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International agricultural trade fair opens in north China’s Tianjin

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The 22nd China International Agricultural Trade Fair opened in the northern Chinese city of Tianjin on Friday, bringing together nearly 4,000 exhibitors from around the world.

The event aims to showcase agricultural innovation while promoting trade and international cooperation. Visitors this year can explore approximately 25,000 products, with organizers expecting over 50,000 buyers and trade professionals to attend.

Hosted by China’s Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, the three-day fair spans more than 100,000 square meters and has zones dedicated to smart agriculture, agricultural technology and supportive industries for rural communities.

Alongside the main exhibition, more than 10 sideline events have been organized, including an agricultural forum and a livestreamed sales event.

This year’s fair features Thailand as the guest country of honor and includes participants from 19 countries, including Brazil, Italy, Malaysia, New Zealand and Uganda. It will facilitate discussions on and the establishment of high-quality international agricultural cooperation platforms, and promote practical cooperation on agricultural trade.

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Agriculture

Xi extends greetings ahead of farmers’ harvest festival

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Xi Jinping, general secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee, has extended festive greetings and sincere regards on behalf of the CPC Central Committee to farmers and people working on agricultural and rural fronts ahead of the eighth Chinese farmers’ harvest festival.

Xi, also Chinese president and chairman of the Central Military Commission, stressed efforts to build a beautiful and harmonious countryside that is desirable for people to live and work in, and march together toward a bright future of Chinese modernization.

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Agriculture

Closer China-Central Asia partnership brings greater certainty to global peace, development

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In a world increasingly fractured by geopolitical tensions and economic headwinds, the deepening cooperation between China and Central Asian nations stands as a key stabilizing force — one that fosters both regional peace and sustainable development.

Anchored in millennia of the ancient Silk Road exchanges and fortified by three decades of contemporary partnership, the China-Central Asia relationship has matured into a new paradigm of international relations — one that is built on mutual respect, synergistic development and strategic trust.

As the second China-Central Asia Summit convenes on June 16-18, anticipation grows that this gathering will inject fresh momentum into regional development, economic connectivity and cross-border understanding, and serve as a compelling example of how regional cooperation can help address global challenges and foster a more inclusive international order.

China was among the first countries to set up diplomatic ties with the five countries following their independence. Over the years, they have firmly supported each other’s independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity, and respected the countries’ exploration of their own development paths.

Development and prosperity remain elusive without stability and security. In their shared pursuit of regional peace and security, China and the Central Asian countries have stood in solidarity against the « three forces » of terrorism, separatism and extremism as well as drug trafficking and transnational organized crime, thereby fostering a favorable environment for economic growth and improving people’s well-being in the region.

Connectivity and win-win cooperation remains a cornerstone of the China-Central Asia relationship. It was in Kazakhstan back in 2013 that Chinese President Xi Jinping proposed the building of the Silk Road Economic Belt, a component of the landmark Belt and Road Initiative.

Over the years, Belt and Road cooperation has unfolded with a number of landmark projects, notably the China-Central Asia Gas Pipeline, Central Asia’s largest wind farm in Kazakhstan and the China-Europe freight trains transiting through the region.

Take the China-Central Asia Gas Pipeline. Stretching across Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan, it has delivered more than 500 billion cubic meters of natural gas to China since it was put into service in 2009, ensuring energy security for both sides while generating significant revenues for Central Asian economies.

Around the globe, rising protectionism and attempts to fragment the global economy are risking undermining global economic recovery. China-Central Asia economic and trade cooperation stands out as a fine example of how mutually beneficial partnerships can foster shared development.

In 2024, trade between China and Central Asia soared to almost 95 billion U.S. dollars, up by 5.4 billion dollars from the previous year. This sustained growth demonstrates not only the robust complementarity between the economies of China and Central Asia but also their shared commitment to an open global economy and a rules-based multilateral trading system.

Equally important is the cultural and people-to-people dimension. Educational exchanges, language programs, cultural initiatives and tourism cooperation have brought the peoples of China and Central Asia closer than ever.

In an era marked by geopolitical turbulence and widening governance deficits, the call for a fairer and more inclusive global order has grown ever more urgent.

As key members of the Global South, China and Central Asian countries are committed to genuine multilateralism, mutual respect for sovereignty and choosing their own development paths, as well as solving global hot-button issues via dialogues. Their shared commitment reflects a growing consensus among developing nations for a fairer and more equitable global governance, as well as for sustainable world peace and shared development.

Through cooperation within platforms such as the United Nations, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization and the Conference on Interaction and Confidence Building Measures in Asia, they are not only defending their core interests but also amplifying the voice of the Global South in the push for a fairer international order.

With shared vision and concrete action, China and Central Asian countries are pioneering a model of inclusive and mutually beneficial development — a path grounded in mutual respect and offering valuable insights for an international community grappling with growing divisions and uncertainties. ■

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Agriculture

Hollywood’s fading charm in China — and why U.S. tariffs are making it worse

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Once the king of China’s silver screen, Hollywood now finds itself sidelined, as local blockbusters surge and Washington’s tariffs against the rest of the world add fuel to shifting audience sentiment.

According to data released this week, Chinese animated feature « Ne Zha 2 » has scored a thunderous success, raking in 15.2 billion yuan (about 2.11 billion U.S. dollars) at China’s box office in just 12 weeks.

In stark contrast, the top-performing American film so far this year, « A Minecraft Movie » from Warner Bros., has just crossed 150 million yuan and failed to break into China’s top 10 films of 2025. That continues a sobering trend: 2024 marked the second consecutive year in which no Hollywood title cracked the one-billion-yuan mark, a symbolic threshold once routinely surpassed.

The sharp contrast highlights the deepening decline of Hollywood’s influence in the world’s second-largest movie market. Analysts say U.S. tariffs and trade restrictions are only accelerating the slide.

CREATIVE DECLINE

Industry data tells the story. American movies’ share of China’s annual box office revenue has plunged from 36 percent in 2018 and 30 percent in 2019 to just 14 percent in 2024, according to figures from box office tracker Maoyan, obtained by Xinhua.

That fading influence extends beyond box office numbers. « American blockbusters aren’t drawing much of a crowd anymore, » wrote one Weibo user nicknamed « SurfaceMe, » blaming a mix of lackluster quality and declining favorability amid tariff and trade tensions.

« The appeal, emotional resonance, and cultural impact of Hollywood films are fading among Chinese audiences, » said Rao Shuguang, president of the China Film Critics Association. « Creatively, Hollywood has grown conservative, leaning too heavily on Marvel and other franchise fare. The visual spectacle remains, but viewers are experiencing aesthetic fatigue. And on a deeper level, American stories often feel disconnected from Chinese life, making it harder to generate empathy or emotional response. »

According to a China Film News report, original Hollywood productions accounted for just 18.6 percent of all U.S. studio releases in 2024, a dramatic decline from 40.9 percent in 2000. In contrast, sequels, reboots, adaptations and spinoffs now account for 81.4 percent. This cost-efficient but creatively cautious model has dampened Chinese viewers’ expectations for high-quality cinematic content, it says.

DWINDLING FAVORABILITY

But Hollywood’s creative slump is only part of the picture. Industry insiders point to another force hastening its fall in China: the long shadow of Washington’s aggressive tariff policy and its downstream effects on public sentiment.

Film is part of the broader U.S. services sector, where the United States has traditionally maintained a significant trade surplus with China. According to the U.S. Department of Commerce, U.S. service exports to China grew more than eightfold between 2001 and 2023, with the annual surplus peaking at nearly 40 billion dollars. Film and other IP-driven content have long been a key part of that advantage.

« U.S. politicians fixated on manufacturing trade deficits are overlooking the billions America has earned through services, » said Ming Jinwei, a Beijing-based commentator and widely followed blogger. He warned that weaponizing tariffs could backfire by undermining America’s winning sectors.

« Irrational U.S. tariffs could trigger a chain reaction, as IP-driven cultural industries are ‘cross-media, integrated and long-chained,' » said Chen Xuguang, director of the Institute of Film, Television and Theatre at Peking University. Washington’s tariff policies risk triggering a ripple effect, with audiences drifting away from Hollywood films and potentially other U.S. cultural exports tied to major IP, he said.

REPERCUSSIONS

Washington’s trade restrictions and tariff escalations against China are already being felt in the reception of American cultural exports here. Franchises like Transformers, Fast & Furious and even Marvel, once guaranteed box office juggernauts, are now performing inconsistently — or outright poorly — in China.

« It’s been rare for an American film to cross the 100 million yuan mark in China in recent years — unless it’s something truly special, » said Dong Wenxin, a film critic and manager of a cinema in Jinan, Shandong Province. « They’re getting beaten not just by Japanese anime but also by European arthouse and regional Asian surprises. »

Tastes are shifting. Japanese animation continues to draw steady crowds, while European and Southeast Asian films are gaining ground. This year’s surprise hits, Italy’s « There’s Still Tomorrow » and Britain’s « National Theatre Live: Prima Facie, » have exceeded expectations. Thailand’s « How to Make Millions Before Grandma Dies » became a breakout sleeper last year.

Looking ahead, Dong said China’s film market is likely to forge even closer ties beyond the United States to meet the increasingly diverse audience needs. And Beijing is already moving in that direction.

A recent film agreement with Spain calls for deepening collaboration on co-productions, film festivals and mutual screenings, signaling that China is broadening its cultural partnerships.

The irony is stark: Washington’s trade restrictions and tariff moves, designed to protect American industries, may end up crippling one of the country’s most impactful exports — its cultural influence, analysts say.

« U.S. tariffs don’t just tax goods — they tax appeal, » said Ming. « And in today’s global entertainment economy, once that appeal wanes, even the strongest cultural influence may have to struggle to endure. »

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