BETA


2010/2210(INI) Combating illegal fishing at the global level - the role of the EU

Progress: Procedure completed

RoleCommitteeRapporteurShadows
Lead PECH LÖVIN Isabella (icon: Verts/ALE Verts/ALE)
Committee Opinion DEVE PONGA Maurice (icon: PPE PPE) Nirj DEVA (icon: ECR ECR), Gabriele ZIMMER (icon: GUE/NGL GUE/NGL)
Committee Opinion ENVI ROSBACH Anna (icon: EFD EFD)
Lead committee dossier:
Legal Basis:
RoP 54

Events

2011/11/17
   EP - Results of vote in Parliament
2011/11/17
   EP - Debate in Parliament
2011/11/17
   EP - Decision by Parliament
Details

The European Parliament adopted by 491 votes to 7, with 24 abstentions, a resolution on combating illegal fishing at the global level - the role of the EU.

Members believe that IUU fishing is one of the most serious threats facing the biodiversity of the world's oceans .

Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) fishing has been reported to account for between 11 and 26 million tonnes a year, equivalent to at least 15% of world catches, making the economically, socially and environmentally sustainable management of the exploitation of the world's marine resources impossible.

Members underline that th e recent IUU and Control Regulations (Council Regulations 1005/2008 establishing a Community system to prevent, deter and eliminate illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing (the ‘IUU Regulation’) and 1224/2009 establishing a Community control system for ensuring compliance with the rules of the common fisheries policy (the ‘Control Regulation’) respectively) provide the EU with powerful and ground-breaking tools to combat IUU fishing, by defining obligations and opportunities of both Member States and third countries as flag, coastal, port and market States. Parliament insists that the Commission and the control authorities in the Member States be provided with sufficient resources (human, financial, technological) enabling them to fully implement these regulations .

Promote legal fishing : Members call for the review of the common fisheries policy to be used to create incentives for legal fishing in the interests of the fish, the environment, consumers and producers in the EU. Parliament invites the Commission and the Member States:

to identify and sanction EU operators who violate EU legislation ; to ensure that illegal fishing is combated at sea and in inland waters and underlines the need to review the sufficiency of control mechanisms and their implementation; to cooperate with a view to the creation of a ‘ European coastguard ’ in order to boost common monitoring and inspection capacity and to effectively combat current or future dangers at sea such as terrorism, piracy, IUU fishing, trafficking or even marine pollution; to publish annual assessments of the performance of each Member State in implementing the rules of the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP) that identify possible weak points needing improvement, and to use all possible means, including identifying Member States when they fail in their responsibilities, to ensure their full compliance, in order to create a reliable and transparent control regime; to increase the resources allocated to the fight against corruption and organised crime at all levels; to continue its efforts to promote the exchange of information in order to integrate maritime surveillance, in particular information aimed at harmonising coastguard services at European level.

Global sustainable development : the resolution points out that the fight against illegal fishing at world level is vital for global sustainable development and must therefore represent an essential and explicit part of Fisheries Partnership Agreements, trade policy commitments, development cooperation policy objectives and the European Union’s foreign policy priorities. Parliament calls on the EU to strongly insist that third countries effectively combat IUU fishing, in the context of trade agreements, Fisheries Partnership Agreements and the EU’s development policy. The Commission is called upon to increase the financial envelope for the fisheries sector in the agreements that it signs with developing countries as far as is necessary, so that these countries can consolidate their institutional, human and technical capacities to combat IUU fishing and thereby improve their compliance with the measures adopted by world and regional fisheries management organisations and with European legislation.

Objectives within the RFMOs : Members consider that the EU should pursue the following objectives in Regional Fisheries Management Organisations (RFMOs) to which it belongs :

establishment, for all fisheries under the remit of the RFMOs, of registers of fishing vessels, including support vessels, that are authorised to fish, as well as lists of vessels that are identified as IUU ( black lists ), to be updated frequently, published widely and coordinated among RFMOs; establishment of appropriate at-sea inspections and observer programmes; bans on transhipments at sea; development of catch documentation schemes, beginning with the major species in each RFMO; compulsory use of electronic tools including VMS, electronic logbooks and other tracking devices where relevant; compulsory and regular evaluations of the performance of individual RFMOs with a requirement that the recommendations be acted upon.

The resolution fully supports the current FAO initiative to develop a Global Record of Fishing Vessels , which should be compulsory and include vessels above 10 GT as soon as possible. It encourages the rapid development of a system for the evaluation of flag State performance currently underway at the FAO as a means of putting pressure on States that do not meet their international legal obligations.

In this context, Members call for the urgent adoption of measures to put an end to the use of ‘flags of convenience’ . They also support the efforts of the Commission to establish a public register listing the identities of ship owners that have been proven to have participated in IUU fishing. The resolution emphasises the need to ensure that EU interests are not involved in such forms of fishing piracy.

Parliament emphasises that the concept of market State responsibility must be more fully developed as a means of closing down the markets for the products of IUU fish. It believes that the EU must urgently discuss with other major market States, including but not limited to the US, Japan and China, how to cooperate among themselves and, as rapidly as possible, to develop international legal instruments that could halt, prosecute and punish trade in IUU fish, in line with the World Trade Organisation (WTO) rules and within the framework of the United Nations system.

Documents
2011/11/17
   EP - End of procedure in Parliament
2011/10/18
   EP - Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
Documents
2011/10/18
   EP - Committee report tabled for plenary
Documents
2011/10/11
   EP - Vote in committee
Details

The Committee on Fisheries adopted the own-initiative report drafted by Isabella LÖVIN (Greens/EFA, SE) on combating illegal fishing at the global level - the role of the EU.

Members believe that IUU fishing is one of the most serious threats facing the biodiversity of the world's oceans . They underline that th e recent IUU and Control Regulations (Council Regulations 1005/2008 establishing a Community system to prevent, deter and eliminate illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing (the ‘IUU Regulation’) and 1224/2009 establishing a Community control system for ensuring compliance with the rules of the common fisheries policy (the ‘Control Regulation’) respectively) provide the EU with powerful and ground-breaking tools to combat IUU fishing, by defining obligations and opportunities of both Member States and third countries as flag, coastal, port and market States.

The committee insists that the Commission and the control authorities in the Member States be provided with sufficient resources (human, financial, technological) enabling them to fully implement these regulations . Members call for the review of the common fisheries policy to be used to create incentives for legal fishing in the interests of the fish, the environment, consumers and producers in the EU.

The Commission and the Member States are invited:

to identify and sanction EU operators who violate EU legislation ; to ensure that illegal fishing is combated at sea and in inland waters and underlines the need to review the sufficiency of control mechanisms and their implementation; to cooperate with a view to the creation of a ‘ European coastguard ’ in order to boost common monitoring and inspection capacity and to effectively combat current or future dangers at sea such as terrorism, piracy, IUU fishing, trafficking or even marine pollution; to amend the requirements for all kinds of financial assistance so as to apply financial sanctions and the denial of funding opportunities to the owners of vessels proven to have fished illegally to pursue and prosecute vessels, owners, firms, companies or individuals involved in IUU fishing-related activities; to publish annual assessments of the performance of each Member State in implementing the rules of the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP) that identify possible weak points needing improvement, and to use all possible means, including identifying Member States when they fail in their responsibilities, to ensure their full compliance, in order to create a reliable and transparent control regime; to increase the resources allocated to the fight against corruption and organised crime at all levels; to continue its efforts to promote the exchange of information in order to integrate maritime surveillance, in particular information aimed at harmonising coastguard services at European level.

The report points out that the fight against illegal fishing at world level is vital for global sustainable development and must therefore represent an essential and explicit part of Fisheries Partnership Agreements, trade policy commitments, development cooperation policy objectives and the European Union’s foreign policy priorities.

The report calls on the EU to strongly insist that third countries effectively combat IUU fishing, in the context of trade agreements, Fisheries Partnership Agreements and the EU’s development policy. Members stress the need to ensure that all third countries with which the EU has signed a Fisheries Partnership Agreement apply the rules of the International Labour Organisation (ILO) on core labour rights, particularly those concerning social dumping caused by IUU fishing.

Members consider that the EU should pursue the following objectives in Regional Fisheries Management Organisations (RFMOs) to which it belongs :

establishment, for all fisheries under the remit of the RFMOs, of registers of fishing vessels, including support vessels, that are authorised to fish, as well as lists of vessels that are identified as IUU ( black lists ), to be updated frequently, published widely and coordinated among RFMOs; establishment of appropriate at-sea inspections and observer programmes; bans on transhipments at sea; development of catch documentation schemes, beginning with the major species in each RFMO; compulsory use of electronic tools including VMS, electronic logbooks and other tracking devices where relevant; compulsory and regular evaluations of the performance of individual RFMOs with a requirement that the recommendations be acted upon.

The report fully supports the current FAO initiative to develop a Global Record of Fishing Vessels , which should be compulsory and include vessels above 10 GT as soon as possible. It encourages the rapid development of a system for the evaluation of flag State performance currently underway at the FAO as a means of putting pressure on States that do not meet their international legal obligations.

In this context, Members call for the urgent adoption of measures to put an end to the use of ‘flags of convenience’ . They also support the efforts of the Commission to establish a public register listing the identities of ship owners that have been proven to have participated in IUU fishing. The report emphasises the need to ensure that EU interests are not involved in such forms of fishing piracy.

The report emphasises that the concept of market State responsibility must be more fully developed as a means of closing down the markets for the products of IUU fish. It believes that the EU must urgently discuss with other major market States, including but not limited to the US, Japan and China, how to cooperate among themselves and, as rapidly as possible, to develop international legal instruments that could halt, prosecute and punish trade in IUU fish, in line with the World Trade Organisation (WTO) rules and within the framework of the United Nations system.

2011/06/21
   EP - Amendments tabled in committee
Documents
2011/06/14
   EP - Committee opinion
Documents
2011/05/25
   EP - Committee opinion
Documents
2011/05/05
   EP - Committee draft report
Documents
2010/10/28
   EP - ROSBACH Anna (EFD) appointed as rapporteur in ENVI
2010/10/05
   EP - PONGA Maurice (PPE) appointed as rapporteur in DEVE
2010/09/23
   EP - Committee referral announced in Parliament
2010/07/14
   EP - LÖVIN Isabella (Verts/ALE) appointed as rapporteur in PECH

Documents

Activities

AmendmentsDossier
147 2010/2210(INI)
2011/04/18 ENVI 25 amendments...
source: PE-462.889
2011/06/21 PECH 122 amendments...
source: PE-467.233

History

(these mark the time of scraping, not the official date of the change)

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  • date: 2010-09-23T00:00:00 type: Committee referral announced in Parliament, 1st reading/single reading body: EP
  • date: 2011-10-11T00:00:00 type: Vote in committee, 1st reading/single reading body: EP summary: The Committee on Fisheries adopted the own-initiative report drafted by Isabella LÖVIN (Greens/EFA, SE) on combating illegal fishing at the global level - the role of the EU. Members believe that IUU fishing is one of the most serious threats facing the biodiversity of the world's oceans . They underline that th e recent IUU and Control Regulations (Council Regulations 1005/2008 establishing a Community system to prevent, deter and eliminate illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing (the ‘IUU Regulation’) and 1224/2009 establishing a Community control system for ensuring compliance with the rules of the common fisheries policy (the ‘Control Regulation’) respectively) provide the EU with powerful and ground-breaking tools to combat IUU fishing, by defining obligations and opportunities of both Member States and third countries as flag, coastal, port and market States. The committee insists that the Commission and the control authorities in the Member States be provided with sufficient resources (human, financial, technological) enabling them to fully implement these regulations . Members call for the review of the common fisheries policy to be used to create incentives for legal fishing in the interests of the fish, the environment, consumers and producers in the EU. The Commission and the Member States are invited: to identify and sanction EU operators who violate EU legislation ; to ensure that illegal fishing is combated at sea and in inland waters and underlines the need to review the sufficiency of control mechanisms and their implementation; to cooperate with a view to the creation of a ‘ European coastguard ’ in order to boost common monitoring and inspection capacity and to effectively combat current or future dangers at sea such as terrorism, piracy, IUU fishing, trafficking or even marine pollution; to amend the requirements for all kinds of financial assistance so as to apply financial sanctions and the denial of funding opportunities to the owners of vessels proven to have fished illegally to pursue and prosecute vessels, owners, firms, companies or individuals involved in IUU fishing-related activities; to publish annual assessments of the performance of each Member State in implementing the rules of the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP) that identify possible weak points needing improvement, and to use all possible means, including identifying Member States when they fail in their responsibilities, to ensure their full compliance, in order to create a reliable and transparent control regime; to increase the resources allocated to the fight against corruption and organised crime at all levels; to continue its efforts to promote the exchange of information in order to integrate maritime surveillance, in particular information aimed at harmonising coastguard services at European level. The report points out that the fight against illegal fishing at world level is vital for global sustainable development and must therefore represent an essential and explicit part of Fisheries Partnership Agreements, trade policy commitments, development cooperation policy objectives and the European Union’s foreign policy priorities. The report calls on the EU to strongly insist that third countries effectively combat IUU fishing, in the context of trade agreements, Fisheries Partnership Agreements and the EU’s development policy. Members stress the need to ensure that all third countries with which the EU has signed a Fisheries Partnership Agreement apply the rules of the International Labour Organisation (ILO) on core labour rights, particularly those concerning social dumping caused by IUU fishing. Members consider that the EU should pursue the following objectives in Regional Fisheries Management Organisations (RFMOs) to which it belongs : establishment, for all fisheries under the remit of the RFMOs, of registers of fishing vessels, including support vessels, that are authorised to fish, as well as lists of vessels that are identified as IUU ( black lists ), to be updated frequently, published widely and coordinated among RFMOs; establishment of appropriate at-sea inspections and observer programmes; bans on transhipments at sea; development of catch documentation schemes, beginning with the major species in each RFMO; compulsory use of electronic tools including VMS, electronic logbooks and other tracking devices where relevant; compulsory and regular evaluations of the performance of individual RFMOs with a requirement that the recommendations be acted upon. The report fully supports the current FAO initiative to develop a Global Record of Fishing Vessels , which should be compulsory and include vessels above 10 GT as soon as possible. It encourages the rapid development of a system for the evaluation of flag State performance currently underway at the FAO as a means of putting pressure on States that do not meet their international legal obligations. In this context, Members call for the urgent adoption of measures to put an end to the use of ‘flags of convenience’ . They also support the efforts of the Commission to establish a public register listing the identities of ship owners that have been proven to have participated in IUU fishing. The report emphasises the need to ensure that EU interests are not involved in such forms of fishing piracy. The report emphasises that the concept of market State responsibility must be more fully developed as a means of closing down the markets for the products of IUU fish. It believes that the EU must urgently discuss with other major market States, including but not limited to the US, Japan and China, how to cooperate among themselves and, as rapidly as possible, to develop international legal instruments that could halt, prosecute and punish trade in IUU fish, in line with the World Trade Organisation (WTO) rules and within the framework of the United Nations system.
  • date: 2011-10-18T00:00:00 type: Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading body: EP docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=REPORT&mode=XML&reference=A7-2011-362&language=EN title: A7-0362/2011
  • date: 2011-11-17T00:00:00 type: Results of vote in Parliament body: EP docs: url: https://oeil.secure.europarl.europa.eu/oeil/popups/sda.do?id=20692&l=en title: Results of vote in Parliament
  • date: 2011-11-17T00:00:00 type: Debate in Parliament body: EP docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?secondRef=TOC&language=EN&reference=20111117&type=CRE title: Debate in Parliament
  • date: 2011-11-17T00:00:00 type: Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading body: EP docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=TA&language=EN&reference=P7-TA-2011-516 title: T7-0516/2011 summary: The European Parliament adopted by 491 votes to 7, with 24 abstentions, a resolution on combating illegal fishing at the global level - the role of the EU. Members believe that IUU fishing is one of the most serious threats facing the biodiversity of the world's oceans . Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) fishing has been reported to account for between 11 and 26 million tonnes a year, equivalent to at least 15% of world catches, making the economically, socially and environmentally sustainable management of the exploitation of the world's marine resources impossible. Members underline that th e recent IUU and Control Regulations (Council Regulations 1005/2008 establishing a Community system to prevent, deter and eliminate illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing (the ‘IUU Regulation’) and 1224/2009 establishing a Community control system for ensuring compliance with the rules of the common fisheries policy (the ‘Control Regulation’) respectively) provide the EU with powerful and ground-breaking tools to combat IUU fishing, by defining obligations and opportunities of both Member States and third countries as flag, coastal, port and market States. Parliament insists that the Commission and the control authorities in the Member States be provided with sufficient resources (human, financial, technological) enabling them to fully implement these regulations . Promote legal fishing : Members call for the review of the common fisheries policy to be used to create incentives for legal fishing in the interests of the fish, the environment, consumers and producers in the EU. Parliament invites the Commission and the Member States: to identify and sanction EU operators who violate EU legislation ; to ensure that illegal fishing is combated at sea and in inland waters and underlines the need to review the sufficiency of control mechanisms and their implementation; to cooperate with a view to the creation of a ‘ European coastguard ’ in order to boost common monitoring and inspection capacity and to effectively combat current or future dangers at sea such as terrorism, piracy, IUU fishing, trafficking or even marine pollution; to publish annual assessments of the performance of each Member State in implementing the rules of the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP) that identify possible weak points needing improvement, and to use all possible means, including identifying Member States when they fail in their responsibilities, to ensure their full compliance, in order to create a reliable and transparent control regime; to increase the resources allocated to the fight against corruption and organised crime at all levels; to continue its efforts to promote the exchange of information in order to integrate maritime surveillance, in particular information aimed at harmonising coastguard services at European level. Global sustainable development : the resolution points out that the fight against illegal fishing at world level is vital for global sustainable development and must therefore represent an essential and explicit part of Fisheries Partnership Agreements, trade policy commitments, development cooperation policy objectives and the European Union’s foreign policy priorities. Parliament calls on the EU to strongly insist that third countries effectively combat IUU fishing, in the context of trade agreements, Fisheries Partnership Agreements and the EU’s development policy. The Commission is called upon to increase the financial envelope for the fisheries sector in the agreements that it signs with developing countries as far as is necessary, so that these countries can consolidate their institutional, human and technical capacities to combat IUU fishing and thereby improve their compliance with the measures adopted by world and regional fisheries management organisations and with European legislation. Objectives within the RFMOs : Members consider that the EU should pursue the following objectives in Regional Fisheries Management Organisations (RFMOs) to which it belongs : establishment, for all fisheries under the remit of the RFMOs, of registers of fishing vessels, including support vessels, that are authorised to fish, as well as lists of vessels that are identified as IUU ( black lists ), to be updated frequently, published widely and coordinated among RFMOs; establishment of appropriate at-sea inspections and observer programmes; bans on transhipments at sea; development of catch documentation schemes, beginning with the major species in each RFMO; compulsory use of electronic tools including VMS, electronic logbooks and other tracking devices where relevant; compulsory and regular evaluations of the performance of individual RFMOs with a requirement that the recommendations be acted upon. The resolution fully supports the current FAO initiative to develop a Global Record of Fishing Vessels , which should be compulsory and include vessels above 10 GT as soon as possible. It encourages the rapid development of a system for the evaluation of flag State performance currently underway at the FAO as a means of putting pressure on States that do not meet their international legal obligations. In this context, Members call for the urgent adoption of measures to put an end to the use of ‘flags of convenience’ . They also support the efforts of the Commission to establish a public register listing the identities of ship owners that have been proven to have participated in IUU fishing. The resolution emphasises the need to ensure that EU interests are not involved in such forms of fishing piracy. Parliament emphasises that the concept of market State responsibility must be more fully developed as a means of closing down the markets for the products of IUU fish. It believes that the EU must urgently discuss with other major market States, including but not limited to the US, Japan and China, how to cooperate among themselves and, as rapidly as possible, to develop international legal instruments that could halt, prosecute and punish trade in IUU fish, in line with the World Trade Organisation (WTO) rules and within the framework of the United Nations system.
  • date: 2011-11-17T00:00:00 type: End of procedure in Parliament body: EP
links
other
  • body: EC dg: url: http://ec.europa.eu/dgs/maritimeaffairs_fisheries/ title: Maritime Affairs and Fisheries commissioner: DAMANAKI Maria
procedure/Modified legal basis
Old
Rules of Procedure of the European Parliament EP 150
New
Rules of Procedure EP 150
procedure/dossier_of_the_committee
Old
PECH/7/03557
New
  • PECH/7/03557
procedure/legal_basis/0
Rules of Procedure EP 052
procedure/legal_basis/0
Rules of Procedure of the European Parliament EP 052
procedure/subject
Old
  • 3.15.01 Fish stocks, conservation of fishery resources
  • 3.15.07 Fisheries inspectorate, surveillance of fishing vessels and areas
  • 3.70.01 Protection of natural resources: fauna, flora, nature, wildlife, countryside; biodiversity
  • 6.30 Development cooperation
New
3.15.01
Fish stocks, conservation of fishery resources
3.15.07
Fisheries inspectorate, surveillance of fishing vessels and areas
3.70.01
Protection of natural resources: fauna, flora, nature, wildlife, countryside; biodiversity
6.30
Development cooperation
activities
  • date: 2010-09-23T00:00:00 body: EP type: Committee referral announced in Parliament, 1st reading/single reading committees: body: EP responsible: False committee: DEVE date: 2010-10-05T00:00:00 committee_full: Development rapporteur: group: PPE name: PONGA Maurice body: EP responsible: False committee: ENVI date: 2010-10-28T00:00:00 committee_full: Environment, Public Health and Food Safety rapporteur: group: EFD name: ROSBACH Anna body: EP responsible: True committee: PECH date: 2010-07-14T00:00:00 committee_full: Fisheries rapporteur: group: Verts/ALE name: LÖVIN Isabella
  • date: 2011-10-11T00:00:00 body: EP committees: body: EP responsible: False committee: DEVE date: 2010-10-05T00:00:00 committee_full: Development rapporteur: group: PPE name: PONGA Maurice body: EP responsible: False committee: ENVI date: 2010-10-28T00:00:00 committee_full: Environment, Public Health and Food Safety rapporteur: group: EFD name: ROSBACH Anna body: EP responsible: True committee: PECH date: 2010-07-14T00:00:00 committee_full: Fisheries rapporteur: group: Verts/ALE name: LÖVIN Isabella type: Vote in committee, 1st reading/single reading
  • date: 2011-10-18T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=REPORT&mode=XML&reference=A7-2011-362&language=EN type: Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading title: A7-0362/2011 body: EP type: Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
  • date: 2011-11-17T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/oeil/popups/sda.do?id=20692&l=en type: Results of vote in Parliament title: Results of vote in Parliament url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?secondRef=TOC&language=EN&reference=20111117&type=CRE type: Debate in Parliament title: Debate in Parliament url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=TA&language=EN&reference=P7-TA-2011-516 type: Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading title: T7-0516/2011 body: EP type: Results of vote in Parliament
committees
  • body: EP responsible: False committee: DEVE date: 2010-10-05T00:00:00 committee_full: Development rapporteur: group: PPE name: PONGA Maurice
  • body: EP responsible: False committee: ENVI date: 2010-10-28T00:00:00 committee_full: Environment, Public Health and Food Safety rapporteur: group: EFD name: ROSBACH Anna
  • body: EP responsible: True committee: PECH date: 2010-07-14T00:00:00 committee_full: Fisheries rapporteur: group: Verts/ALE name: LÖVIN Isabella
links
other
  • body: EC dg: url: http://ec.europa.eu/dgs/maritimeaffairs_fisheries/ title: Maritime Affairs and Fisheries commissioner: DAMANAKI Maria
procedure
dossier_of_the_committee
PECH/7/03557
reference
2010/2210(INI)
title
Combating illegal fishing at the global level - the role of the EU
legal_basis
Rules of Procedure of the European Parliament EP 052
stage_reached
Procedure completed
subtype
Initiative
Modified legal basis
Rules of Procedure of the European Parliament EP 150
type
INI - Own-initiative procedure
subject