- "Trade and Economic Security" programme
EU-CPTPP Dialogue
This dialogue is part of the « Trade and Economic Security » programme. In December 2025, the Jacques Delors Institute launched in Paris, together with PSIA (Paris School of International Affairs, Sciences Po), a dialogue between EU Member States and the member states of the CPTPP (Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership: Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, United Kingdom, Singapore, Vietnam).

« Trade and Economic Security » programme
Global trade is increasingly influenced by economic security considerations. It is also increasingly shaped by the growing use of coercive measures taken by major powers. Tariff surges, export restrictions and investment controls are disrupting value chains and raising the risk of sudden supply shocks. In this context, Europe faces mounting pressures to manage and mitigate the possible spillovers from incoming strategic rivalries, all while preserving an open, rules-based approach to trade.
Reducing excessive dependencies has become a strategic priority. It requires closer coordination between public authorities and private actors, and a more deliberate use of economic statecraft combining trade, investment, industrial, and security tools to reduce vulnerabilities without sliding into protectionism.
Our work is anchored in the EU’s economic security agenda, strengthening resilience while remaining open, across the risk areas of supply-chain resilience, technology leakage, critical infrastructure security and exposure to economic coercion.
Our priorities
The « Trade and Economic Security » programme of the Jacques Delors Institute is dedicated to:
Analyse trends in global trade and EU trade relations with key partners and competitors;
Assess economic security risks (dependencies, coercion exposure, critical technology and infrastructure vulnerabilities) and monitor the implementation of economic security strategies worldwide;
Develop policy options and recommendations for European decision-makers;
Convene public–private–expert dialogues to enable coordination and shared problem definition (Track 1.5 format);
Support pathways towards an open, rules-based trade order (including cooperation with like-minded partners).
Strategic dialogues on trade and economic security
As the international system transforms rapidly, Europe must build the governance and funding capacity needed to operationalise an economic security strategy that protects citizens, strengthens business resilience, and supports cooperation with third countries to uphold common rules.
In December 2025, the European Commission presented additional initiatives to operationalise the 2023 Economic Security Strategy, including a more proactive use of the EU toolbox and measures to reduce dependencies.
To contribute to the necessary acceleration in coordination across institutions and stakeholders, the Jacques Delors Institute has launched three Track 1.5 dialogues bringing together officials, businesses, and experts.
EU-CPTPP Dialogue
In December 2025, the Jacques Delors Institute launched in Paris, together with PSIA (Paris School of International Affairs, Sciences Po), a dialogue between the EU Member States and the member states of the CPTPP (Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership: Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, United Kingdom, Singapore, Vietnam) focused on a positive agenda for an open, rules-based trade order.
Supported by: the Japan Economic Foundation, Kommerskollegium (Sweden), Bertelsmann Stiftung (Germany), the UK Department for Business and Trade, the Australian Embassy in Paris, and the Canadian Embassy in Paris.
Next steps: a conference in Tokyo in May 2026 and a series of online workshops.

Our publications
Blog postA jolt…
Blog postChinese robots, European lag?
Our similar projects
- "Trade and Economic Security" programme
Franco-German Dialogue on Economic Security
Structured forum to align Paris and Berlin approaches across the many dimensions of economic security.
- "Trade and Economic Security" programme
Franco-British Dialogue on Economic Security
Dialogue exploring best practices and avenues for coordination between Paris and London.







