China and Spain agree to provide 'fair, non-discriminatory' business environment, Wang Yi says

China and Spain have agreed to provide a "fair, just and non-discriminatory" business environment for each other, top Chinese diplomat Wang Yi said, amid growing calls in Europe to de-risk from Beijing.

In a joint press conference with Spanish counterpart Jose Manuel Albares in Cordoba on Sunday, Wang also said China had agreed to lift a 24-year-old ban on imports of beef from Spain, calling it "good news, especially for Spanish farmers".

The ban was imposed on beef products from the European Union in 2000 after several cases of mad cow disease - or bovine spongiform encephalopathy - were found in some EU member states.

Do you have questions about the biggest topics and trends from around the world? Get the answers with SCMP Knowledge, our new platform of curated content with explainers, FAQs, analyses and infographics brought to you by our award-winning team.

Albares said the impact of the move would be "extraordinarily positive".

"This is a measure which we have long been asking for and which benefits the entire countryside," Albares said, according to Agence France-Presse. "It is hard to find a market like the Chinese market."

Wang, who travelled to the southern Spanish city of Cordoba on Sunday after attending the Munich Security Conference in Germany, said China welcomed "more high-quality products" from Spain.

"China and Spain agreed to expand cooperation in new areas - such as electric vehicles, green energy, the digital economy - and to provide each other's enterprises with a fair, just and non-discriminatory business environment ... to help transform and upgrade our respective economies," Wang said, according to a Chinese readout released on Monday.

He said they would also step up efforts to improve cultural and people-to-people exchanges, and that Beijing had agreed to send a pair of pandas to Spain after five pandas currently in Madrid are returned to China.

According to the Chinese readout, Wang said Beijing was ready to work with Madrid "to coordinate closely ... and propose more effective solutions to promote the political settlement of hotspot issues", without elaborating.

The AFP report quoted Albares as saying they had "agreed to support the solution of the two states: Palestinian and Israeli" to end the conflict in Gaza.

"I have expressed my serious concern about the critical situation in Rafah, the need to achieve an immediate ceasefire, to continue supporting UNRWA more than ever and the indispensable work it does with refugees," Albares said, referring to the UN agency for Palestinian refugees.