Next event: Commission response to text adopted in plenary 2013/07/29 more...
- Results of vote in Parliament 2013/03/12
- Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading 2013/03/12
- End of procedure in Parliament 2013/03/12
- Debate in Parliament 2013/03/11
- Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading 2013/02/27
- Vote in committee, 1st reading/single reading 2013/02/19
- Amendments tabled in committee 2013/01/30
- Committee opinion 2013/01/25
- Committee opinion 2013/01/24
Progress: Procedure completed
Role | Committee | Rapporteur | Shadows |
---|---|---|---|
Lead | DEVE | TIROLIEN Patrice ( S&D) | PONGA Maurice ( PPE), MICHEL Louis ( ALDE), STAES Bart ( Verts/ALE) |
Committee Opinion | FEMM | GABRIEL Mariya ( PPE) | |
Committee Opinion | BUDG | KOZŁOWSKI Jan ( PPE) | |
Committee Opinion | AFET |
Lead committee dossier:
Legal Basis:
RoP 052
Legal Basis:
RoP 052Subjects
Events
The European Parliament adopted by 547 votes to 61, with 26 abstentions, a resolution on the preparation of the multiannual financial framework regarding the financing of EU cooperation for African, Caribbean and Pacific States and Overseas Countries and Territories for the 2014–2020 period (11th European Development Fund-EDF.)
Parliament recalls the need to ensure that the 11th EDF has sufficient funding so that the Union might honour the undertakings made at international level concerning development and devote 0.7% of its GDP to development aid. It stresses that at least 90% of the appropriations under the 11th EDF for ACP states should meet the official development aid (ODA) criteria , as laid down by the OECD’s Development Assistance Committee. In order to meet that objective, more needs to be done to ensure that the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) on which the least progress is being made are met, in particular by earmarking 20 % of the 11th EDF budget for the provision of basic social services, particularly health care and basic education.
In this regard, aid should be prioritised to ensure access to basic maternal, reproductive and child healthcare, with particular emphasis on the poorest sections of the population and the fight against HIV/AIDS, with particular emphasis on aid for the most vulnerable groups in society, including women, children, and persons with disabilities.
Promoting the economic and social development of the Overseas countries and territories (OCTs): Parliament welcomes the fact that the proposal on the Overseas Association Decision (OAD) recognises the need to develop a new long-term partnership with the OCTs, centred around four new objectives:
boosting the competitiveness of the OCTs; strengthening their adaptability; reducing their vulnerability; promoting their cooperation with other partners.
However, it regrets the absence of a financial instrument dedicated to the OCTs that could be integrated in the Union budget so as to allow democratic, transparent control over funding allocated by that means.
Budgetisation and financial allocation : once again, Parliament calls for the budgetisation of the EDF in the next programming period and default from 2021, with the full transfer to Section 4 of PSC (‘Europe in the world’), as this would contribute to the more effective promotion of Union priorities and thematic support.
At the same time, Members support the Commission’s proposal to earmark a total of EUR 30 319 million (at 2011 prices) to the 11th EDF, and call for the sums set aside for the 11th EDF and the other cooperation instruments, including the Development Cooperation Instrument (DCI), to be used to ensure that the Union’s official development aid is maintained at its current level, or even increased.
Parliament also put forward funding priorities in this regard:
· substantial investment in disaster risk reduction ;
· the proportion of resources devoted to the intra-ACP programme to remain the same as that under the 10th EDF;
· financing the new scheme to absorb any exogenous shocks with an international dimension (in particular, financial, food or humanitarian crises) that may affect an ACP country,
· 5% of the appropriations under the 11th EDF should be used to cover Commission support costs.
Reduction of the EDF budget for 2014-2020 : Parliament deeply regrets the agreement concluded by the Member States on 8 February 2013, which provides for an 11 % reduction in the 11th EDF budget proposed in July 2012 by the Commission and without the Parliament being associated with this decision. It draws attention to the glaring contradiction between the repeated undertakings given by the Council to meet development aid targets by 2015 and the substantial cuts made to international development appropriations in both national and Union budgets. It takes the view that, in making these budget cuts, the Union and its Member States, as the main ODA providers, will be held primarily responsible if the objective of reducing global poverty levels by half is not met by 2015.
Members urge that, under the 11th EDF, the proportion of resources devoted to the intra-ACP programme and regional programmes should be the same as that under the 10th EDF. The resolution states that the financial proposals for the 2014-2020 period, currently under discussion in the Council, have worrying implications for the future of European development policy, but also for the association linking the OCTs and the EU.
Parliament emphasises the importance of the Union having a budget that is capable of meeting the challenges facing it, particularly in times of crisis, as that budget provides funding, in particular for development, that could not be made available at national level. It calls, therefore, for the Union's budget to be funded from own resources , such as a financial transactions tax, so that the size of the budget is no longer just about the level of payment appropriations.
Reform of European development policy and the 11th EDF : stressing that the Cotonou Agreement should continue to be the main reference framework for the 11th EDF, Members take the view that the application of the principle of differentiation to eligibility for funding under the 11th EDF will be beneficial only if the impact is offset by a vulnerability index that supplements the GDP criterion, incorporates a national poverty and inequality index, and takes account of the specific circumstances of Small Island Developing States (SIDS). They note that ongoing close political dialogue is essential if our ACP partners are to accept the principle. They recognise, nevertheless, that the application of the principle of differentiation is a vital political tool which can be used to encourage middle and higher income ACP countries to establish a welfare state and devise national policies to redistribute wealth and tackle poverty and inequality. Differentiation should also take account of the specific situation in fragile states. In this context, Members call for a special focus on the Sahel region and the Horn of Africa in the programming of the 11th EDF.
Development and the private sector : Parliament stresses the role of the private sector in development. It recognises that the new funding arrangements, such as combined grant/loan funding, have definite advantages in a context of ever more scarce public resources. Members welcome the recent establishment of the ‘Results Measurement Framework’ (RMF), an index that enables the EIB to measure the development impact of all its operations outside the EU. They also acknowledge the importance of supporting the private sector, in particular micro-enterprises and SMEs in ACP countries, in order to encourage wealth creation and the establishment of business-friendly environments. Members emphasise, furthermore, the need to involve civil society directly in projects.
The resolution welcomes other initiatives, such as the UN initiative ‘Sustainable Energy for All’ which enjoys strong support from the EU to the tune of EUR 500 million under the 10th EDF (this level of funding should be continued under the 11th EDF) or the Maputo Declaration, which was poorly honoured, when ACP states made commitment to allocate 10% of national budget revenue to agriculture and rural development.
Democratic scrutiny : Parliament reiterates the importance of observing the principle of democratic ownership, as defined in the programme for aid effectiveness and ask the ACP States to work more actively with their national parliaments, so that the disbursement of the funds provided for in each country's strategy documents is made subject to ex post parliamentary scrutiny. It believes that transparency and accountability are fundamental when allocating EDF funds and monitoring the projects financed, including direct aid to national budgets.
On the issue of budget support , Parliament notes that the latter has many advantages, because it leads to more responsible decision-making, more precise results analysis, greater policy coherence, more effective forecasting and optimum use of the funds available directly for the benefit of the population. Budget support is designed to encourage sound management of public finances by the beneficiaries and Members call for this support to remain an important aspect of the 11th EDF, subject to closer dialogue on human rights between the Commission and the ACP States.
Development effectiveness : Parliament emphasises the merits of the joint programming of aid between the Union and its Member States, given that it boosts the visibility, impact and effectiveness of European development policy, whilst preventing duplication and waste. It stresses the need, however, to clarify the rules set out in the common framework for joint multiannual programming and bring further transparency to this process.
Lastly, the Commission is asked to:
to ensure compliance with social and environmental standards a condition for obtaining public procurement contracts financed from the 11th EDF in ACP countries; to promote effective and fair tax collection systems in order to improve tax collection and prevent tax evasion and the use of tax havens; to increase the role of women who play a crucial role in nutrition and food security, particularly in Africa, and in conflict resolution.
The Committee on Development adopted the own-initiative report by Patrice TIROLIEN (S&D, FR) on the preparation of the multiannual financial framework regarding the financing of EU cooperation for African, Caribbean and Pacific States and Overseas Countries and Territories for the 2014–2020 period (11th European Development Fund-EDF.)
Members recall the need to ensure that the 11th EDF has sufficient funding so that the Union might honour the undertakings made at international level concerning development and devote 0.7% of its GDP to development aid. They stress that at least 90% of the appropriations under the 11th EDF for ACP states should meet the official development aid (ODA) criteria , as laid down by the OECD’s Development Assistance Committee. In order to meet that objective, more needs to be done to ensure that the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) on which the least progress is being made are met, in particular by earmarking 20 % of the 11th EDF budget for the provision of basic social services, particularly health care and basic education.
In this regard, aid should be prioritised to ensure access to basic maternal, reproductive and child healthcare, with particular emphasis on the poorest sections of the population and the fight against HIV/AIDS, with particular emphasis on aid for the most vulnerable groups in society, including women, children, and persons with disabilities.
Promoting the economic and social development of the Overseas countries and territories (OCTs): Members welcomes the fact that the proposal on the Overseas Association Decision (OAD) recognises the need to develop a new long-term partnership with the OCTs, centred around four new objectives:
boosting the competitiveness of the OCTs; strengthening their adaptability; reducing their vulnerability; promoting their cooperation with other partners.
However, they regret the absence of a financial instrument dedicated to the OCTs that could be integrated in the Union budget so as to allow democratic, transparent control over funding allocated by that means.
Budgetisation and financial allocation : once again, Members call for the budgetisation of the EDF in the next programming period and default from 2021, with the full transfer to Section 4 of PSC (‘Europe in the world’), as this would contribute to the more effective promotion of Union priorities and thematic support.
At the same time, they support the Commission’s proposal to earmark a total of EUR 30 319 million (at 2011 prices) to the 11th EDF, and call for the sums set aside for the 11th EDF and the other cooperation instruments, including the Development Cooperation Instrument (DCI), to be used to ensure that the Union’s official development aid is maintained at its current level, or even increased.
Members also put forward funding priorities in this regard:
substantial investment in disaster risk reduction ; the proportion of resources devoted to the intra-ACP programme to remain the same as that under the 10th EDF; financing the new scheme to absorb any exogenous shocks with an international dimension (in particular, financial, food or humanitarian crises) that may affect an ACP country, 5% of the appropriations under the 11th EDF should be used to cover Commission support costs.
Members deeply regret the agreement concluded by the Member States on 8 February 2013, which provides for an 11% reduction in the 11th EDF budget proposed in July 2012 by the Commission. They take the view that, in making these budget cuts, the Union and its Member States will be held primarily responsible if the objective of reducing global poverty levels by half is not met by 2015. They call for the proportion of the EDF budget set aside for OCTs to be kept at the figure proposed by the Commission , whatever contribution scales and levels of appropriations are set for the 11th EDF.
Reform of European development policy and the 11th EDF recalling their view that the Cotonou Agreement should continue to be the main reference framework for the 11th EDF, Members state that the application of the principle of differentiation to eligibility for funding under the 11th EDF will be beneficial only if the impact is offset by a vulnerability index that supplements the GDP criterion, and takes account of the specific circumstances of Small Island Developing States. They stress the importance of maintaining all the national budgets at their current levels under the 11th EDF, given that European development aid can still have a decisive impact in some middle and higher income ACP countries. Differentiation should also take account of the specific situation in fragile states. In this context, Members call for a special focus on the Sahel region and the Horn of Africa in the programming of the 11th EDF.
Development and the private sector : the committee stressed the role of the private sector in development. It recognises that the new funding arrangements, such as combined grant/loan funding, have definite advantages in a context of ever more scarce public resources. Members welcome the recent establishment of the ‘Results Measurement Framework’ (RMF), an index that enables the EIB to measure the development impact of all its operations outside the EU. They also acknowledge the importance of supporting the private sector, in particular micro-enterprises and SMEs in ACP countries, in order to encourage wealth creation and the establishment of business-friendly environments. Members emphasise, furthermore, the need to involve civil society directly in projects.
The report welcomes other initiatives, such as the UN initiative ‘Sustainable Energy for All’ which enjoys strong support from the EU to the tune of EUR 500 million under the 10th EDF (this level of funding should be continued under the 11th EDF) or the Maputo Declaration, which was poorly honoured, when ACP states made commitment to allocate 10% of national budget revenue to agriculture and rural development.
Democratic scrutiny : Members reiterate the importance of observing the principle of democratic ownership, as defined in the programme for aid effectiveness and ask the ACP States to work more actively with their national parliaments, so that the disbursement of the funds provided for in each country's strategy documents is made subject to ex post parliamentary scrutiny. They believe that transparency and accountability are fundamental when allocating EDF funds and monitoring the projects financed, including direct aid to national budgets.
On the issue of budget support , the committee notes that the latter has many advantages, because it leads to more responsible decision-making, more precise results analysis, greater policy coherence, more effective forecasting and optimum use of the funds available directly for the benefit of the population. Budget support is designed to encourage sound management of public finances by the beneficiaries and Members call for this support to remain an important aspect of the 11th EDF, subject to closer dialogue on human rights between the Commission and the ACP States.
Development effectiveness : Members emphasise the merits of the joint programming of aid between the Union and its Member States, given that it boosts the visibility, impact and effectiveness of European development policy, whilst preventing duplication and waste. They stress the need, however, to clarify the rules set out in the common framework for joint multiannual programming and bring further transparency to this process.
Lastly, the Commission is asked to:
to ensure compliance with social and environmental standards a condition for obtaining public procurement contracts financed from the 11th EDF in ACP countries; to promote effective and fair tax collection systems in order to improve tax collection and prevent tax evasion and the use of tax havens; to increase the role of women who play a crucial role in nutrition and food security, particularly in Africa, and in conflict resolution.
PURPOSE: to present the outlines of the future Internal Agreement on the 11 th European Development Fund (EDF) for the period of the next financial framework (2014-2020).
BACKGROUND: this Communication and its annex are devoted to the 11th EDF and its financing for the period covering the next financial framework 2014-2020. It is based on the hypothesis of Croatia’s accession and its contribution to the 11 th EDF .
Note: the European Union maintains privileged relations with the African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) group of developing countries under the ACP-EU Partnership Agreement. In total, 25 Overseas Countries and Territories (OCTs) with constitutional links to Member States are associated to the EU through a regime based on the provisions of Part IV of the Treaty on the Functioning of the EU (TFEU) and the detailed rules and procedures laid down in the Overseas Association Decision (OAD) of 27 November 2001
The EDF is the main instrument for delivering EU assistance for development cooperation under the Cotonou Agreement with ACP States and for financing EU cooperation with the Overseas Countries and Territories. The EDF is funded outside the EU budget by the EU Member States on the basis of specific contribution keys. Each EDF is concluded for a multi-annual period. The 10th EDF Internal Agreement , establishing the resources of the 10th EDF and their share in broad sub-categories, covers the period 2008-2013, and includes provisions on implementation and financial monitoring.
In its Communication entitled “ A budget for Europe 2020 ”, the Commission underlined that it was not appropriate at the present time to propose that the EDF be integrated into the EU budget (‘EDF budgetisation’). The integration of EU development cooperation with ACP States into the EU budget is foreseen for 2020, at the end of the 2014-2020 multiannual financial framework, coinciding with the year of expiry of the Cotonou Agreement.
This is the general context into which this Communication fits; it describes the main aspects likely to be covered in the Internal Agreement on the 11th EDF for the next period of financial programming.
CONTENT: the Communication presents the legal and strategic framework for the future EDF. The content and wording of the Internal Agreement will be decided by the Governments of the EU Member States. The adoption of this Internal Agreement would be followed by the adoption by the Council of an Implementing Regulation and a Financial Regulation for the 11th EDF.
Policy framework for the EU’s development cooperation: the legal and policy context of EU development cooperation is defined by the Lisbon Treaty and includes a series of priorities and sectorial or transsectorial strategies such as, for example, combating climate change.
The overriding objective is still one of reducing and eradicating poverty in developing countries.
- As regards cooperation with ACP States , this EU legal and policy framework is complemented by the Cotonou Agreement , concluded between the members of the ACP Group of States on the one hand and the European Union and its Member States on the other. It runs for a twenty-year period (from March 2000 to February 2020), and entered into force in April 2003. It was designed to establish a comprehensive partnership, based on three complementary pillars: i) development cooperation, ii) economic and trade cooperation, and iii) the political dimension. The Cotonou Agreement provides for a revision clause which foresees that the agreement is adapted every five years. The second such revision was adopted in June 2010 by the ACP-EU Council of Ministers and has been applied on a provisional basis since November 2010.
- As regards the OCT/EU Association , the legal framework is more complex: i) provisions in Part IV of the TFEU; ii) the conditions and procedures laid down by several Council Decisions, the most recent of which ( Council Decision 2001/822/EC ) expires on 31 December 2013. The Commission is currently preparing a proposal for a new Council Decision which should enter into force on 1 January 2014 and which will constitute the political and legal framework for the 11th EDF implementation with regard to OCTs.
Main changes compared to the Internal Agreement for the 10 th EDF: no major change is proposed compared to the structure of the 10th EDF.
Nevertheless, the main proposed changes are as follows:
Member States’ contributions: it is proposed to further align Member States’ contribution keys under the EDF with the keys used for the EU budget; Financial allocations: the overall volumes proposed in Article 1(2)(a) for the 11th EDF for cooperation with ACP countries and OCTs are expressed in current prices to reflect more accurately inflation; support expenditure: the requested funding represents 5% of the EDF credits which will be managed by the Commission. This reflects the Commission’s wish to take more fully into account the real support expenditures made for programming and implementing the EDF, including the costs associated with the devolution of aid implementation and with enhanced monitoring; regarding intra-ACP and interregional cooperation , Article 2(b) proposes to maintain the same share from ACP resources as in the 10th EDF. This envelope will be used in part to finance the new shock-absorbing scheme foreseen by the second revision of the Cotonou Agreement; following consultation of the European Investment Bank , it appears that there is no need to replenish the Investment Facility, as sufficient funding is already available from reflows from the allocations of the 9th and 10th EDF, due to the 'revolving' nature of this Facility. However, this does not concern grants for financing interest rate subsidies and project-related technical assistance, for which an increased allocation (compared to the 10th EDF) is proposed to address the insufficient level of funding under the 10 th EDF, to increase the scale of current activities and to allow for possible other types of blending mechanisms; Regional B-envelopes and shock-absorbing scheme: the second revision of the Cotonou Agreement foresees the creation of regional B-envelopes to cover unforeseen needs with a regional dimension (Article 9(2) of Annex IV to the revised Cotonou agreement). It also provides for the creation of shock-absorbing schemes to replace the current Flex and other ad hoc shock-absorbing schemes. These new schemes should build upon the experience of V-Flex and the Food Facility and focus on exogenous shocks with a cross-country dimension. Article 2(c) therefore proposes to include these changes in the internal agreement for the 11th EDF; EDF Committee: a proposed system of voting weights in the 11th EDF Committee is included, based on the proposed contribution keys.
Resources of the 11 th EDF: the proposed allocation is EUR 34 275.6 million (in current prices), funded by the Member States. This sum shall be made available to developing partners following the entry into force of the multiannual financial framework.
Of this amount:
EUR 32 218.4 million shall be allocated to the ACP Group of States broken down as follows: i) national indicative programmes; ii) regional indicative programmes; iii) intraregional cooperation; iv) to cover unforeseen needs and to mitigate adverse short-term effects of exogenous shocks; v) the EIB Investment Facility;
EUR 343.4 million shall be allocated to the OCTs; EUR 1 713.8 million shall be allocated to the Commission for support expenditure as referred to in Article 6, linked to programming and implementation of the EDF.
Specific provisions for the transfer of funds from previous EDFs: provisions are laid down for the mechanism by which remaining funds for the 10th EDF may be transferred to the 11th EDF . In any event, after 31 December 2013, or after the date of entry into force of the multiannual financial framework for the period 2014 to 2020 if this falls later, balances from the 10th EDF or from previous EDFs shall no longer be committed. Funds decommitted from projects under the 10th EDF or from previous EDFs after 31 December 2013 shall no longer be committed, unless decided otherwise by the Council unanimously, on the basis of a proposal by the Commission.
Specific provisions regarding the EIB: special provisions are envisaged to define the framework for action by the EIB, besides that already foreseen
In the context of the EIB Facility. A sum of EUR 2 600 million shall be granted by the EIB from its own resources in the form of loans to beneficiary countries to fund investment projects.
Implementing provisions: lastly, the proposal envisages a series of technical provisions laying down the framework for the EDF’s implementation and the Commission’s responsibilities in this respect (e.g. financial implementation, preparation of accounts, audits and discharge procedure). A review clause is also envisaged.
It should be noted that, to enter into force, the proposed Internal Agreement shall be approved and ratified by each Member States in accordance with its own constitutional requirements.
Documents
- Commission response to text adopted in plenary: SP(2013)442
- Results of vote in Parliament: Results of vote in Parliament
- Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading: T7-0076/2013
- Debate in Parliament: Debate in Parliament
- Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading: A7-0049/2013
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE504.105
- Committee opinion: PE500.585
- Committee opinion: PE500.510
- Committee draft report: PE497.947
- Non-legislative basic document published: COM(2011)0837
- Non-legislative basic document published: EUR-Lex
- Committee draft report: PE497.947
- Committee opinion: PE500.510
- Committee opinion: PE500.585
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE504.105
- Commission response to text adopted in plenary: SP(2013)442
Activities
- Elena BĂSESCU
Plenary Speeches (0)
- Miroslav MIKOLÁŠIK
Plenary Speeches (0)
- Georgios PAPASTAMKOS
Plenary Speeches (0)
- Maurice PONGA
Plenary Speeches (0)
- Patrice TIROLIEN
Plenary Speeches (0)
Amendments | Dossier |
8 |
2012/2222(INI)
2012/12/11
BUDG
8 amendments...
Amendment 1 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 1 1. Calls once again for the budgetisation of the European Development Fund (EDF), as this would contribute to the more effective promotion of Union priorities and thematic support and would enhance the visibility, as well as the consistency, of the EU's actions as the world's largest donor of development aid; invites the Commission to present a roadmap for the budgetisation of the EDF after 2020, containing details on the timeline and procedure for its inclusion in the Union budget;
Amendment 2 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 2 2. Insists however that the incorporation of the EDF into the EU budget
Amendment 3 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 2 2. Insists that the incorporation of the EDF into the EU budget should not influence the overall financial allocation for the other priority areas and policies of the Union; recalls the commitment given by the Member States in relation to official development assistance and asks that the incorporation of the EDF into the budget should not have a detrimental effect on their contributions;
Amendment 4 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 3. Underlines the importance of the complementary nature of EU and Member States’ assistance, and the catalyst effect of the former in terms of intervening in regions where bilateral assistance is not delivered; is particularly supportive of joint programming between Member States’ and EU actions; likewise considers it crucial to ensure coherence between development cooperation policies and other European policies that are likely to affect developing countries; considers that coordination between the EU and other aid donors is also essential;
Amendment 5 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 a (new) 3a. Believes that we should take account, as regards the beneficiaries of the EDF, of countries which are vulnerable in certain respects, whether owing to geographical characteristics, as is the case for islands or countries without access to the sea, or climate issues, where countries are particularly exposed to natural disasters, or social issues resulting from high rates of domestic inequality; points to the need to take account of other criteria in addition to GDP in order to decide with which countries to cooperate;
Amendment 6 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 b (new) 3b. Believes that transparency and accountability are fundamental when allocating EDF funds and monitoring the projects financed, including direct aid to national budgets;
Amendment 7 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 c (new) 3c. Calls for close attention to be paid to the specific situation of ACP countries and regions exiting (no longer receiving) bilateral aid on the grounds of GDP;
Amendment 8 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 4 a (new) 4a. Recalls that the 2015 deadline for meeting the Millennium Development Goals (MDG), and the collective Official Development Aid (ODA) target of 0.7% of gross national income (GNI), fall within the next MFF period; stresses, accordingly, that an appropriate overall level of development aid and funding is required for the Union and its Member States to meet its international development commitments; urges Member States to take immediate action to meet their ODA targets and fulfil their development pledges;
source: PE-501.984
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PURPOSE: to present the outlines of the future Internal Agreement on the 11th European Development Fund (EDF) for the period of the next financial framework (2014-2020). BACKGROUND: this Communication and its annex are devoted to the 11th EDF and its financing for the period covering the next financial framework 2014-2020. It is based on the hypothesis of Croatias accession and its contribution to the 11th EDF. Note: the European Union maintains privileged relations with the African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) group of developing countries under the ACP-EU Partnership Agreement. In total, 25 Overseas Countries and Territories (OCTs) with constitutional links to Member States are associated to the EU through a regime based on the provisions of Part IV of the Treaty on the Functioning of the EU (TFEU) and the detailed rules and procedures laid down in the Overseas Association Decision (OAD) of 27 November 2001 The EDF is the main instrument for delivering EU assistance for development cooperation under the Cotonou Agreement with ACP States and for financing EU cooperation with the Overseas Countries and Territories. The EDF is funded outside the EU budget by the EU Member States on the basis of specific contribution keys. Each EDF is concluded for a multi-annual period. The 10th EDF Internal Agreement, establishing the resources of the 10th EDF and their share in broad sub-categories, covers the period 2008-2013, and includes provisions on implementation and financial monitoring. In its Communication entitled A budget for Europe 2020, the Commission underlined that it was not appropriate at the present time to propose that the EDF be integrated into the EU budget (EDF budgetisation). The integration of EU development cooperation with ACP States into the EU budget is foreseen for 2020, at the end of the 2014-2020 multiannual financial framework, coinciding with the year of expiry of the Cotonou Agreement. This is the general context into which this Communication fits; it describes the main aspects likely to be covered in the Internal Agreement on the 11th EDF for the next period of financial programming. CONTENT: the Communication presents the legal and strategic framework for the future EDF. The content and wording of the Internal Agreement will be decided by the Governments of the EU Member States. The adoption of this Internal Agreement would be followed by the adoption by the Council of an Implementing Regulation and a Financial Regulation for the 11th EDF. Policy framework for the EUs development cooperation: the legal and policy context of EU development cooperation is defined by the Lisbon Treaty and includes a series of priorities and sectorial or transsectorial strategies such as, for example, combating climate change. The overriding objective is still one of reducing and eradicating poverty in developing countries. - As regards cooperation with ACP States, this EU legal and policy framework is complemented by the Cotonou Agreement, concluded between the members of the ACP Group of States on the one hand and the European Union and its Member States on the other. It runs for a twenty-year period (from March 2000 to February 2020), and entered into force in April 2003. It was designed to establish a comprehensive partnership, based on three complementary pillars: i) development cooperation, ii) economic and trade cooperation, and iii) the political dimension. The Cotonou Agreement provides for a revision clause which foresees that the agreement is adapted every five years. The second such revision was adopted in June 2010 by the ACP-EU Council of Ministers and has been applied on a provisional basis since November 2010. - As regards the OCT/EU Association, the legal framework is more complex: i) provisions in Part IV of the TFEU; ii) the conditions and procedures laid down by several Council Decisions, the most recent of which (Council Decision 2001/822/EC) expires on 31 December 2013. The Commission is currently preparing a proposal for a new Council Decision which should enter into force on 1 January 2014 and which will constitute the political and legal framework for the 11th EDF implementation with regard to OCTs. Main changes compared to the Internal Agreement for the 10th EDF: no major change is proposed compared to the structure of the 10th EDF. Nevertheless, the main proposed changes are as follows:
Resources of the 11th EDF: the proposed allocation is EUR 34 275.6 million (in current prices), funded by the Member States. This sum shall be made available to developing partners following the entry into force of the multiannual financial framework. Of this amount:
Specific provisions for the transfer of funds from previous EDFs: provisions are laid down for the mechanism by which remaining funds for the 10th EDF may be transferred to the 11th EDF. In any event, after 31 December 2013, or after the date of entry into force of the multiannual financial framework for the period 2014 to 2020 if this falls later, balances from the 10th EDF or from previous EDFs shall no longer be committed. Funds decommitted from projects under the 10th EDF or from previous EDFs after 31 December 2013 shall no longer be committed, unless decided otherwise by the Council unanimously, on the basis of a proposal by the Commission. Specific provisions regarding the EIB: special provisions are envisaged to define the framework for action by the EIB, besides that already foreseen In the context of the EIB Facility. A sum of EUR 2 600 million shall be granted by the EIB from its own resources in the form of loans to beneficiary countries to fund investment projects. Implementing provisions: lastly, the proposal envisages a series of technical provisions laying down the framework for the EDFs implementation and the Commissions responsibilities in this respect (e.g. financial implementation, preparation of accounts, audits and discharge procedure). A review clause is also envisaged. It should be noted that, to enter into force, the proposed Internal Agreement shall be approved and ratified by each Member States in accordance with its own constitutional requirements. New
PURPOSE: to present the outlines of the future Internal Agreement on the 11th European Development Fund (EDF) for the period of the next financial framework (2014-2020). BACKGROUND: this Communication and its annex are devoted to the 11th EDF and its financing for the period covering the next financial framework 2014-2020. It is based on the hypothesis of Croatias accession and its contribution to the 11th EDF. Note: the European Union maintains privileged relations with the African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) group of developing countries under the ACP-EU Partnership Agreement. In total, 25 Overseas Countries and Territories (OCTs) with constitutional links to Member States are associated to the EU through a regime based on the provisions of Part IV of the Treaty on the Functioning of the EU (TFEU) and the detailed rules and procedures laid down in the Overseas Association Decision (OAD) of 27 November 2001 The EDF is the main instrument for delivering EU assistance for development cooperation under the Cotonou Agreement with ACP States and for financing EU cooperation with the Overseas Countries and Territories. The EDF is funded outside the EU budget by the EU Member States on the basis of specific contribution keys. Each EDF is concluded for a multi-annual period. The 10th EDF Internal Agreement, establishing the resources of the 10th EDF and their share in broad sub-categories, covers the period 2008-2013, and includes provisions on implementation and financial monitoring. In its Communication entitled A budget for Europe 2020, the Commission underlined that it was not appropriate at the present time to propose that the EDF be integrated into the EU budget (EDF budgetisation). The integration of EU development cooperation with ACP States into the EU budget is foreseen for 2020, at the end of the 2014-2020 multiannual financial framework, coinciding with the year of expiry of the Cotonou Agreement. This is the general context into which this Communication fits; it describes the main aspects likely to be covered in the Internal Agreement on the 11th EDF for the next period of financial programming. CONTENT: the Communication presents the legal and strategic framework for the future EDF. The content and wording of the Internal Agreement will be decided by the Governments of the EU Member States. The adoption of this Internal Agreement would be followed by the adoption by the Council of an Implementing Regulation and a Financial Regulation for the 11th EDF. Policy framework for the EUs development cooperation: the legal and policy context of EU development cooperation is defined by the Lisbon Treaty and includes a series of priorities and sectorial or transsectorial strategies such as, for example, combating climate change. The overriding objective is still one of reducing and eradicating poverty in developing countries. - As regards cooperation with ACP States, this EU legal and policy framework is complemented by the Cotonou Agreement, concluded between the members of the ACP Group of States on the one hand and the European Union and its Member States on the other. It runs for a twenty-year period (from March 2000 to February 2020), and entered into force in April 2003. It was designed to establish a comprehensive partnership, based on three complementary pillars: i) development cooperation, ii) economic and trade cooperation, and iii) the political dimension. The Cotonou Agreement provides for a revision clause which foresees that the agreement is adapted every five years. The second such revision was adopted in June 2010 by the ACP-EU Council of Ministers and has been applied on a provisional basis since November 2010. - As regards the OCT/EU Association, the legal framework is more complex: i) provisions in Part IV of the TFEU; ii) the conditions and procedures laid down by several Council Decisions, the most recent of which (Council Decision 2001/822/EC) expires on 31 December 2013. The Commission is currently preparing a proposal for a new Council Decision which should enter into force on 1 January 2014 and which will constitute the political and legal framework for the 11th EDF implementation with regard to OCTs. Main changes compared to the Internal Agreement for the 10th EDF: no major change is proposed compared to the structure of the 10th EDF. Nevertheless, the main proposed changes are as follows:
Resources of the 11th EDF: the proposed allocation is EUR 34 275.6 million (in current prices), funded by the Member States. This sum shall be made available to developing partners following the entry into force of the multiannual financial framework. Of this amount:
Specific provisions for the transfer of funds from previous EDFs: provisions are laid down for the mechanism by which remaining funds for the 10th EDF may be transferred to the 11th EDF. In any event, after 31 December 2013, or after the date of entry into force of the multiannual financial framework for the period 2014 to 2020 if this falls later, balances from the 10th EDF or from previous EDFs shall no longer be committed. Funds decommitted from projects under the 10th EDF or from previous EDFs after 31 December 2013 shall no longer be committed, unless decided otherwise by the Council unanimously, on the basis of a proposal by the Commission. Specific provisions regarding the EIB: special provisions are envisaged to define the framework for action by the EIB, besides that already foreseen In the context of the EIB Facility. A sum of EUR 2 600 million shall be granted by the EIB from its own resources in the form of loans to beneficiary countries to fund investment projects. Implementing provisions: lastly, the proposal envisages a series of technical provisions laying down the framework for the EDFs implementation and the Commissions responsibilities in this respect (e.g. financial implementation, preparation of accounts, audits and discharge procedure). A review clause is also envisaged. It should be noted that, to enter into force, the proposed Internal Agreement shall be approved and ratified by each Member States in accordance with its own constitutional requirements. |
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