The new law could make it harder for Chinese companies to win public contracts concerning everything from power plants to trains and bridges. | Sean Gallup/Getty Images EU leaders call for ‘reciprocity’ in public tenders: draft Text will be discussed at European Council summit starting Thursday.

European heads of government are set to call for new rules that would make it harder for Chinese companies to win public contracts in Europe, according to new draft conclusions seen by POLITICO.

The draft text calls on the EU to kickstart internal negotiations on a new law that would enforce "reciprocity" in public procurement.

"The European Council calls for resuming discussions on the EU's international procurement instrument," say the draft conclusions, that will be discussed by EU leaders on Thursday.

The EU "must ... [ensure] effective reciprocity for public procurement with third countries," the draft adds.

Paris and Berlin have taken the lead in calling for new rules to penalize companies from countries that do not allow EU competitors to bid in their public tenders.

Many industrial EU countries are increasingly frustrated that their leading businesses were excluded from Chinese projects such as the country's 10,000 kilometer high-speed rail network and the Olympic facilities in 2008, while the EU opened domestic markets to Chinese bidders in tenders.

The new law could make it harder for Chinese companies to win public contracts concerning everything from power plants to trains and bridges.

EU leaders will discuss the proposals at a dinner on Thursday.

The Commission first proposed such rules — known as the international procurement instrument — in 2012, but German officials said that draft law should be amended in discussions.

While China is the EU's primary target, the reciprocity strategy would also apply to other difficult markets such as Russia, Turkey, India and Indonesia.

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