23 Mar 2026
by Sabina Ciofu

Global Tech & Trade Policy Update

I’m just back from the whirlwind that was SXSW in Austin, Texas. Were you there? Curious to hear your take and/or whether techUK should be doing more to engage with both the state of Texas and SXSW in Austin and London.  

A few developments worth flagging this week. 

EU–US trade: progress, but heavily conditional 

Members of the European Parliament’s International Trade Committee have endorsed the EU side of the Turnberry accord agreed with the US last August - but not without materially reshaping it. What was framed as tariff elimination is now explicitly a temporary suspension, set to expire on 31 March 2028 (right in the middle of the next US presidential cycle). 

More importantly, MEPs have introduced both a “sunset” and a “sunrise” logic: 

  • Tariff suspensions can be reversed if conditions change. 
  • Crucially, they only take effect if US tariffs remain at or below 15%. 

There is also a targeted clause on metals: the EU will only suspend duties on steel, aluminium and derivatives if the US reduces its Section 232 tariffs from 50% down to a 15% ceiling. 

In short: this is not liberalisation in the classic sense — it’s conditional, reversible, and tightly linked to US domestic trade policy. With ongoing legal uncertainty in the US (including the Supreme Court ruling on tariff authorities), expect this file to remain politically sensitive and procedurally slow as it moves toward plenary and trilogues. 

A new trade geometry emerging? 

On the sidelines of next week’s WTO Ministerial in Cameroon, EU and Indo-Pacific trade ministers are expected to explore ways of linking major trading blocs - notably the EU and CPTPP economies. 

This is less about replacing the WTO and more about hedging against its limitations. The language coming out of Brussels is telling: calls for a “reset” that restores predictability and fairness, alongside growing interest in coalitions of “middle powers” that don’t want to be forced into binary alignment with either the US or China. 

There are already parallel ideas circulating - from a potential EU–Japan–Canada–Korea deterrence pact to broader efforts led by Canada, Australia, and New Zealand to stitch together a 1.5 billion–person market. Not straightforward, and not without resistance, but clearly momentum is building for more modular, flexible trade architectures. 

EU trade agenda: quietly accelerating 

Several files are moving in parallel: 

  • EU–Australia FTA: political momentum is back. Commission President von der Leyen heads to Australia next week, with both sides signaling renewed optimism after the 2023 breakdown (agriculture vs. industrial access still the core tension). 
  • Mercosur agreement: the Commission is preparing for provisional application, potentially as early as May, pending final procedural steps. 

China’s Five-Year Plan 

China has released its 15th Five-Year Plan (2026–2030), setting quantified targets across everything from GDP growth and patents to emissions, water quality, and life expectancy. 

Tech, security, and infrastructure: the lines are blurring 

Two developments underline how quickly the boundary between commercial tech and national security is dissolving: 

  • In the US, a dispute between Anthropic and the Defense Department over AI usage constraints has escalated into a legal battle. The key issue: who ultimately controls how frontier AI systems are deployed in security contexts - the developer or the state? The use of “supply chain risk” designations in this context could set a powerful precedent. 

  • Meanwhile, in the Gulf, data centres have been directly impacted by ongoing conflict, forcing traffic rerouting and exposing how geographically localised disruptions can cascade through global cloud infrastructure. 

 Off to Cameroon this week for the WTO Ministerial Conference. Let me know if you are around - should be quite the conference this year, to say the least. 


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Meet the team 

Sabina Ciofu

Sabina Ciofu

International Policy and Strategy Lead, techUK

Daniel Clarke

Daniel Clarke

Senior Policy Manager for International Policy and Trade, techUK

Theophile Maiziere

Theophile Maiziere

Policy Manager - EU, techUK

Tess Newton

Team Assistant, Policy and Public Affairs, techUK

Authors

Sabina Ciofu

Sabina Ciofu

International Policy and Strategy Lead, techUK, techUK

Sabina Ciofu is International Policy and Strategy Lead at techUK, where she heads the International Policy and Trade Programme. Based in Brussels, she shapes global tech policy, digital trade, and regulatory cooperation across the EU, US, Canada, Asia-Pacific, and the Gulf region. She drives strategy, advocacy, and market opportunities for UK tech companies worldwide, ensuring their voice is heard in international policy debates.

With nearly a decade of previous experience as a Policy Advisor in the European Parliament, Sabina brings deep expertise in tech regulation, trade policy, and EU–US relations. Her work focuses on navigating and influencing the global digital economy to deliver real impact for members.

A passionate community-builder, Sabina co-founded Young Professionals in Digital Policy (800+ members) and now runs Old Professionals in Digital Policy (more experience, better wine, earlier nights). She is also the founder of the Gentlewomen’s Club, a network of 500+ women supporting each other with kindness.

She holds advisory roles with the UCL European Institute, Café Transatlantique (a network of women in transatlantic tech policy), and The Nine, Brussels’ first members-only club for women.

Recognised by ComputerWeekly as one of the most influential women in UK tech, Sabina is also a sought-after public speaker on tech, trade and diversity.

Sabina holds an MA in War Studies from King’s College London and a BA in Classics from the University of Cambridge.

She is a frequent traveler and a marathon runner.

Email:
[email protected]

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