[{"bbox": [84, 152, 150, 176], "category": "Page-header", "text": "action."}, {"bbox": [84, 224, 424, 253], "category": "Section-header", "text": "## 3.4 Risks and Lessons Learnt"}, {"bbox": [84, 269, 837, 298], "category": "Section-header", "text": "### Component 1 – EU-China Cooperation on Environment and Green Economy"}, {"bbox": [73, 357, 1153, 844], "category": "Table", "text": "<table><thead><tr><td>Risk description</td><td>Likelihood (High/Medium/Low)</td><td>Impact (High/ Medium/ Low)</td><td>Mitigating measure</td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td>Low engagement of Chinese authorities</td><td>L</td><td>M</td><td>Strong alignment between technical work and agreements/outcomes from high level political dialogue.</td></tr><tr><td>Limited flexibility of Chinese counterparts in defining areas of collaboration</td><td>M</td><td>M</td><td>Close dialogue and reciprocal awareness on key environmental issues to be addressed at all levels from Summit to regular technical discussions.</td></tr><tr><td>Lack of willingness for participation / contribution from the private sector</td><td>L</td><td>L</td><td>Involvement of private sector stakeholders in consultations, workshops and study tours from the outset.</td></tr><tr><td>Limited access to information</td><td>M</td><td>M</td><td>Build on existing large network of academic and think tanks with which the EU has been working effectively in recent years.</td></tr></tbody></table>"}, {"bbox": [84, 845, 250, 869], "category": "Section-header", "text": "**Lessons learned:**"}, {"bbox": [84, 896, 1143, 1081], "category": "Text", "text": "The previous two phases underlined the relevance of the project for advancing key external EU policy priorities under the European Green Deal (in relation to the EU Circular Economy Action Plan, EU Biodiversity Strategy 2030, Zero Pollution Action Plan and related legislative measures). They contributed to deepening engagement with China and EU Member States (France, Germany, Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden and Spain notably) on environmental policy priorities. The project outputs were relevant and closely linked to China's work and engagement under key global and regional fora and processes, including the G20, UNEA5, CBD COPs, Basel Convention on Hazardous Waste."}, {"bbox": [84, 1128, 1085, 1157], "category": "Section-header", "text": "### Component 2 – China's Champions of Change II: Addressing the Demand for Illegal Wildlife Products"}, {"bbox": [73, 1171, 1153, 1630], "category": "Table", "text": "<table><thead><tr><td>Risk description</td><td>Likelihood (High/Medium/Low)</td><td>Impact (High/ Medium/ Low)</td><td>Mitigating measure</td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td>Low engagement of Chinese counterparts (authorities)</td><td>L</td><td>M</td><td>Strong alignment between technical work and agreements/outcomes from high level political dialogue.</td></tr><tr><td>Limited flexibility of Chinese counterparts with regards to the definition of area of collaboration</td><td>M</td><td>M</td><td>Close dialogue and reciprocal awareness on key issues to be addressed will be ensured at technical and political level.</td></tr><tr><td>Lack of willingness for participation / contribution from the private sector</td><td>L</td><td>L</td><td>Involvement of private sector stakeholders in consultations, workshops and study tours from the outset to ensure timely information sharing and feedback to enable opportunities for their contributions.</td></tr></tbody></table>"}, {"bbox": [1026, 1680, 1143, 1705], "category": "Page-footer", "text": "Page 12 of 26"}]