China and Spain bridge data worlds, build trust

In a quiet district of Barcelona, far from the tourist crowds admiring Catalan architect Antoni Gaudí's architectural marvels, another kind of structure is taking shape — one not made of steel and concrete, but of code, bandwidth and trust. Here, Spanish and Chinese engineers, working at the Beijing-Barcelona digital service center, are quietly redefining the contours of global digital governance.
Huawei's 5G initiative in Spain is not just a technological roll-out; it is a geopolitical experiment in building a new digital architecture, one that might just bridge two very different regulatory philosophies.
Huawei's investment in Spain is a strategic choice. Spain, a member of the European Union with a strong commitment to digital modernization and relatively open regulatory stance, offers fertile ground for experimentation. The move is politically pragmatic, too, with the Spanish authorities adopting a more nuanced approach to Chinese high-tech compared with some of their northern EU neighbors. Against this backdrop, Huawei's infrastructure, combined with local partnerships, has enabled Spain to become a sandbox for testing how Chinese and European companies can cooperate on complex digital issues.
At the heart of this experiment lies a regulatory paradox. The EU's Digital Markets Act, a flagship piece of legislation aimed at reining in Big Tech, promotes openness, interoperability and user-empowerment. On the other hand, China's Data Security Law places emphasis on national security considerations and a more cautious approach to cross-border data flows. On paper, the two frameworks appear irreconcilable. One seeks to ensure data move freely across digital borders, while the other emphasizes greater oversight over outbound data transfers.
Yet it is precisely in these tensions that cooperation begins to take form. For small and medium-sized enterprises, the implications are particularly stark. SMEs often lack the legal and technical resources to navigate parallel regulatory systems. If digital infrastructure providers, such as Huawei, can help harmonize or at least streamline compliance processes across jurisdictions, the cost and complexity of innovation decreases dramatically.
A Barcelona-based AI start-up, for instance, may benefit from Huawei's cutting-edge computing capabilities while also needing to reassure EU clients that their data remains fully protected under European privacy regulations. Without clear standards for mutual trust, such companies risk being paralyzed by uncertainty.
The Beijing-Barcelona partnership is therefore more than a symbolic gesture. It provides a rare real-world case study of how two systems can learn from each other — not by imposing one model over the other, but by identifying zones of compatibility. For example, both China and the EU have developed national AI ethics frameworks. While their language and philosophical foundations may differ, both stress transparency, non-discrimination and accountability. These shared goals can form the basis for interoperability, even without formal legal alignment.
Trust, in this context, becomes the true infrastructure. Not the fiber-optic cables or 5G towers, but the protocols, auditing tools and personal relationships that enable cooperation under regulatory divergence. This is not about harmonization in the traditional sense. Rather, it is about developing what might be called regulatory translation, allowing different systems to interpret each other's standards without demanding absolute equivalence.
Of course, risks remain. Critics argue that Huawei's involvement in European digital infrastructure raises "national security concerns". These worries must not be dismissed. Yet outright rejection of cooperation risks missing an opportunity to shape global high-tech governance. Building walls is easy, but building standards everyone can trust is harder.
The EU and China will not arrive at a single unified data law anytime soon. But what they can do, starting with partnerships like the one in Barcelona, is show that coexistence, as well as cooperation, in the digital domain is possible, even beneficial — one pilot project, one joint protocol, one successful SME at a time. In a fragmented digital world, learning to speak across regulatory dialects may be the most important skill of all. After all, trust isn't built only through treaties; it's built through use too.
The author is a professor at the Institute of Information Law and Telecommunication and Media Law, University of Münster, Germany.
The views don't necessarily reflect those of China Daily.

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