BETA

5 Amendments of Jordi SOLÉ related to 2018/2024(BUD)

Amendment 7 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 3
3. Welcomes the Commission proposal and believes that it corresponds broadly to Parliament’s own priorities; intends to further defend an appropriate level of appropriations corresponding to the latter; notes the increase of 3.1 % in commitmentNotes the relative lack of ambition of the Commission proposal as reflected in the even lower percentage of GNI as compared to 2018 both for commitment appropriations (1 % as compared to 1.02%) and payment appropriations (0.9% as compared to 0.92%); intends to defend an appropriate higher level of appropriations;
2018/06/20
Committee: BUDG
Amendment 24 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 6
6. Notes the commitment to a renewed EU defence agenda, namely through the agreement on the European Defence Industrial Development Programme (EDIDP), as a first stage of the European Defence Fund; believes that this shared commitment will contribute to achieving economies of scale and greater coordination among Member States and businesses, allowing the EU to retain its strategic autonomy and become a genuine world player;deleted
2018/06/20
Committee: BUDG
Amendment 42 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 10
10. Commends the fact that the Commission proposal would enable reaching the target of 20 % of the budget being dedicated to climate spending in 2019; regrets, however. that the Commission has not followed up on Parliament’s request regarding offsetting the lower allocations made during the first years of the MFF; believes that more should be done through the development of an action plan within programmes with massive potential, as for example under Horizon 2020, EAGF, EAFRD, EMFF or LIFE+; recalls the Court of Auditors reasoned criticism as regards the methodology deployed by the Commission and calls for swift improvements in this light and in this regard;
2018/06/20
Committee: BUDG
Amendment 54 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 12
12. Emphasises that several important legislative initiatives under negotiation or in the early stages of implementation, such as the revision of the Dublin Regulation, the establishment of the Entry/Exit System and the European Travel Information and Authorisation System, the upgrading of the Schengen Information System and the initiative on interoperability of EU information systems for security, borders and migration management are expected to have significant budgetary implications for the 2019 budget, and underlines the importance of adequate financing to match the Union’s ambition in these areascost efficiency in this regard;
2018/06/20
Committee: BUDG
Amendment 88 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 33
33. Believes that in the context of a wide range of security concerns, including changing forms of radicalisation, violence and terrorism that surpass individual Member States’ capacity to respond, the EU budget should encourage cooperation on security-related matters; in this context, questions how this high-risk security context is reconcilable with the proposed significant decrease of commitment appropriations (-26,6 %) for the Internal Security Fund (ISF); highlights that spending in this area can only fall on fertile ground if unjustifiable obstacles to intra-European cooperation and targeted information sharing are removed;
2018/06/20
Committee: BUDG