The Briefing
- Orpo meets with China’s top leaders
- Economic ties and Arctic security on agenda
- Visit follows EU’s cautious approach to Beijing
Finnish Prime Minister Petteri Orpo has concluded a high-profile trip to China, marking his first official visit since taking office.
His meetings focused on strengthening economic ties and directly addressing security concerns in the Arctic region amid increasing international competition for influence.
Orpo held talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Qiang in Beijing, where both sides discussed expanding trade, especially in the fields of technology and clean energy.
The prime minister also stressed the importance of upholding international law in the Baltic and Arctic regions. According to statements from Orpo’s office, he raised concerns about regional security and urged China to support a rules-based international order.
This visit comes at a time when Finland is recalibrating its foreign strategy—having joined NATO in April 2023 and recently shifted from a traditionally neutral stance to closer military and political alignment with Western nations.
China has become Finland’s fourth-largest trading partner, with bilateral trade rebounding after the pandemic.
However, the EU’s generally cautious approach to China, particularly regarding human rights and security issues, shaped the tone and content of Orpo’s discussions.
China has become Finland’s fourth-largest trading partner, with bilateral trade rebounding after the pandemic.
The Balancing Act
For Finland, the China relationship is wrapped in layers of complexity.
China is now Finland’s fourth-largest trading partner, with bilateral trade valued at several billion euros annually. Finnish paper and pulp products, machinery, and technology flow east; Chinese electronics, textiles, and manufactured goods flow west. For a nation of 5.5 million people, these economic ties are not trivial.
Yet Finland is also a committed member of the European Union, which has grown increasingly wary of Chinese investment, intellectual property practices, and human rights record. The EU has labeled China simultaneously a “partner, competitor, and systemic rival”—a formulation that captures the ambivalence felt across the continent.
And then there is the Russia factor. China’s deepening relationship with Moscow—including continued economic support despite Western sanctions—creates an uncomfortable backdrop for Finnish engagement. Finland shares an 830-mile border with Russia, the longest in the EU. Every Finnish leader knows that what happens between Beijing and Moscow has direct implications for Helsinki.


