// Global Analysis Archive
The Diplomat argues that China and India are driving a clean-tech race that accelerates renewable deployment while fragmenting supply chains and industrial policy. The rivalry is structurally asymmetric, with China dominant upstream and India stronger downstream, creating an interdependent but increasingly politicized global transition.
Spain is pursuing a bilateral deepening with China, highlighted by 19 agreements and a new Permanent Strategic Dialogue following Prime Minister Sánchez’s April 2025 Beijing visit. The approach could accelerate clean-tech investment and market access, but it heightens EU cohesion, security, and political-continuity risks—especially in sensitive infrastructure and data domains.
The Diplomat argues that China and India are driving a clean-tech race that accelerates renewable deployment while fragmenting supply chains and industrial policy. The rivalry is structurally asymmetric, with China dominant upstream and India stronger downstream, creating an interdependent but increasingly politicized global transition.
Spain is pursuing a bilateral deepening with China, highlighted by 19 agreements and a new Permanent Strategic Dialogue following Prime Minister Sánchez’s April 2025 Beijing visit. The approach could accelerate clean-tech investment and market access, but it heightens EU cohesion, security, and political-continuity risks—especially in sensitive infrastructure and data domains.
| ID | Title | Category | Date | Views | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RPT-4935 | China-India Clean Tech Rivalry Deepens a New ‘Green Divide’ | China | 2026-06-05 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-4251 | Spain’s China Bridge: Strategic Leverage or Emerging Dependency? | Spain | 2025-11-21 | 0 | ACCESS » |