing system, anyone applying for a visa must do so online and then go in person to a China application centre in London, Manchester, Belfast or Edinburgh, according to the UK government's foreign travel advice.
There, your fingerprints may be scanned and you may have your photo taken, the advice adds.
Someone must submit an application on behalf of anyone aged 13 and under, or 71 and over.
Costs for UK applicants start from £130 including service fees for a two-year visa, a graphic on the Chinese Visa Application Center website shows.
There are higher charges for 5-year and 10-year visas. All are available by regular, express or urgent services.
But Brits do not need a visa to visit the tropical island of Hainan in the south of China.
Tourist and business visas do not allow UK citizens to work in China – you can only work if you have a work visa – and anyone travelling to China must have at least six months left on their passport from the date they arrive in the country and two blank pages for visas and stamping, the foreign travel advice adds.
Laura Bicker
China correspondent
The Chinese president framed his meeting with Sir Keir Starmer not just in terms of what it meant for business between the UK and China – but what it meant in global terms.
For President Xi, these visits by western leaders from Canada, France and now the UK, all looking to reset their relationship with China, are taking part at a time when western alliances are being strained by an unpredictable US president who continues to threaten his partners with trade tariffs.
Xi described the state of the world as "turbulent and fluid" and said that he believed talks between the two nations was imperative for the sake of world peace and stability.
China is playing a long diplomatic game here to try to restore its historical status as a global power in the hope that it can soon rival US influence.
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What do UK and China want from Starmer's visit?
Former security minister Tom Tugendhat says Starmer "handed over all his cards" before turning up in Beijing.
The Conservative MP, who has long been a critic of China, says over the last 10 years he has seen jobs and intellectual property being stolen by China, and points to human rights abuses that Beijing is accused of.
"We need to stand up for Britain today," he tells BBC Radio 5 Live.
"We don’t spy to steal technology like this, we don’t spy to get ahead like this. The British government defends British interests and British vales. What it doesn’t do is act like some global bandit stealing ideas."
Tugendhat was one of several MPs who was sanctioned by Beijing in 2021 for his stance on China.
Dharshini David
Deputy economics editor
With China already the UK’s fourth biggest trading partner, there’s much fanfare surrounding the deals unveiled during the first visit by a British PM in eight years. But does what we've seen so far move the economic dial?
Some of it appears to play to the UK's strengths, in particular the $15bn (£10.9bn) investment by AstraZeneca – pharmaceuticals make up the UK's second biggest goods export to China.
Meanwhile, there's the "feasibility study" to explore whether to enter negotiations towards bilateral services announcement.
About half of what the UK sells China are services and there are theoretically gains to be had on both sides – in areas such as technology and banking – but there will inevitably be concerns over national security and espionage.
We await to hear what else may be on the table, but the deals are expected to be relatively piecemeal (and some, as ever, may have been announced before). China accounts for less than 1% of total foreign investment in the UK.
So in economic terms this will not be a game changer, but that in part will be deliberate – due to caution, not just about a higher-risk trading partner – but also the potential reaction of US President Donald Trump.
Here's a full list of the agreements signed today, according to Downing Street:
1. Co-operation on Transnational Organised Crime and Illegal Immigration
2. Establishment of a Bilateral Services Partnership
3. Joint Feasibility Study for a UK-China Trade in Services Agreement
4. Co-operation in the Field of Conformity Assessment
5. Exports from the UK to China
6. Strengthening the Work of the UK-China Joint Economic and Trade Commission
7. Co-operation in Domiciliary Services and Sports Industries
8. Collaboration in Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET)
9. Co-operation on Food Safety, Animal, and Plant Quarantine
10. Health Co-operation
We haven't got any details of what exactly is included in each deal, but we'll bring you this as soon as we have it.
In addition to visa-free travel for up to 30 days, the UK has announced a “feasibility study” to work towards an agreement on trade in services between China and the UK.
If agreed, this would establish clear and legally binding rules for UK firms doing business in China, making it easier for British companies to operate in the country, and vice versa.
The UK is already the world’s second largest exporter of services, and these measures aim to grow the £13bn worth of services sold by UK firms to China annually, the government says.
Chris Mason
Political editor, travelling with Starmer
Commenting on the visas agreement, the prime minister said: “As one of the world’s economic powerhouses, businesses have been crying out for ways to grow their footprints in China.
“We’ll make it easier for them to do so – including via relaxed visa rules for short-term travel – supporting them to expand abroad, all while boosting growth and jobs at home.”
We're getting some more details on some of the deals being agreed between China and the UK.
Downing Street says among them is confirmation that there will be visa-free travel for UK citizens visiting China for under 30 days.
The government says that this means people visiting China on business or as tourists will be able to travel without a visa, and that this brings the UK into line with 50 other countries such as France, Germany and Australia.
Chris Mason
Political editor, travelling with Keir Starmer
The prime minister has told the UK-China Business Council his engagement with Beijing was a way of “seeing the whole elephant”.
He told a meeting of business delegates at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing: “President Xi tells the story of blind men being presented with an elephant.
“One touches the leg and thinks it’s a pillow, another feels the belly and thinks it’s a wall.
“And too often this reflects how China is seen. But I profoundly believe that with broader and deeper engagement, which we’ve been talking about all this week, is our way of seeing the whole elephant and therefore building a more sophisticated relationship fit for these times.”
He added: “I would like to echo a Chinese phrase, which I think captures the essence of what I’m talking about: pursue common goals whilst reserving differences.
“That’s what we are working together to achieve.”
Business Secretary Peter Kyle welcomed the signing of a series of agreements with China on greater co-operation, including on trade in services.
"This visit is a springboard. This is not the last moment, it is a springboard into a future with far more action to come," he said.
Here's a closer look at what AstraZeneca says its $15bn investment in China will bring:
AstraZeneca, which is headquartered in the UK, has just announced it will invest $15bn (£10.9bn) in China until 2030.
The pharmaceutical company says the investment will be used to expand medicines manufacturing and research and development.
In a press release from AstraZeneca, Prime Minister Keir Starmer says the company's "expansion and leadership in China will help the British manufacturer continue to grow – supporting thousands of UK jobs".
We'll have more detail on this deal in the next post.
Let's bring you some more reaction now to Starmer's visit to China.
Kerry Brown, a former first secretary at the British Embassy in Beijing, says that China has become a "technology superpower" since 2018 – the last time a British prime minister visited the country.
He tells BBC Radio 4's Today programme that Beijing is "way ahead" in the fields of AI, quantum computing and pharma, adding that "China is now really important" in areas that matter to the UK such as cancer treatment and environmental science.
Brown adds that he hopes Starmer's visit "creates a framework" for the UK to "engage with that story rather than shaking our heads and saying no".
Currently, British passport holders need a visa to enter mainland China.
But President Xi today announced that China would "actively consider" implementing unilateral visa-free entry for UK citizens.
Since 2023, Beijing has dropped visa requirements for a growing number of countries including France, Germany and Spain.
Citizens of these countries can travel to China without a visa for business or tourism for a maximum of 30 days.
Hundreds of thousands of Brits could potentially benefit from a change to the current rules – there were 620,000 visits to mainland China in 2024, according to the Office for National Statistics. , external
Chris Mason
Political editor, travelling with Starmer
Chinese Premier Li Qiang said the people of the UK and China wanted “open co-operation” between their countries.
At the start of his meeting with Keir Starmer, Li told the prime minister that his efforts to improve relations had been “widely welcomed” in both countries.
He said this showed that “open co-operation and mutual benefit is what the people want. It also serves the shared interests of us both.”
He added: “The more we are in a changing world, the more valuable such stability is.”
Starmer said he wanted “to find ways to work together in a manner which is fit for these times".
“This means being more open and frank, to deal directly with differences, and it also means recognising and respecting modern China in all its vastness and complexity, for everything it has achieved and as a power whose fortunes directly affect the United Kingdom," Starmer added.
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