Written by Ulrich Jochheim.
Hours before the Beijing Winter Olympics officially opened on 4 February 2022, Chinese President Xi Jinping had a long meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin. In the joint statement issued after the meeting, the Chinese leader for the first time voiced his country’s outright opposition to NATO enlargement and support for Russia’s ‘proposals to create long-term legally binding security guarantees’ in Europe. This stance might be seen as the culmination of a relationship, formed in 1992, between the newly proclaimed Russian Federation and a China that had just started emerging from the stupor following the Tiananmen Square massacre.
This relationship has seen major shifts since 1992. At the outset, China’s population was greater than Russia’s and both countries had a very similar level of GDP. Nowadays, thanks to China’s exceptional growth performance, its economy is more than eight times bigger than Russia’s. Similarly, trade with Russia is not of major importance to China in terms of value. However, the high share of raw materials (including food) in Russian exports and the transfer of Russian military technology are of strategic importance to China in these relations.
Since 2012, the relationship has evolved into an informal alliance in the face of what both countries consider a rising threat from the West to their regimes. At present, China’s response to Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine seems to be more favourable to Russia than it was in 2014 when Russia annexed Crimea. China has been critical of NATO’s enlargement to central and eastern Europe, and less insistent about respect for the territorial integrity of nations – something that it has traditionally upheld in light of the ‘open Taiwan question’. On 30 March, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov met his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi in China to discuss the bilateral relationship.
Experts posit that China is likely to support the kind of solution to the Ukraine war that would be the least likely to challenge the power monopoly of the Chinese Communist Party.
Read the complete briefing on ‘China-Russia relations: A quantum leap?‘ in the Think Tank pages of the European Parliament.
Mineral fuel trade between Russia and China Trends in Chinese and Russian GDP growth since 1989 (constant US$ million)Written by Elena Lazarou.
Cooperation with third countries is embedded in several dimensions of EU security and defence policy. The Strategic Compass, adopted in March 2022, dedicates one of its main sections to the role of partnerships.
BackgroundThird countries (i.e. non-EU countries) can take part in EU common security and defence policy (CSDP) in various ways. These range from contributing to CSDP missions, financial investment and joint training, to taking part in dialogue and defence industrial initiatives. In its section on partnering, the Strategic Compass, approved by the Council in March 2022, calls for stronger tailored bilateral partnerships with like-minded partners, such as the US, Norway, Japan, the UK and Canada, multilateral organisations such as the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), the United Nations (UN) and regional organisations. It also stresses the importance of partnerships with the eastern and southern neighbourhood, the western Balkans, Asia, Africa, and Latin America, emphasising participation in CSDP missions and operations and support for capacity-building. It also envisages an EU security and defence partnership forum.
Permanent structured cooperation (PESCO)Established in 2017, PESCO is designed to deepen defence cooperation among the 25 participating EU Member States. There are now 60 PESCO projects addressing a range of domains: training (9), land (8), maritime (8), air (10), cyber (10), space (4), and joint services (11). In 2020, the Council set out conditions ‘exceptionally’ permitting third countries to take part in PESCO, providing the countries added ‘substantial added value’ and shared the EU’s founding values, and no external dependencies resulted. Countries must submit their requests to participate to the project’s lead country, and all participating Member States must agree unanimously. The Council and the High Representative/Vice-President of the Commission must be notified, with the Council giving formal approval. In May 2021, EU defence ministers agreed to invite the US, Canada and Norway – three key NATO allies – to join the PESCO military mobility project. The focus is on facilitating cross-border troop and equipment movement and harmonising transportation rules; a goal also shared by NATO. The EU has also acknowledged Ukraine‘s wish to join PESCO projects, so as to deepen EU-Ukraine defence cooperation. Third-country-controlled entities can participate as of 31 December 2025.
European Defence Agency (EDA)To help Member States with their capabilities development, the EDA can sign administrative agreements (AAs) with third countries, to allow their participation in military-technological programmes, providing there is reciprocal transparency and they adopt EU intellectual property rights legislation. The EDA has AAs with four non-EU countries: Norway, Switzerland, Serbia and Ukraine; and two organisations: the Organisation for Joint Armament Co-operation and the European Space Agency. In November 2021, the EDA was mandated to conclude an AA with the US, to outline a future framework for cooperation. In principle, an AA between a third country and the EDA is considered a pre-requisite for that country’s participation in a PESCO project.
European Defence Fund (EDF) and European defence industrial policyThe EDF supports research and development in EU defence capabilities, by co-financing measures that contribute to competitiveness, innovation and strategic autonomy and to a stronger defence technological and industrial base (EDTIB). The Fund has been endowed with €8 billion for the 2021-2027 period, of which €2.65 billion for research and innovation, and €5.3 billion for capabilities. The EDF regulation stipulates that, apart from non-EU countries that are members of the European Economic Area, only entities established in the EU or associated countries – and that are not subject to control by third countries or third-country entities – are eligible for EDF grant schemes. In cases of derogation from this rule, ‘there shall be no unauthorised access by a non-associated third country or non-associated third-country entity to classified information regarding action supported by the Fund’. In June 2020, the Commission announced a list of projects funded through the preparatory action on defence research and the European defence industrial development programme (precursors of the EDF), four of which involved the US, Canada and Japan.
SpaceThe 2016 space strategy promotes synergies between the civil and defence sectors. Geopolitical competition extends to outer space, and autonomous space capabilities enhance situational awareness, not least through the European global navigation satellite system (Galileo), Copernicus, and the European geostationary navigation overlay service (EGNOS). The EU earmarked €13.2 billion for space activities in the 2021-2027 period, managed by DG DEFIS. In 2004, the EU and US agreed on cooperation between Galileo and the global positioning system (GPS), while the EU signed agreements with Norway (2010) and with Switzerland (2013) on cooperation on satellite navigation and Galileo-related classified information exchange. According to the EU’s negotiating directives, the UK can access Galileo’s public regulated service (PRS), but third parties cannot take part in encrypting the PRS system. The UK is participating in Copernicus as a third country in the 2021-2027 period. This allows it to apply for EU Copernicus tenders.
The Commission’s space-based secure communication system, part of its space package, secures uninterrupted access to satellite communications and improved connectivity. Here, dialogues with third countries are expected on space traffic management while third countries may participate in the 2023-2027 ‘Union secure connectivity programme’. Similarly, the Roadmap on critical technologies for security and defence notes that in order to reduce strategic dependence, the EU needs to coordinate with like-minded partners such as NATO, the US, Canada, Norway and Japan. Transatlantic coordination on critical technologies also takes place within the EU-US Trade and Technology Council.
CSDP missions and operations The Strategic Compass includes the creation by 2025 of the EU rapid deployment capacity, a modular force of up to 5 000, including substantially modified EU battlegroups. Operational since 2007, but yet to be deployed, the battlegroups are of a rotating nature and can involve non-EU countries. For example, the Nordic battlegroup includes Norway; and Ukraine and Serbia took part in the Greek-led Balkan battlegroup. Ukraine was invited to join the Visegrad battlegroup in 2016.The Council has highlighted EU support for regular dialogue with third countries, while facilitating partners’ participation in CSDP missions. The EU currently has seven military and 11 civilian missions under CSDP, while the 20 framework cooperation agreements (FPA) currently in force provide the political and legal basis for third-country participation in missions. These also clarify that this contribution should be without prejudice to operational planning and EU decision-making autonomy. The EU’s counter-piracy mission EUNAVFOR Atalanta has, for instance, involved Colombia, South Korea, Montenegro, Ukraine and others, while Turkey contributes to the EUFOR Althea mission in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The new EUTM Mozambique mission is also open to third-country involvement. In all, more than 45 third countries have contributed to CSDP missions so far. In January 2021, the EU Military Committee (EUMC) recommended developing criteria for non-EU country participation in CSDP missions, and creating a CSDP ‘partners consultative mechanism’ to be chaired by the EEAS. According to the EUMC recommendation, the basic conditions for a third country to become a ‘CSDP partner’ would be an FPA, a security of information agreement (SIA), good neighbourly relations with the EU, shared EU values and principles, and respect for international law. Also in 2021, the EU enhanced the modalities for participation of third countries in CSDP missions and operations by ensuring a greater level of information-sharing. Partner countries have also taken part in CSDP exercises. For example, in 2020, the US, Canada and Norway joined in the EEAS EU Integrated Revolve 2020 exercise to improve crisis management.
The European Parliament has welcomed third-country involvement in CSDP missions and third-party involvement in the EDA, noting that participation in PESCO should be based on ‘established and effective reciprocity’. Parliament has also asked to be ‘fully involved’ in the process of opening PESCO to third countries. Parliament’s 2020 annual report on common foreign and security policy (CFSP) meanwhile, acknowledged the contribution of Eastern Partnership (EaP) countries to CSDP, and called for deeper EU-EaP cooperation in EU-related defence policies. On the EDF, Parliament has recognised the need to regulate access to companies controlled by third countries and noted that while third countries may offer ‘technological and operational added value’, this must not weaken the EU’s strategic security interests or undermine EDF objectives. Parliament has also stressed the need to be ‘creative’ regarding EU-UK cooperation on CFSP and CSDP.Read this ‘at a glance’ on ‘Third-country participation in EU defence‘ in the Think Tank pages of the European Parliament.
Written by Marcin Grajewski.
EU officials say that the 23rd summit between the European Union and China on Friday 1 April will focus on Russia’s war on Ukraine, the engagement of the international community to support Ukraine, the dramatic humanitarian crisis created by the conflict, its destabilising nature for the international order and its inherent global impact. The meeting, to be conducted by video-conference, is also expected to discuss bilateral issues and areas of shared interest, such as climate change, biodiversity and health, as well as ways to ensure a more balanced and reciprocal trade relationship. The EU is also likely to urge China to end its trade ban on imports from Lithuania, which followed the country’s decision to open a de facto Taiwan embassy in its capital. In recent years, China has become more of a rival for the EU than a declared strategic partner.
This note gathers links to the recent publications and commentaries from many international think tanks on EU-China relations, the country’s attitude to the war on Ukraine and its policies on other issues. Analyses on the war and its implications can be found in a previous edition of the ‘What Think Tanks are Thinking’ series.
China’s ‘enlightened authoritarianism’ as an alternative to liberal democracy
Barcelona Centre for International Affairs, March 2022
China can see the limits of bailing out Russia’s economy
Bruegel, March 2022
Six reasons why backstopping Russia is an increasingly unattractive option for China
Bruegel, March 2022
China offers Russia respite but not a solution
Bruegel, March 2022
Can China bail out Putin?
Bruegel, March 2022
China and Russia are joining forces to spread disinformation
Brookings Institution, March 2022
China’s choices and the fate of the post-post-Cold War era
Brookings Institution, March 2022
Ukraine presents opportunity to test China’s strategic outlook
Brookings Institution, March 2022
Caught between Russia and the West? China’s struggle for a position on Ukraine
Bertelsmann Stiftung, March 2022
The war in Ukraine: Troubling lessons for Taiwan
American Enterprise Institute, March 2022
Putin is creating the multipolar world he (thought he) wanted
Egmont, March 2022
Mapping China’s rise in the Western Balkans
European Council on Foreign Relations, March 2022
Let a thousand contacts bloom: How China competes for influence in Bulgaria
European Council on Foreign Relations, March 2022
The war in Ukraine: China walking amid the shrapnel
European Policy Centre, March 2022
Could China be a partner for the West in managing the Ukraine crisis?
Foreign Policy Centre, March 2022
Amid the turbulent international landscape, China and Europe must reinforce trust
Friends of Europe, March 2022
Keeping China out of the Ukraine conflict
Friends of Europe, March 2022
The China factor in Russia’s war: Implications for Europe
German Council on Foreign Relations, March 2022
China faces the consequences of supporting Russia
German Marshall Fund, March 2022
Watching China in Europe: March 2022
German Marshall Fund, March 2022
War in Ukraine: Asia takes sides
Istituto per gli Studi di Politica Internazionale, March 2022
What is China’s position in the Russian-Ukrainian conflict?
Institut français des relations internationales, March 2022
China signals desire to improve ties with India, but is that what New Delhi wants?
International Institute for Strategic Studies, March 2022
The rise of China and NATO’s new Strategic Concept
NATO Defence College, March 2022
China is too tied to the global economy to risk helping Russia
Peterson Institute for International Economics, March 2022
New technology restrictions against Russia could also target China
Peterson Institute for International Economics, March 2022
China bought none of the extra $200 billion of US exports in Trump’s trade deal
Peterson Institute for International Economics, March 2022
Great power rivalry in a changing international order: Concepts and theories
Rand Corporation, March 2022
The dependence of China of Spain’s supply chains
Real Instituto Elcano, March 2022
China’s economic support for Russia is not a panacea
Bruegel, February 2022
How China’s investment in Middle East is evolving
Bruegel, February 2022
Learning the right lessons from Ukraine for Taiwan
Brookings Institution, February 2022
Germany and the trade conflict between Lithuania and China
Centre for Eastern Studies, February 2022
Ukraine is severe test of China’s new axis with Russia
Chatham House, February 2022
Russia’s escalation in Ukraine: Views from Asia
European Council on Foreign Relations, February 2022
Games changer: How China is rewriting global rules and Russia is playing along
European Council on Foreign Relations, February 2022
Europe’s role in promoting US-China arms control cooperation
Hague Centre for Strategic Studies, February 2022
The continued downturn of US-China relations and Beijing’s approach to the Ukraine crisis
Istituto Affari Internazionali, February 2022
Convaincre et contraindre Les interférences américaines dans les échanges technologiques entre leurs alliés et la Chine
Institut français des relations internationales, February 2022
China’s path to geopolitics: Case study on China’s Iran policy at the intersection of regional interests and global power rivalry
Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik, February 2022
Chinas nukleare Aufrüstung betrifft auch Europa
Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik, February 2022
In the electric vehicle race, China coming first
Bruegel, January 2022
How Chinese competition helps western conglomerates
Bruegel, January 2022
China’s bullying of Lithuania spurs European unity
Carnegie Europe, January 2022
Coercion with Chinese characteristics: How Europe should respond to interference in its internal trade
European Council on Foreign Relations, January 2022
How to counter Chinese interference: Keeping an eye on the geopolitical ball
Friends of Europe, January 2022
Lithuania, China and EU lawfare to counter economic coercion
Centre for European Policy Studies, December 2021
China’s approach to global economic governance
Chatham House, December 2021
China’s new military base in Africa: What it means for Europe and America
European Council on Foreign Relations, December 2021
Read this briefing on ‘EU-China ties and Russia’s war on Ukraine‘ in the Think Tank pages of the European Parliament.
Written by Andrés García Higuera.
Automated decision-making by systems that use machine learning to dynamically improve performance are still seen as lacking the ‘human perspective’ and flexibility to adapt to the particular nuances of specific cases. But perhaps, as they lack the ‘cunning’ to hide their biases, automated systems actually make fairer decisions than do humans, when these decisions are based on data that have been properly curated.
Machine learning systems can perform tasks for which they were not initially developed. While it is usually possible – and very effective – to develop specific algorithms to solve well-defined problems, this is not always the case when confronting more complex situations. In these instances, it may be more efficient to explore ways in which the machine can develop or adjust its own decision-making algorithms, rather than for human programmers to try and specify every step, taking all possible nuances into account.
Machine learning (ML) is a form of artificial intelligence (AI) in which computers develop their own decision-making processes for situations that cannot be directly and satisfactorily addressed by available algorithms. The process is adjusted through the exploration of existing data on previous similar situations that include the solutions found at the time. The system trains itself to come to a decision-making process whose solutions would match those of the training examples, when confronted with the corresponding initial data. The assumption is that new problems arising in similar situations can interpolate between those examples and, therefore, the appropriate solutions will follow similar lines.
The task of programmers is no longer to identify the specific steps constituting the right algorithm to solve the problem, but to find the right data or set of examples that will lead the ML system to adjust its decision-making process properly. The risks of this method are obvious, as it cannot be guaranteed that the resulting system will extrapolate situations in a meaningful way when the problem deviates significantly from the original learning data. The advantages are also evident, as this method facilitates solutions for very difficult problems in a dynamic, self-adjusting and autonomous way.
Potential impacts and developmentsMachine learning systems do not rely on a direct expression of knowledge, but on implicit information emanating from a wealth of data. The broader and more balanced the dataset is, the better the chances will be of obtaining a valid result; but there is no a priori way of knowing whether the available data will suffice to collect all aspects of the problem at hand. The outputs of systems based on AI can be biased owing to imbalances in the training data, or if the data source is itself biased with respect to ethnicity, sex or other factors. A typical example is the poor results some facial recognition systems present when identifying black women, because not enough images of that specific population were used in the learning process. This leads to biases related to the sampling of data and results in pernicious decisions and discrimination. Although these biases are bad enough, they are not the only ones possible; biases can already be present in the data that reflect previous decisions, which are not guaranteed to be correct. This potential discrimination against minorities and other population groups leads to major ethical concerns. Machine learning systems therefore act as a mirror of society and replicate previous biases that become assimilated as a result.
A further problem relates to complicated accountability in AI, because so many actors and different applications are involved. When AI misbehaves, or the output is incorrect, who is responsible for the error? The user that benefits from the system, its owner, the manufacturer or the developers? The situation is currently unclear and that is why transparency and traceability are so important in AI – to provide complete and continuous information on how the AI tool is designed, developed, validated and used in day-to-day practice. ‘Blaming the machine’ has become the new way to designate a scapegoat, but someone has to be clearly accountable if we want actions to be taken towards correcting malfunction and possible biases. This leads to a problem of acceptance and trust. Both the party affected by the decision and the one that will be accountable for it need to rely on the system and accept its outputs. Even if the performance of an AI system is high, reliable, secure and unbiased, it may still be rejected, because the parties affected do not understand or trust the technology. In this respect, improving education on AI, as well as involving different stakeholders throughout the whole development process might increase AI acceptability and applicability.
Finally, there are privacy and security concerns, both in normal circumstances and in case of cyberattacks that can affect results or compromise data protection. It is therefore important to build more robust and reliable systems, as well as to increase the layers of protection in AI tools.
Anticipatory policy-makingResearchers are currently working on solutions to detect and compensate for biases in the data used for training ML systems and to obtain AI tools capable of ensuring a fair and safe use independently of sex, gender, age or ethnicity. There is always a trade-off between limiting access to some information on grounds of confidentiality to mitigate bias and reducing the accuracy of the AI mechanism. Additionally, data can be anonymised and access to it can be allowed solely on grounds of legitimate interest. However, both these solutions present important safety risks and it is not always clear what can be defined as legitimate interest. Furthermore, the different availability of data depending on population can also affect the process.
Having access to all the information seems always to be the best way to ensure a good result. Although AI systems may appear to be black boxes, it is possible to introduce mitigating measures, such as the tracking and explainability of the decisions taken using methods like SHAP or LIME. These methods allow checks on the reasoning followed in a specific decision-making process, by highlighting the conditions and data used and their effect on making a final choice. The user or supervisor can thus decide whether the result is sufficiently justified depending on the context at a more personal level. This leads to the question of who that supervisor should be, as well as the need for auditing depending on the level of risk for different applications.
Artificial intelligence has become a sector with huge economic potential and Europe cannot lag behind on innovation as a result of over-regulation. Regulatory sandboxes set up temporary reprieves from regulation to allow technology and the related legislation to evolve together. Rather than increasing regulation, it is crucial to ensure that existing rules, such as the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), cover all new aspects that may appear as the technology evolves. European legislation such as the proposed AI act (together with the data act proposal and the data governance act) may apply not only to algorithms but also to datasets, thereby enforcing the explainability of decisions obtained through systems based on ML.
The idea of setting up AI ethics committees to assess and provide certification for the systems or datasets used in ML is also proposed by organisations such as International Organization for Standardization (ISO) or European Committee for Electrotechnical Standardization (CEN). The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) follows similar lines in its recommendations on AI. While setting up standards and certification procedures seems a good way to progress, it may also lead to a false impression of safety, as the ML systems and the datasets they use are dynamic and continue to learn from new data. A dynamic follow-up process would therefore also be required to guarantee that rules are respected following the FAIR principles of data management and stewardship (FAIR: Findability, Accessibility, Interoperability and Reusability). The European Parliament’s Special Committee on Artificial Intelligence in a Digital Age (AIDA) presented a Working Paper on AI and Bias last November, paying special attention to data quality. It refers to the need to avoid ‘training data that promotes discriminatory behaviour or results in underrepresentation of certain groups, and keeping a close eye on how feedback loops may promote bias’.
Read this ‘at a glance’ on ‘What if machines made fairer decisions than humans?‘ in the Think Tank pages of the European Parliament.
Listen to policy podcast ‘What if machines made fairer decisions than humans?’ on YouTube.
Written by Stefano Spinaci.
The EU’s commitment to the objectives of the Paris Agreement, and the ambitious European Green Deal, require significant investment. It is estimated that hundreds of billions of euros are needed in the current decade to reach the carbon reduction targets.
The EU taxonomy is a classification system that aims to channel public and private investment into environmentally sustainable economic activities in order to achieve environmental objectives, such as those in the fight against climate change.
It establishes a dynamic list of economic activities considered to be environmentally sustainable, provided they contribute substantially to at least one environmental objective and do not significantly harm any other. The European Commission claims that such a common understanding of what constitutes environmentally sustainable investment can facilitate the funding of the transition to a more sustainable economy by bringing clarity to investors, avoiding market fragmentation and reducing the risk of greenwashing.
While the basic legal act for the taxonomy is already in force, the process of establishing detailed criteria on how to classify activities as green is ongoing. A first delegated act on reporting obligations of companies was adopted on 6 July 2021.
The focus of this briefing is the two delegated acts determining which activities should be considered as sustainable and contributing to the fight against climate change, and be reported as such. The first climate delegated act came into force on 1 January 2022, establishing criteria for activities helping to mitigate or adapt to climate change. Activities in the nuclear and gas sectors are the subject of a complementary delegated act proposed by the European Commission on 2 February 2022.
Read the complete briefing on ‘EU taxonomy: Delegated acts on climate, and nuclear and gas‘ in the Think Tank pages of the European Parliament.
Listen to policy podcast ‘EU taxonomy: Delegated acts on climate, and nuclear and gas‘ on YouTube.
Written by Suzana Anghel and Ralf Drachenberg.
Russia’s war on Ukraine and the linked issue of energy security constituted the clear focus of the European Council meeting held on 24‑25 March 2022. The meeting included a joint session with the President of the United States of America, Joe Biden, and it formed part of a trilogy of summit meetings in Brussels (NATO, G7 and EU) demonstrating Western unity in support of Ukraine and in response to President Vladimir Putin’s unacceptable violation of international law. The main outcomes of the meeting were: i) the creation of a new Ukraine Solidarity Trust Fund; ii) a voluntary EU joint purchasing scheme for gas, similar to that put in place for coronavirus vaccines; and iii) the endorsement of the new EU ‘Strategic Compass’. However, no further steps were taken with regard to Ukraine’s EU membership application, no common EU approach was found to address increased energy prices and no further sanctions were imposed on Russia at this stage, despite calls by some EU leaders for energy and/or transport bans. In general, the conclusions reiterated, or built further upon, the Versailles Declaration of 11 March. Important elements included the need to further reduce the EU’s strategic dependence in energy and other sensitive areas, notably critical raw materials, semi-conductors, health, digital and food security. The meeting also saw Charles Michel re-elected as President of the European Council for a second term of 30 months.
1. General aspectsThe European Council meeting began with the customary address by the President of the European Parliament, Roberta Metsola. President Metsola had already met 13 of the EU Heads of State or Government bilaterally in the first two months of her mandate, in addition to addressing two informal meetings of EU leaders. Besides stating the Parliament’s view on the main agenda points, she also used the opportunity to address other topics on which the EU urgently needs to advance, notably migration and the rule of law.
Charles Michel’s first term as European Council President ends on 31 May 2022 (see EPRS outlook). During this formal European Council meeting, EU Heads of State or Government unanimously re‑elected Charles Michel for a second and final mandate. He was also re-appointed as President of the Euro Summit for the same two-and-a-half-year mandate.
As Charles Michel’s invitation indicated, to address transatlantic cooperation in the context of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, US President Joe Biden joined one session of the European Council. Subsequently, the President of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelenskyy joined the meeting by video link.
Due to the high number of meetings on the day of the European Council, notably the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Summit and G7 meeting – as well as the heavy agenda of the European Council itself – the Euro Summit scheduled to take place following the European Council was postponed and will now take place alongside the European Council meeting on 23‑24 June 2022.
The conclusions confirmed that EU leaders would return to all the current agenda items at a special European Council meeting, likely in mid-May, announced by French President Emmanuel Macron.
The indicative leader’s agenda for 2021‑22, updated in December 2021, concludes in March 2022, but has not been further extended for the time being.
2. European Council meeting Russia’s invasion of UkraineThe European Council reiterated its call on Russia to withdraw its troops and to respect Ukraine’s territorial integrity and its internationally recognised borders. It urged Russia to abide by the order of the International Court of Justice, and stressed once again its violation of international law. The EU leaders condemned Russia’s targeting of civilian populations and infrastructure, called for ‘an immediate end to war crimes’, and urged Russia to facilitate the disbursement of humanitarian aid and the creation of humanitarian corridors.
The joint readout of the discussion with the US President stressed the united and coordinated Western response, expressed readiness to go beyond existing sanctions on Russia and Belarus, discussed humanitarian needs and assistance, and stressed the importance of ‘strengthening democratic resilience in Ukraine, Moldova and the wider Eastern partnership region’. The joint readout also underlined the importance of the transatlantic agenda and of ‘transatlantic security and defence through robust EU-NATO cooperation as described in the strategic compass’.
Support for reconstruction of a democratic Ukraine was at the centre of the EU leaders’ debate. They agreed on a Ukraine Solidarity Trust Fund, with funding to be the subject of an international conference to be organised in due course. Estonia also put forward a proposal to set up an ‘escrow account’ to fund Ukraine’s reconstruction from a share of gas and oil payments. Referring to the Versailles Declaration, EU leaders renewed their invitation to the European Commission to present its opinion on Ukraine’s request for EU membership ‘in accordance with the relevant provisions of the Treaties’. They did not agree to offer Ukraine a ‘fast-track’ to membership.
Millions of Ukrainians have fled the war, with one in four being displaced. The EU leaders called for intensified efforts in support of refugees, and stressed that the EU would ‘continue to provide coordinated political, financial, material and humanitarian support’ to Ukraine, which in the words of the Prime Minister of Latvia Krišjānis Kariņš, ‘is fighting our battle’ for values. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen stressed that the EU is providing humanitarian aid and working on ‘securing safe passage’. She added that €17 billion mainly from cohesion funds (due to additional flexibility) would be made available to front-line EU countries, €3.4 billion of which would be frontloaded to swiftly provide liquidity to EU countries hosting refugees.
No further sanctions were adopted, the focus being set on full implementation of existing sanctions and on the elimination of loopholes. However, EU leaders called on the world to align with existing sanctions, and stressed the Union’s readiness to adopt ‘further coordinated robust sanctions on Russia and Belarus’. This was a compromise solution between Member States (including Ireland, Poland and the Baltic countries), which wished to go much faster with sanctions and Member States (including Belgium, Germany, Greece and the Netherlands), which stressed that it might take time to cut energy dependency in a sustainable way. Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas spoke of ‘smart containment’, stressed the importance of unity and underlined that there can be no return to ‘business as usual’ that signals ‘to dictators of the world’ that they may continue their disruptive behaviour.
The G7 meeting and NATO Summit, which preceded the European Council meeting, also focused on the situation in Ukraine. The G7 leaders underlined their unity and determination ‘to restore peace and stability and uphold international law’, and warned against ‘the use of chemical, biological and nuclear weapons’. While they did not propose new sanctions, they called for Russia to be isolated in international organisations and multilateral fora, which might result in Russia’s suspension or even exclusion from the United Nations. Prior to the summit, the US and its allies questioned Russia’s participation in the G20, whilst China has thus far opposed any exclusion. The NATO leaders committed to continue to fight false narratives and expose ‘fabricated narratives or manufactured “false flag” operations’. They warned of ‘severe consequences’ in case of use of chemical or biological weapons and confirmed the further strengthening of the eastern flank. They also reaffirmed NATO’s open door policy and called on China to play a constructive international role. Jens Stoltenberg’s mandate as NATO Secretary-General was also renewed for an additional year.
Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, participated in two of the meetings. At the NATO Summit, he stressed that the Ukrainian army has proved its value and contribution to European security and urged leaders to give or sell 1 % of their equipment to Ukraine, in particular tanks, aircraft and air defence systems. When addressing the European Council, he asked EU leaders not to be ‘late’ in endorsing Ukraine’s European path and urged them to determine their position in earnest.
Main message of the President of the European Parliament: Roberta Metsola stressed that Ukraine ‘looks to the EU as its destination’. She also underlined that Europe should help the displaced and that Parliament would be ‘a constructive and pragmatic partner’ in finding solutions on asylum and migration. Speaking of hope, she welcomed the Ukraine Solidarity Trust Fund initiative.
Security and defenceAs flagged up in the EPRS Outlook, EU leaders endorsed the EU Strategic Compass. They continued the debate initiated in Versailles on bolstering defence capabilities in preparation for a special meeting in May 2022, at which further decisions are expected. The strategic compass offers a long-term vision, which requires sufficient means. A share of two per cent of GDP for defence spending ‘must be the floor not the ceiling’. As President Biden urged, the allies must share the burden of transatlantic security, step up defence investments and foster EU-NATO cooperation.
Main message of the President of the European Parliament: Roberta Metsola stressed that the EU was at risk and that it should show solidarity, raise national defence spending and use the ‘common EU budget more efficiently’, channelling resources ‘towards the causes that need them the most.’
Energy securityEU leaders reaffirmed their commitment to phase out the Union’s dependence on Russian fossil fuels, and called again on the Commission to present an ambitious plan by May 2022. In a joint statement, Presidents Biden and von der Leyen committed to stepping up cooperation on security of supply. The US will supply an additional 15 billion cubic metres at least of liquefied natural gas (LNG) in 2022, aiming to reach at least 50 billion cubic metres per year. A joint task force was established to assess ‘immediate energy security needs’. President von der Leyen stressed that the energy partnership with the US would enable the acceleration of the green transition and would help phase out EU fuel dependency on Russia.
EU leaders agreed to refill gas storage to prepare for next winter, and tasked the Commission with establishing ‘solidarity and compensation mechanisms’. They also agreed to work on a voluntary joint procurement mechanism allowing the ‘common purchase of gas, LNG and hydrogen’, which would offer the EU enormous ‘bargaining power’ and would be open to Ukraine, Georgia, Moldova and the Western Balkans.
The most heated part of the debate focused on energy prices and the reform of the energy market. President von der Leyen stressed that EU leaders had explored various options to mitigate the impact of high energy prices on consumers and businesses and invited Member States to make the best possible use of the Commission’s toolbox. Regarding the Commission communication envisaging measures to cap energy prices, the Prime Minister of Italy Mario Draghi stressed that the Council will discuss the subject in May 2022, when the Commission will present options for decoupling energy prices from gas prices.
Main message of the President of the European Parliament: Roberta Metsola expressed support for a coordinated European approach to energy prices and for replenishing gas storage. She stressed that the ‘long-term target must be zero gas from the Kremlin’.
Economic issuesThe EU leaders’ main message on economic issues was to further reduce the EU’s strategic dependence in the most sensitive areas, such as critical raw materials, semi-conductors, health, digital and food, by pursuing an ambitious and robust trade policy and fostering investment.
To ensure the single market functions correctly during crises, EU leaders called for strict implementation and enforcement of the single market rules, implementation of the industrial and small and medium-sized enterprise (SME) strategies, the completion of the single market in digital and services, better ecosystem interconnection across Member States, as well as improving the security and diversity of supply chains.
EU leaders endorsed the annual sustainable growth survey, inviting Member States to reflect the results in their national reform and stability or convergence programmes, as well as the draft Council recommendation on the economic policy of the euro area.
Considering the likely impact of the war in Ukraine on food security and affordability in the EU and its neighbourhood, EU leaders discussed the issue in depth and invited the Council to proceed on the Commission’s recent communication on this issue. They stressed the need to preserve the integrity of food supply chains, and invited the Commission, in coordination with international partners, to prioritise work on global food security and affordability, which will be the core objective of the FARM (food and agricultural resilience mission) initiative.
External relationsIn preparation for the forthcoming EU-China summit on 1 April 2022, EU leaders considered relations with China in the context of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. They also discussed the political crisis in Bosnia and Herzegovina, reiterating the country’s European perspective and stressing the importance of finalising constitutional and electoral reform.
The Covid-19 pandemicPerhaps surprisingly, given the increase in case numbers across the EU – even if mortality rates are now significantly lower than they were in January 2022 – Covid-19 was not a key focus of this European Council meeting. Indeed it was rarely mentioned by EU leaders’ as they arrived for the meeting.
As expected, the European Council discussed coordination efforts as well as global health governance, solidarity, and future preparedness. They also welcomed progress on the issue of an Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) waiver for medical products, which has been under discussion at the World Trade Organization since October 2020.
Read this briefing on ‘Outcome of the meetings of EU leaders, 24‑25 March 2022‘ in the Think Tank pages of the European Parliament.
Citizens often turn to the European Parliament to ask what the European Union (EU) is doing to ensure a supply of microchips and semiconductors.
Computer chips are ubiquitous. We use them in an impressive range of products, from computers to medical devices, 5G and artificial intelligence systems, and security and defence devices. The production of these chips is dependent on a large global supply chain in which countries all over the world participate. Disruptions in one part of the supply chain can lead to major problems. In 2020, a storm in Texas and fires in Taiwan and Japan, combined with the coronavirus pandemic, led to a global shortage in chips.
We import nearly all the chips used in the EU, mostly from Taiwan. This means that the EU is dependent on foreign production, making it vulnerable to supply chain disruptions and trade disputes. To prevent shortages in the future, the European Union is planning to increase the production of chips in EU countries.
Boosting the production of microchips in the EUIn February 2022, the European Commission proposed a European chips act. The aim is to double the EU’s current market share of chips to 20 % by 2030. To achieve this target, the EU would increase its funding of the chips industry to almost €5 billion. The EU also aims to encourage a large amount of private investment.
The European Union would boost chips production in several ways. The proposed European chips act would establish a mechanism promoting research into the development of chips, in part by making it easier for researchers to test new prototypes. The proposed legislation also aims to help companies train staff to work on chips. Additionally, the EU would set up a chips fund, which would finance start-ups and help them attract investment. The European chips act would also fund factories that produce chips.
Lastly, the Commission proposes to improve coordination between EU countries in monitoring potential shortages, and evaluating future supply and demand.
You can find more information about progress on the proposal on the legislative train schedule website. The Parliament and government ministers from the EU countries are now considering the proposal.
Position of the European ParliamentThe European Parliament has not yet adopted a formal position on the proposal for a European chips act. However, in a June 2021 resolution, Parliament already called on the Commission and EU countries to invest in the production of chips and similar technologies.
Further informationKeep sending your questions to the Citizens’ Enquiries Unit (Ask EP)! We reply in the EU language that you use to write to us.
Written by Guillaume Ragonnaud and Marcin Szczepanski.
Russia is a major global commodity producer and exporter. The country’s invasion of Ukraine has already pushed commodity prices to historically high levels, and could also lead to commodity shortages. This situation may cause considerable economic damage, with far-reaching consequences for EU industry.
BackgroundRichly endowed with natural resources, Russia plays a crucial role in global energy, raw materials and agricultural markets. In 2021, it was the second global producer and net exporter of crude oil, the second producer and first net exporter of natural gas, and the sixth producer and third net exporter of coal. Supply chains around the world, meanwhile, rely on Russia for its metal exports. The country is, for instance, the top producer of palladium (40 % of world production), a metal used in catalytic converters and for chemical production and petroleum refining. Palladium belongs to the platinum-group metals, which are on the EU’s critical raw materials list. Russia is also a top agricultural commodity producer. With a considerable part of its territory within the Eurasian wheat belt, Russia boasts around 25 % of global arable land. It overtook the EU in 2016 to become the world’s largest wheat exporter, and is expected to increase its lead by 2030. In 2021 Russia was the world’s top exporter of nitrogen fertilisers, and ranked second for phosphorous and potassium fertilisers. It is also a major source of materials used to produce fertilisers in Europe (e.g. natural gas for nitrogen fertilisers). Lastly, Russia is, by far, the world’s most forested country, hosting 20 % of the global forest area.
By 15 March 2022, the EU had adopted four packages of restrictive measures against Russia, affecting trade flows among other areas. The fourth package includes an EU import ban on some steel products and denies Russian products and services most-favoured-nation treatment on EU markets (meaning that Russia may be subject to higher tariffs and import bans). The US has also targeted Russia with similar, far-reaching sanctions. So far, Russia’s exports of commodities to the EU have been spared the sort of comprehensive trade bans imposed on other sectors, but this could change. From its side, on 10 March 2022, Russia imposed retaliatory export bans (on 48 countries, including the EU Member States and the US) on more than 200 products. These include some manufactured products, such as cars, railway carriages, telecoms, and electrical and agricultural equipment, as well as some commodities such as wood and timber, with repercussions for many sectors. For now, energy and raw materials – such as metals – are not covered by the ban. Extending the list to these could have grave consequences for EU industry and for its green and digital transformation. Russia is also considering withdrawing from the WTO, which would likely complicate trade still further.
Main commodities imported by the EU from RussiaThe EU imported commodities worth €108.3 billion from Russia in 2021, a sum representing 65 % of all goods it imported from Russia that year. Energy commodities represented 91 % of commodity imports (€98.9 billion), raw materials 7 % (€7.3 billion) and food commodities 2 % (€2.1 billion). Imports of the top 20 commodities for which the EU depended on Russia most in 2021 (Figure 1) totalled €103.4 billion, representing 95 % of EU imports from Russia. The highest dependency rate was for nickel ores. Nickel is used for many products (mainly stainless steel, a range of alloys, electroplating and the fast-growing electric vehicle battery market). In 2021, Russia was the world’s third biggest nickel producer, mining 250 000 tonnes (9.2 % of global production). A number of energy commodities (natural gas, oil, coal) also feature prominently in this ranking. Coke and iron ore, two materials used in steelmaking are in the top 20. Iron ore is also mainly used in steelmaking, through the blast furnace route. Sulphur, used mainly to produce sulphuric acid, is of prime importance for many industrial sectors. Synthetic rubber is used to produce tyres and other consumer goods.
Top 20 EU commodity imports from Russia, 2021 Potential impact on EU industryThe future magnitude of the impact of Russia’s war on the EU economy is largely unknown, depending not least on the duration of the war and on the policy responses made. While commodity prices started from historically elevated levels owing to strong demand, they have recently reached or neared record highs. Agricultural commodity prices had been rising steadily since 2020, and the FAO food price index reached an all-time high in February 2022. The war is likely to keep commodity prices high, which is expected to exert even stronger inflationary pressures. Together with supply-chain disruptions, and high energy and oil prices squeezing incomes, this situation could cause a global stagflationary shock.
The OECD’s initial simulations after two weeks of conflict suggested that global growth could be reduced by over 1 percentage point, and global inflation could rise by close to 2.5 percentage points in the first full year from the start of Russia’s invasion. Energy-intensive industries (such as chemicals and steel manufacturing, fertilisers and transport) are expected to be impacted by higher prices and/or possible disruptions in the availability of energy products, possibly causing industry shutdowns. By 8 March 2022, high power prices resulting from surging gas prices had already taken 900 000 tonnes of aluminium and 700 000 tonnes of zinc smelting capacity offline in Europe. Furthermore, higher prices, metal shortages, and also logistics problems, could severely affect other industries (e.g. electric vehicle production).
Global supply chains, in which the EU is highly integrated, were already under pandemic-induced stress. The war may help to reconfigure supply chains permanently, particularly if it causes closer alignment of China and Russia. Experts also consider that the war may rupture the Belt and Road Initiative: the declining use of the Russian transport infrastructure that supports supply chain links between the EU and Asia is a case in point. This reconfiguration may come in the form of a tightening of supply chains or ‘friendshoring‘. If the oil shock of the 1970s can offer a guide to the future, accelerated innovation and the use of alternative energy sources are likely to become the new, transformational forces for EU industry. However, it has first to weather the deteriorating economic climate, the shock to supply chains, and surging oil and energy prices.
Read this ‘at a glance’ on ‘Russia’s war on Ukraine: Implications for EU commodity imports from Russia‘ in the Think Tank pages of the European Parliament.
Written by Marcin Grajewski.
Inflation has reached the highest level in decades in the European Union, United States and many other countries, with the Ukraine conflict adding upward pressure on prices of energy and food. The Russian invasion has intensified the already near-record growth of consumer prices resulting from the coronavirus pandemic and broken supply-chains. The war has sharply curbed supply of energy, wheat and other products from Russia and Ukraine, their major producers. The countries’ exports look set to dwindle further if the war continues and the EU imposes a ban on its massive gas and oil imports from Russia, adding to the already strict sanctions on Moscow.
Some central banks have signalled that they will further increase interest rates, and ‘stagflation’, or high inflation coupled with economic stagnation, could follow. Before the invasion, many experts had expected rapid price growth to be temporary. Now, they believe inflation could become more entrenched, further squeezing households’ real income in coming months.
This note gathers links to the recent publications and commentaries from many international think tanks on resurgent inflation. Analyses on the war and its implications can be found in a previous edition of the ‘What Think Tanks are Thinking’ series.
The week inflation became entrenched
Bruegel, March 2022
The impact of the war in Ukraine on food security
Bruegel, March 2022
Can Europe manage if Russian oil and coal are cut off?
Bruegel, March 2022
Inflation in America: Experts react to the latest CPI release
Brookings Institution, March 2022
Stagflation: Real threat or imagined?
Council on Foreign Relations, March 2022
Russia’s war on Ukraine: There is worse to come (for the West as well)
Centre for European Reform, March 2022
Ukraine crisis could trigger cascading risks globally
Chatham House, March 2022
How agriculture bureaucrats are manipulating food prices and our diets
Mises Institute, March 2022
Inflation: Who or what is the culprit?
Mises Institute, March 2022
Economic consequences of the Russian invasion of Ukraine
IfO, March 2022
Preiskontrollen eignen sich nicht, um die Inflation zu bekämpfen
DIW Berlin, March 2022
World economy in spring 2022: Slower growth amid higher inflation
Euro Area Economy Spring 2022: War in Ukraine impairs post-pandemic recovery
Kiel Institute of the World Economy, March 2022
Does rational economic policy require a Stability and Growth Pact?
Österreichische Gesellschaft für Europapolitik, March 2022
Why I worry about inflation, interest rates, and unemployment
Peterson Institute for International Economics, March 2022
Fed gets a grip on 2022, still optimistic on 2023
Peterson Institute for International Economics, March 2022
Why US inflation surged in 2021 and what the Fed should do to control it
Peterson Institute for International Economics, March 2022
What is needed to tame US inflation?
Peterson Institute for International Economics, March 2022
Will anchored inflation expectations actually anchor inflation?
Peterson Institute for International Economics, March 2022
Higher oil prices stemming from Russia-Ukraine war may be temporary
Peterson Institute for International Economics, March 2022
Beyond oil, natural gas, and wheat: The commodity shock of Russia-Ukraine crisis
Atlantic Council, March 2022
What about inflation and the Russia-Ukraine crisis?
Atlantic Council, March 2022
Why inflation is President Biden’s biggest political problem
Brookings Institution, February 2022
The weakness of average inflation targeting
Bruegel, February 2022
Who is suffering most from rising inflation?
Bruegel, February 2022
East-west divergence in central bank action will not last much longer
Bruegel, February 2022
Russia’s energy role in Europe: What’s at stake with the Ukraine crisis
Council on Foreign Relations, February 2022
What do the data tell us about inflation expectations?
IfO, February 2022
Inflation rises could again poison euro zone politics
Chatham House, February 2022
Inflation politics is clearer than inflation economics
Brookings Institution, January 2022
Taking stock of the new Fed and ECB monetary policy frameworks
Brookings Institution, January 2022
Inflation expectations
Centre for European Policy Studies, January 2022
Inflation: Policymakers should stop driving it and start fighting it
Heritage Foundation, January 2022
European inflation is not American inflation
Peterson Institute for International Economics, January 2022
Inflation: Learning the proper lessons from history
Council on Foreign Relations, January 2022
Read this briefing on ‘Inflation in the wake of coronavirus and war‘ in the Think Tank pages of the European Parliament.
Written by Kjeld van Wieringen with Julia Hüntemann.
Within the scope of the European Union’s new industrial strategy, the European Commission acknowledges the need for a more strategic approach to renewable energies. Following up on the presentation of the strategy, the European Parliamentary Research Service organised a webinar, in cooperation with Parliament’s Directorate-General for External Policies of the Union, to assess developments in the global solar photovoltaic (PV) industry. The event identified opportunities as well as challenges – not only for the EU – but also for India, to reduce their dependence on solar PV technologies manufactured in China.
China emerged as the dominant producer of PV modules by 2008. By 2012, it accounted for 64 % of worldwide production, and as of 2017, 8 of the top-10 solar manufacturers were Chinese, supplying ca. three quarters of the world’s solar panels. China’s unprecedented surge as a global provider of solar panels was also enabled by a 75 % decline in production costs. While China’s success in this industry has been deemed a result of Beijing’s commitment to establish market leadership, the country has not always dominated the supply chain. In 2007, 30 % of PV manufacturing was in Europe, making the region the initial front-runner in the solar revolution. However, the swift price decreases achieved by cost reductions among Chinese PV manufacturers in combination with significant state subsidies allowed them to outcompete their European counterparts, driving them into bankruptcy. In 2012, a proposal by the Commission to implement anti-dumping duties of up to 67.9 percent was aborted, following Chinese threats to retaliate with tariffs on French wine and German cars, and thus failed to save the European solar panel industry. Currently, Europe holds less than 0.2 % of PV cell production capacities. While PV manufacturers in the EU can no longer match the cheap prices offered by Chinese competitors, Indian PV manufacturers were never able to do so, as the country joined the ‘solar race’ at a time when the China had already established market leadership.
Solar installation companies have been incentivised to rely on the cheap equipment exported from China, both in Europe and in India. Without them, solar installations – and therefore green transition plans – could not have advanced at the pace they did. Nevertheless, an unpleasant aftertaste lingers, as the dependency on Chinese solar equipment is increasingly deemed a cause for concern both in the EU and in India.
Both Europe and India consider a domestic PV manufacturing industry important because it would provide lucrative employment opportunities, and a source of technological leadership and international prestige. More importantly however, in-house PV manufacturing would make the solar sector a source of energy security, allowing the EU and India to cut the unwanted dependencies that accompany imported oil and gas. With Europe importing 80 % of its solar panels from China, and India up to 90 % of its required solar equipment, dependencies are simply shifting from imported oil or gas to imported solar equipment, leaving much to be desired when it comes to the solar sector as a genuine source of energy security.
In May 2020, India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi deemed this dependence on foreign suppliers untenable and proclaimed a new policy focus on domestic (solar) manufacturing, through the ‘Atmanirbhar Bharat Abhiyan’ (Self-Sufficient India) and ‘Make in India’ initiatives. Around the same time, a letter signed by Ministers from Austria, Estonia, Greece, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Poland and Spain called on the Commission to consider solar PV to be a strategic value chain, to receive more support under Covid‑19 recovery packages. Similarly, in the summer of 2020, 90 organisations from the European solar sector urged for solar PV manufacturing and research and development (R&D) to be at the core of the Green Deal.
With pleas to re-shore PV manufacturing capacities to Europe gaining renewed momentum, the question remains how Europe will go about providing its domestic manufacturers with a business environment in which they can compete with their Chinese counterparts, without igniting another round of solar trade disputes, as experienced in 2012‑2013. The Commission’s anti-dumping and anti-subsidy investigation, valued at more than €20 billion but cut short following Chinese threats to increase tariffs on European wines and luxury cars, became one of the largest EU-China trade disputes. The European Union could consider diversifying its supply of solar equipment, a process which will require the navigation of domestic and international pressures, and thus demands – first and foremost – a careful study of mid- to long-term trends in the global solar industry. In an attempt to help the EU anticipate these pressures, the webinar concluded with an assessment of scenarios for cooperation and competition between the EU and its Indian and Chinese counterparts respectively. These scenarios were presented within a foresight ‘Best Case’, ‘Anticipated Case’ and ‘Worst Case’ framework.
Best CaseAnticipated CaseWorst CaseEU-IndiaIndia and the EU find effective ways of cooperating more closely within the framework of the already existing EU-India Clean Energy and Climate Partnership. The EU has been collaborating closely with India in deployment of climate friendly energy sources, collaboration that could be extended to include the manufacturing, as well as the research and development arm of the supply chain. Energy cooperation could also be embedded deeper in the recently ratified EU-India Connectivity Partnership to find investment opportunities for automated production lines. This could be particularly valuable in trying to bring next generation solar technologies onto the market (see below).Narendra Modi has pledged to achieve self-sufficiency, cutting dependencies on PV imports irrespective of their country of origin. Under current circumstances, this goal seems unfeasible given that:The webinar discussion led to the participants suggesting a number of options for further EU action.
Written by Zsolt G. Pataki.
The fifth-generation mobile network (5G) is not just a performance booster for current mobile communication networks, but is also a technology enabling the convergence of communication networks with another fundamental block of the digital era – computing. 5G technology is defined by a complex ecosystem, composed of heterogeneous stakeholders, technologies, methodologies and best practices.
On the one hand, this ecosystem offers new opportunities for digitalisation, a key reason for which 5G technology is envisaged as providing a cornerstone of European resilience and as one of the seven flagship areas of the European Recovery and Resilience Facility. On the other hand, the complexity of this ecosystem poses unexplored security and privacy concerns, risks and challenges that might threaten the feasibility of the future development of 5G. These issues, along with a possible lack of awareness about them, are factors that might lead to serious vulnerabilities regarding personal data and sensitive information. Protecting information is essential for EU citizens’ security and privacy. Information leaks can severely damage the European Union: 5G network security has become an intense battlefield between Western countries and China, where some of the main providers of 5G network equipment are established.
In this context, and in addition to two earlier studies on the impact of 5G (on human health and on the environment respectively), the European Parliament’s Panel for the Future of Science and Technology (STOA)commissioned another important study. This study aims at identifying the risks that the deployment of 5G technology could pose to EU citizens’ privacy, security, and businesses, and exploring their potential implications.
The unrivalled capability and flexibility of 5G have been made possible by a decades-long process of convergence between computing and telecommunications. Their merger brings to light a new ecosystem, where telecommunications and computing collaborate to enable new scenarios, and where stakeholders can extend their business offering and compete with each other. Throughout this epochal shift, a wide debate around privacy and security has unfolded. The complexity of the 5G ecosystem requires a deep insight into its main components, and especially into how the components affecting privacy and security interact with each other. To this end, the authors of the study performed an impact assessment based on a research conceptual map divided into four categories (privacy, security, technologies, ethics/politics), focused on the identification and analysis of the new potential risks, challenges and opportunities that 5G technology entails with respect to privacy and security.
On this basis, they formulated a set of policy options for potential enhancements of the next releases of technical specifications and regulations, organised into three dimensions (privacy, security and ethics):
The STOA Options Brief linked to the study contains an overview of several policy options. Read the full report to find out more, and let us know what you think via stoa@europarl.europa.eu.
Written by Clare Ferguson and Katarzyna Sochacka.
With the war in Ukraine high on Parliament’s agenda, the highlight of the March II 2022 plenary session in Brussels was a formal address by Justin Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada. Members held a debate with the Council and the European Commission on the need for an urgent EU action plan to ensure food security inside and outside the EU, in the light of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. They also debated the power of the proposed joint European action to secure more affordable, reliable and sustainable energy. Turning to the ‘Suisse Secrets’ scandal, Members debated how to encourage anti-money-laundering standards in third countries. Members also discussed the outcome of the European Council meeting in Paris on 10 March 2022, and the preparations for the 24‑25 March 2022 meeting. Several legislative files were adopted, inter alia on roaming charges; the cohesion action for the presence of refugees in Europe and use of funds under the Asylum, Migration and Integration Fund (AMIF) Regulation, both in light of the war in Ukraine; and on the Status Agreement between the EU and Moldova on Frontex operations.
Roaming RegulationMembers debated extending and adapting current EU legislation on roaming charges. In interinstitutional negotiations on the proposal to revise the rules to increase transparency and network quality, Parliament succeeded in capping the wholesale roaming charges at €2 per gigabyte from this year, with a progressive reduction to reach €1 in 2027. Now that the Parliament has adopted the provisional agreement, it goes to the Council for confirmation, before citizens are able to ‘roam like at home‘ for a further 10 years.
Pilot regime for market infrastructure based on distributed ledger technologyParliament is always keen to encourage technological solutions that benefit citizens in their daily lives. Members debated and adopted, by a large majority, the agreement reached between the co-legislators on a pilot regime developing trading and transactions in crypto-assets – usually known as cryptocurrencies (such as bitcoin and ethereum). Parliament is in favour of encouraging crypto-assets, as long as they do not pose a risk to financial stability, transparency or market integrity, or permit legal loopholes. Parliament’s Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs (ECON) therefore proposed stricter limits on trading. Market capitalisation will be allowed up to €500 million in shares and issuance of bonds up to €1 billion.
Macro-financial assistance to the Republic of MoldovaMoldova has found itself on the frontline in Russia’s most recent aggression against its neighbours. The country has experienced Russian interference in its own democratic process in recent years, added to an economic downturn exacerbated by the pandemic. Moldova has nevertheless opened its borders to welcome large numbers of Ukrainian refugees. The country enjoys good political and economic relations with the EU, and signed association and free trade agreements with the bloc – Moldova’s largest trading partner – in 2014. The EU has provided €160 million in EU macro-financial assistance since 2017. In response to a Moldovan request for further assistance, the Commission proposed (before the outbreak of the war), to start allocating €30 million in grants and up to €120 million in medium-term loans. Members adopted this proposal by an overwhelming majority.
The fight against oligarch structures, protection of EU funds from fraud and conflict of interestThe Parliament has long stressed that corruption threatens democracy, fundamental rights and the rule of law, and undermines citizens’ trust in the EU and its institutions. The sanctions necessitated by Russia’s war on Ukraine have highlighted the presence of Russian oligarchs and oligarchic structures on EU territory. Denouncing the current situation, especially in certain countries where EU funding is sometimes diverted to such persons (and not just Russians), Parliament’s Budgetary Control (CONT) Committee tabled a hard-hitting own-initiative report highlighting the need to protect EU funding against the risks of fraud and conflict of interest. Members debated and adopted a resolution which particularly condemns the use of EU agricultural funding for personal benefit, and warns against the threat to EU values of allowing oligarchs to gain control over the media and the judiciary.
Opening of trilogue negotiationsA number of committee decisions to enter into interinstitutional negotiations were announced: from the Legal Affairs (JURI) Committee on the proposal for a directive on corporate sustainability reporting, from the Employment and Social Affairs (EMPL) and Women’s Rights and Gender Equality (FEMM) Committees on the proposal for a directive to strengthen the application of the principle of equal pay for equal work or work of equal value between men and women through pay transparency and enforcement mechanisms, and from the ECON committee on the proposal for a regulation on markets in crypto-assets.
Read this ‘at a glance’ on ‘Plenary round-up – March II 2022‘ in the Think Tank pages of the European Parliament.
Written by Micaela Del Monte and Maria Margarita Mentzelopoulou.
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has forced hundreds of thousands of people, mostly women and children, to flee the country and seek shelter in neighbouring countries. Ukraine’s civilian population is being subjected to shelling and violence, while outside Ukraine’s borders, the international humanitarian community has quickly mobilised to provide support. As the humanitarian situation deteriorates, children are particularly vulnerable.
Humanitarian situation: Ukraine’s children in dangerAs of 16 March 2022, the United Nations (UN) Refugee Agency, UNHCR, estimated that more than 3.4 million people, mostly women and children, had fled Ukraine to neighbouring countries – mainly to Poland but also to Hungary, Moldova, Romania and Slovakia. As the days go by, the conflict is generating increasing numbers of casualties, destruction and displacement within and outside Ukraine’s borders, causing one of the greatest European humanitarian crises of recent times. The crisis has triggered the ‘biggest show of European mobilisation in recent years’, but the situation is disastrous, and the human cost already too high.
According to the UN Children’s Fund (Unicef), the war is posing an immediate and growing threat to Ukraine’s 7.5 million children. Since 24 February, 1.5 million children have fled the country, but there are still up to 6 million children trapped in Ukraine. With growing numbers of attacks on schools, hospitals and other civilian infrastructure, where many people have been sheltering, these children are in grave danger and are vulnerable to injury or death, as well as being deprived of food, clean water, education and health care. According to the United Nations (UN), as of 18 March at least 59 children had been killed as a result of the war, while media reports suggest that the number may have reached at least 100.
Children, together with women, are at extreme risk of violence and abuse, including human trafficking, smuggling and illegal adoption. The International Organization for Migration (IOM) has warned of the high risk of human trafficking and sexual exploitation of the population in distress, but also of the financial insecurity suffered by certain unaccompanied children and many women who have been separated from partners and support networks. Many children are without parental care, either because, amid the chaos, they were separated from their families or because they were living in residential care or boarding schools when the Russian invasion started. Among the latter category, of 100 000 children, it is estimated that half have disabilities and need special attention and care. Save the Children reports that Ukraine probably has among the highest rates of institutional care for children in Europe, ‘with about 1.3 % of all children living in some form of residential care facility’. Ukraine is also an international surrogacy hub, and infants born to surrogate mothers are currently stranded in shelters, as their parents cannot travel to collect them.
International and EU responseUNHCR is working with partners and local organisations on the ground to reinforce vulnerability screening and referrals for people with specific needs, while improving monitoring of unaccompanied and separated children, and referral to specialised services. Unicef has meanwhile published advice for the relevant authorities, aid workers and volunteers on protecting displaced and refugee children in and outside Ukraine. The guidance states that children could be at risk of human trafficking, child labour, sexual exploitation, illegal adoption and aggravated smuggling, and that displaced girls are at particular risk of gender-based violence. The Council of Europe’s Group of Experts on Action against Trafficking in Human Beings (GRETA) has also warned of the danger faced by people fleeing the armed conflict in Ukraine of falling victim to human trafficking and exploitation. There are already reports of traffickers targeting unaccompanied children fleeing Ukraine; many such children are currently unaccounted for, following the hasty evacuation of orphanages and foster homes. In some countries, specialised anti-trafficking non-governmental organisations are disseminating leaflets to refugees, warning them of the risks of accepting transport and accommodation from strangers, and informing them of how to seek help and report suspicious cases to the existing national helplines for trafficking victims.
The EU has stepped in to help civilians affected by the war in Ukraine, for instance with emergency aid programmes that will cover some basic needs, assistance at the EU borders, and activation of the Temporary Protection Directive (Directive 2001/55/EC). On 21 March, the Commission issued operational guidelines, establishing the existence of a mass influx of displaced persons from Ukraine, in line with the 2017 communication on the protection of children in migration. The guidelines stress that the ‘protection of migrant children arriving from Ukraine is a top priority for the EU’, and that provision must be made for children’s specific needs and rights, including physical and mental healthcare, and education. They further clarify that unaccompanied, separated and orphan children (covered by Article 16 of the Temporary Protection Directive) deserve particular attention, and that decisions must always consider the best interests of the child. On 10 March, the Commission published a statement calling for the protection of children in Ukraine following the bombardment of the children’s and maternity hospital in Mariupol, and called for the establishment of genuine humanitarian corridors to evacuate the most vulnerable. This was echoed in a declaration by the European ministers in charge of children.
Together with international organisations, the Commission has called repeatedly for an end to the war, stressing the need to stop attacks in civilian areas and on civilian infrastructure. One such attack on 16 March 2022 destroyed a theatre and a swimming pool in the city of Mariupol, where some 1 000 civilians, including children, were reportedly sheltering. According to the European Union Agency for Asylum, EU and neighbouring countries have focused their efforts on ensuring that children can access education, by simplifying the relevant procedures, waiving childcare fees, and providing for smooth integration into the school curriculum and language learning.
Finally, on 23 March, the Commission published a communication outlining action taken in response to the humanitarian crisis. The measures address the protection of children and their rights and include guidance for the registration of children upon arrival. Under the European Child Guarantee, national coordinators have a key role to play here and there is a specific focus on children from institutions and children at risk of trafficking and abduction. The Commission is also preparing dedicated standard operating procedures for transfers of unaccompanied minors. It will bring together Member States to pool experience and identify the educational needs of displaced children, while establishing a ‘school education gateway’ – a one-stop shop to link to educational material from Ukraine.
European Parliament’s positionParliament has come up with a series of proposals in recent years, stressing the need for special protection for vulnerable groups – such as unaccompanied children and women and girls. Prioritising unaccompanied and separated children, Parliament has stressed that child protection must be the leading principle when dealing with children. In its resolution of 1 March, the European Parliament strongly condemned ‘the Russian Federation’s illegal, unprovoked and unjustified military aggression against and invasion of Ukraine’ and recalled that ‘attacks against civilians and civilian infrastructure as well as indiscriminate attacks are prohibited under international humanitarian law and therefore constitute war crimes’. It also called on the Commission, the Member States and UN agencies to offer the civilian population humanitarian assistance. Parliament referred to the numerous reports of ‘violations of international humanitarian law committed by Russian troops, including indiscriminate shelling of living areas, hospitals and kindergartens’, and pointed out that, since 2014, more than 14 000 people have died in a ‘conflict fomented by the Russian Federation in eastern Ukraine’. In addition, Parliament stressed the need to pay attention to vulnerable groups, ‘in particular children in institutional care, unaccompanied children, and children with disabilities and other serious illnesses, including childhood cancers’.
In a letter to European Commission President, Ursula von der Leyen, and European Council President, Charles Michel, the Socialists & Democrats Group in the European Parliament have called for an EU initiative to protect and assist children coming from Ukraine as well as those still there. The letter calls for an urgent agreement on an EU-Ukraine child protection package, to be set up jointly with the Ukrainian government, to protect and assist children in and from Ukraine. The group intends to raise this issue for debate during Parliament’s April plenary session.
Read this ‘at a glance’ on ‘Russia’s war on Ukraine: The situation of Ukraine’s children‘ in the Think Tank pages of the European Parliament.
Written by Ralf Drachenberg.
Charles Michel’s (first) term as European Council President comes to an end on 30 May 2022. In advance of his potential re-election by EU Heads of State or Government to that function, this paper looks at his activities during the course of his 30-month mandate to date, with a special focus on the institutional and inter-institutional dimension of his role.
In practice, the coronavirus pandemic has dictated the agenda of the European Council from almost the beginning of Mr Michel’s time in office. The resulting need to concentrate on ‘crisis management’ provided him, as it had his predecessors, with the opportunity to show leadership, applying a careful balance between the role of facilitator and that of agenda-setter. Despite the challenging circumstances he has faced, Mr Michel has managed to make his mark on the European Council’s agenda, notably on external relations, championing the concept of ‘strategic autonomy’. He demonstrated strong activism both prior to and after the outbreak of the war in Ukraine, playing an important role in European Union mobilisation to support the country. He has also adjusted the European Council’s working methods, in particular with the use of video-conferences of small groups of EU leaders to better prepare full European Council meetings. Cooperation between the European Council President and the European Parliament has increased in comparison to previous years, particularly regarding activities not required of the President by the Treaties. Mr Michel has also innovated in communications, notably through a newsletter aimed at EU citizens.
Read the complete briefing on ‘Charles Michel as President of the European Council‘ in the Think Tank pages of the European Parliament.
Written by Vivienne Halleux (1st edition).
On 17 November 2021, the European Commission tabled a proposal to revise EU rules governing shipments of waste. The proposed regulation aims at easing shipments of waste for reuse and recycling in the EU, to support the transition to a circular economy; ensuring that waste exported from the EU is managed in an environmentally sound manner in the destination countries; and stepping up enforcement to counteract illegal shipments of waste. While supporting the proposed streamlining and digitalisation of procedures, stakeholders have stressed the need for significant improvements to ensure that the new regulation fulfils its objectives, in particular as regards exports of waste.
The proposal is now in the hands of the co-legislators. In the European Parliament, the Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety (ENVI), responsible for the file, plans to consider its rapporteur’s draft report in May 2022.
VersionsWritten by Maria Niestadt.
As a general-purpose technology, artificial intelligence (AI) has the potential to change our lives. It could bring many benefits, from increasing farming efficiency to helping to fight climate change and making transport safer, cleaner and more efficient. However, AI also generates a number of issues, such as opaque decision-making, discrimination, or intrusion into our private lives. To investigate these challenges and to analyse the impact of AI on the EU economy, the European Parliament decided in June 2020 to set up a special committee. The special committee on artificial intelligence in a digital age (AIDA) is expected to vote on its final report on 22 March 2022.
Special committee on artificial intelligence in a digital ageThe European Parliament decided to set up a special committee on artificial intelligence in a digital age (AIDA) on 18 June 2020. Its 12-month mandate was to analyse the future impact of AI on the EU economy and its different sectors and its contribution to business value and economic growth, investigate the challenge of deploying AI, and analyse non-EU countries’ AI approach. The committee should submit an evaluation defining common EU medium and long-term objectives and the steps needed to reach them. The committee is chaired by Dragoş Tudorache (Renew Europe, Romania) and has 34 full Members.
The committee has exchanged views with the Commissioners responsible for internal market and digital affairs, and held hearings with experts, policy-makers, and business representatives. The hearings have explored (for example) AI’s potential in fighting climate change and cancer, as well as its use in agriculture and financial services. The AIDA committee has also held workshops on topics such as ‘AI and law enforcement’ and ‘AI and public administration’. The AIDA ‘working papers‘ summarise the key takeaways from these hearings, including the positions of political groups.
ReportThe AIDA committee published a draft report (rapporteur: Axel Voss, EPP, Germany) on 2 November 2021, which outlined AI’s enormous potential to improve almost every area of our lives, from helping to combat pandemics and global hunger to improving healthcare. It could also significantly increase productivity, innovation, job creation and growth. According to the draft report, the EU should not regulate AI as a technology; but the type, intensity and timing of regulatory action should rather depend solely on the type of risk associated with a particular use of an AI system. The draft text warns that the EU is currently falling behind in the global tech race. If the EU wants to remain competitive, it needs to become an AI leader and set global standards. AI technologies also raise crucial ethical questions and fundamental rights concerns. Against this backdrop, the draft report addresses the opportunities and risks of AI in six specific areas: health, the EU Green Deal, external policy and security, competitiveness, democracy and the labour market.
During the 13 January 2022 debate on the 1 384 amendments tabled to the draft report, some Members stressed the risks of discrimination inherent in AI and emphasised the importance of also using private funding for AI development. Members from different political groups disagreed on the question whether the General Data Protection Regulation should be touched in the process of future regulation of AI. The AIDA committee is expected to vote on its final report on 22 March 2022, with Parliament then expected to consider the report in plenary in May 2022.
The AIDA report will complement other legislative and non-legislative initiatives in this area, such as the European Commission proposal for an EU regulatory framework on AI. As co-legislators, the European Parliament and the Council are currently discussing this proposal.Read this ‘at a glance’ on ‘Investigation into the potential of artificial intelligence in the digital age‘ in the Think Tank pages of the European Parliament.
Written by Clare Ferguson.
Meeting in plenary for the third time this month, Members are set to return to voting in person in the chamber for the first time since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic. A number of issues concerning new technologies are on the agenda, such as blockchain and roaming charges. Members are nevertheless most likely to focus on the subject of the Russian war on Ukraine, following a joint debate on the results of the recent European Council meeting in Versailles, and in preparation for the next meeting on 24‑25 March 2022. Members will also hear Council and European Commission statements on a possible EU action plan to ensure food security in light of the Russian invasion (agricultural products imported from Ukraine represent 4.6 % of all EU agri-food imports). The Council and Commission will also update Members on proposals to ensure a more affordable, secure and sustainable energy supply.
The Parliament has long stressed that corruption threatens democracy, fundamental rights and the rule of law, and undermines citizens’ trust in the EU and its institutions. The sanctions necessitated by Russia’s war on Ukraine have highlighted the presence of Russian oligarchs and oligarchic structures on EU territory. Denouncing the current situation, especially in certain countries where EU funding is sometimes diverted to such persons (and not just Russians), Parliament’s Budgetary Control (CONT) Committee has adopted a hard-hitting own-initiative report highlighting the need to protect EU funding against the risks of fraud and conflict of interest. On Wednesday, Members are expected to consider the committee’s motion for a resolution, which particularly condemns the use of EU agricultural funding for personal benefit, and warns against the threat to EU values of allowing oligarchs to gain control over the media and the judiciary.
Moldova has found itself on the frontline in Russia’s most recent aggression against its neighbours. The country has experienced Russian interference in its own democratic process in recent years, added to an economic downturn exacerbated by the pandemic. Moldova has nevertheless opened its borders to welcome large numbers of Ukrainian refugees. The country enjoys good political and economic relations with the EU, and signed association and free trade agreements with the bloc – Moldova’s largest trading partner – in 2014. The EU has provided €160 million in EU macro-financial assistance since 2017. Moldova has requested further assistance, and on Wednesday, Members are scheduled to consider a European Commission proposal (from before the outbreak of the war) starting to allocate €30 million in grants and up to €120 million in medium-term loans.
Parliament is always keen to encourage technological solutions that benefit citizens in their daily lives. On Wednesday, Members are expected to debate an agreement reached between the co-legislators on a pilot regime developing trading and transactions in crypto-assets – usually known as cryptocurrencies (such as bitcoin and ethereum). Parliament is in favour of encouraging crypto-assets, as long as they do not pose a risk to financial stability, transparency or market integrity, or permit legal loopholes. Parliament’s Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs (ECON) therefore proposes to set stricter limits on trading with crypto-assets. The current proposal allows market capitalisation of less than €500 million in shares and issuance of up to €1 billion in bonds. Should Parliament decide to formally adopt the agreed text, it will go to Council for final approval.
Now that travel is getting back to normal, Members are scheduled to return to the issue of extending current EU legislation on roaming charges on Wednesday. In interinstitutional negotiations on the proposal to revise the rules to increase transparency and network quality, Parliament succeeded in capping the wholesale roaming charges at €2 per gigabyte from this year, with a progressive reduction to reach €1 in 2027. Once the Parliament and Council both formally adopt the provisional agreement reached between the co-legislators, citizens should be able to ‘roam like at home’ for a further 10 years.
Written by Suzana Anghel and Ralf Drachenberg.
On 24-25 March 2022, EU Heads of State or Government will meet for the third time in five weeks. In the presence of the United States President, Joe Biden, they will discuss developments in and support for Ukraine, in the context of the unprovoked Russian invasion of the country. Building on their Versailles Declaration of 10-11 March, EU leaders will take further steps aimed at strengthening European sovereignty in the field of security, defence and energy security. As regards security and defence, the European Council will endorse the EU Strategic Compass, call for its implementation, and give further guidelines for the deepening of European defence cooperation. With respect to energy, EU leaders will consider means to counter the current spike in energy prices, consider gas storage capacities and planning in view of the next winter and resume discussions on phasing out EU dependence on Russian fossil fuels. Furthermore, the European Council will take stock of coordination efforts in response to the Covid-19 pandemic, appraise the European Semester, and review initiatives designed to build a more robust economic base and reduce the EU’s strategic dependence in the most sensitive areas. Under external relations, items on the agenda will include the preparation of the forthcoming EU-China Summit and the political crisis in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The European Council will be followed by a Euro Summit meeting on 25 March.
1. European Council agenda pointsThe indicative 2021-2022 Leaders’ Agenda, updated at the December 2021 European Council meeting, had outlined security and defence, economic recovery, the social agenda, the European Semester, and the single market and industrial policy as topics for the March European Council meeting. While security and defence, and the European Semester, were already on the provisional agenda, the war in the Ukraine and energy prices have been added as a result of current events.
The President of the European Council, Charles Michel, has prepared for this meeting by using his own ‘Michel method’, which involves video-conferences with small groups of four to six EU leaders ahead of the summit to prepare the ground. This approach provides Mr Michel with an opportunity to express his intentions as to the result he is seeking to obtain and to gain an insight into individual national leaders’ views on certain agenda points, thus reducing surprises at the meeting itself.
Charles Michel’s (first) term as European Council President comes to an end on 30 May 2022. Given that, since 2009, the (re-)election of the European Council President has taken place at the last formal European Council meeting before the end of the mandate, it can be expected that EU leaders will take a decision on the next European Council President. In line with tradition, for this agenda point, the Head of State or Government holding the rotating Presidency of the Council of the European Union, currently the President of France, Emmanuel Macron, will take the chair.
Having already attended two informal meetings of Heads of State or Government, this will be the first formal European Council meeting for Roberta Metsola, President of the European Parliament. Following Ms Metsola’s opening address, President Macron, again on behalf of the country holding the six-month rotating presidency, is expected to provide an overview of progress made in implementing previous European Council conclusions.
2. European Council meeting Russia’s invasion of UkraineEU leaders will again discuss Russia’s military aggression against Ukraine, this time in the presence of United States (US) President Joe Biden. They are expected to reaffirm transatlantic unity and stress solidarity with Ukraine. The discussions may also green light a fifth round of sanctions, including on oil and coal but probably not on gas. The European Council will most probably consider the deteriorating humanitarian situation in the country. This is a matter of grave concern for the international community, as over 3 million Ukrainians have fled the country in the three weeks since Russia’s invasion began. The leaders will also once more consider assistance for EU and non-EU frontline countries, which are facing an unrelenting influx of refugees. Furthermore, EU leaders will most probably reiterate their call to ensure the safety of Ukraine’s nuclear power plants, with support from the International Atomic Energy Agency. For the first time, EU leaders may consider Union support for reconstruction, which should go hand in hand with peace preparation efforts and could double the EU support offered to Ukraine under the European Peace Facility since the start of the war.
Three EU leaders, the Prime Ministers of Poland, Mateusz Morawiecki, Czechia, Petr Fiala, and Slovenia, Janez Janša, met with the President of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelensky, in Kyiv on 15 March 2022. The visit, aimed at expressing EU support for Ukraine, its sovereignty and independence, was the first by Western leaders since Russia’s invasion began, and the other European Council members knew of it in advance. Petr Fiala emphasised that Ukraine was ‘also fighting for our lives’, while Mateusz Morawiecki stressed that a Europe that loses Ukraine ‘will no longer be Europe’ but ‘a defeated, humiliated and pathetic version of its former self’. At their meeting in Versailles, EU leaders recognised the ‘European aspirations and the European choice of Ukraine’, with public opinion polls showing clear European public condemnation of Russia’s invasion and support for Ukraine’s request for membership.
The Russian Federation was excluded from the Council of Europe – the pan-European organisation upholding human rights – by a decision of the organisation’s Committee of Ministers on 16 March. Russia had already initiated the procedure to leave in a pre-emptive attempt to avoid being excluded. Back in 2016, Russia withdrew from joining the International Criminal Court (ICC) at the time when the Court began investigating war crimes in South Ossetia following Russia’s 2008 invasion of Georgia. In March 2022, the ICC opened an investigation into ‘alleged crimes committed in the context of the situation in Ukraine since 21 November 2013’, which would allow it to investigate ‘war crimes, crimes against humanity or genocide committed on any part of the territory of Ukraine’.
In parallel, on 16 March 2022, in the Ukraine v.Russian Federation case, the International Court of Justice considered Ukraine’s request for an indication of provisional measures and ordered Russia ‘to suspend the military operations that it commenced on 24 February 2022 in the territory of Ukraine’. The Court reaffirmed the binding effect of its order, which creates ‘international legal obligations for any party to whom the provisional measures are addressed’.
Security and defenceSecurity and defence have been a rolling item on the agenda of the European Council for the past six months. EU leaders last discussed security and defence at their informal Versailles meeting, where they adopted a declaration and issued new strategic guidelines for the further development and deepening of European defence cooperation. At their spring meeting, the leaders are expected to endorse the Strategic Compass, which has recently been reviewed at their request, adding more robust language on the threat posed by Russia to European security in light of the war in Ukraine. The Strategic Compass, which was drafted with a view to providing a common perspective on the security threats and challenges facing the EU, is expected to lend further impetus to the EU’s bid to become a security and defence actor. The purpose is for the EU to be able to protect its citizens, to react quickly to crises and to deepen partnerships with like-minded partners, such as the United Nations and NATO.
The war in Ukraine raises more than ever the question of resources and how to allocate them efficiently. At Versailles, the European Parliament’s President, Roberta Metsola, stressed that the EU ‘must go beyond the European Defence Fund and make the EU budget work for our security and defence policy whenever it adds value’. A recent EPRS study pointed to ‘generally large average amounts of waste’ in current EU Member States’ spending; in the field of defence, this waste was cumulatively estimated at €32 billion for deployable troops, and €13 billion for procurement and research and development.
Energy securityEnergy will feature on the agenda of the European Council for the fifth time since October 2021. EU leaders will again discuss energy prices and how best to reduce fossil fuel dependency, notably the phasing out of gas and oil imports from Russia. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen confirmed in Versailles that, by May 2022, the European Commission would present a plan to phase out fossil fuel dependency on Russia by 2027. Regarding the spike in energy prices, a first series of short-term measures had been taken in 2021. Given the worsening situation following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, EU leaders are expected to discuss further short- and medium-term measures to address energy prices and security of supply, such as the refilling of gas storage facilities across the continent. The European Commission is expected to publish a communication on this subject on 23 March, to provide input ahead of the European Council meeting.
A number of other initiatives will feed into the debate. Ahead of the Versailles summit, on 9 March, the Prime Minister of Greece, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, had addressed a letter to President von der Leyen, proposing a six-point plan to counter the ‘weaponisation’ of gas as a result of Russia’s war in Ukraine, including ‘targeted and temporary market intervention’ to avoid speculation. A ‘mini “Mediterranean summit”‘ held in Rome allowed Greece, Italy, Portugal and Spain to articulate a common position on reforming the energy market. The mini-summit was part of a wider European tour the Prime Minister of Spain, Pedro Sanchez, undertook with the aim of building consensus ahead of the European Council meeting.
A new phase in the Covid-19 pandemicAs the number of coronavirus-related deaths in the EU continues to fall, EU leaders may mention the importance of EU coordination on the removal of restrictions and on developing the vaccination campaign that has lessened the most severe effects of Covid-19. This may lead the European Council to reiterate the need to coordinate on future preparedness, namely on the ‘health union’ package.
The European Council will most likely welcome the decision authorising the opening of negotiations for an international agreement on pandemic prevention, preparedness and response. Charles Michel first proposed the idea in November 2020, and the European Council supported it at the time. EU leaders may reiterate their commitment to contributing to the global response to Covid‑19, both bilaterally and by ensuring access to vaccines through COVAX. This commitment has been repeated by the European Council in 10 of its meetings since the outbreak of the pandemic.
Economic issuesIt has been a tradition that EU leaders use the March European Council meeting to discuss the European Semester – the framework for the coordination of economic policies across the EU – ever since its launch in 2011 in the context of the sovereign debt crisis. Implementation of the Recovery and Resilience Facility (RFF) – set up in 2020 in response to the economic consequences of the pandemic – is also now reviewed during the European Semester. EU Heads of State or Government are expected to endorse the annual sustainable growth survey (ASGS) and the draft Council recommendation on the economic policy of the euro area, also part of the 2022 European Semester exercise.
EU leaders will follow up on the objectives set out in the 2019-2024 Strategic Agenda, and firmly reiterated in the Versailles Declaration, aimed at building a more robust economic base and fostering investment. The focus will be on reducing the EU’s strategic dependence in the most sensitive areas: critical raw materials, semi-conductors, health, digital and food. The European Council is expected to call for the completion of the single market, in order for it to realise its full potential. The digital and services components should be top priority when it comes to removing the remaining unjustified barriers and administrative burdens, interconnecting ecosystems across Member States more effectively, and enforcing single market rules. EU leaders might also address the activities of the European Commission on the issue of food security.
External relationsEU leaders will most probably consider relations with China in preparation for the EU-China Summit on 1 April 2022. Two issues are likely to be central to the debate: China’s positioning over the war in Ukraine and the future of EU-China bilateral relations, including on trade and security. In 2021, the European Parliament froze its ratification of the EU-China Comprehensive Agreement on Investment (CAI) pending the lifting of sanctions imposed against ‘European individuals and entities, including five MEPs’.
EU leaders will also discuss the deterioration of the political situation in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Prior to the meeting, the High Representative/Vice-President of the European Commission (HR/VP), Josep Borrell, visited the country, stressing that its future and the future of the western Balkan region ‘lies in the European Union, as the best provider for peace and security’.
3. Euro SummitOn 25 March, EU leaders will convene for a Euro Summit meeting in inclusive format, in order to review progress on completing the banking union and the capital markets union, as indicated in the declaration issued at the last Euro Summit meeting, of 16 December 2021.
EU leaders are expected to consider the Commission’s communication of 2 March 2022 on ‘Fiscal policy guidance for 2023‘, as well as the statement of 14 March 2022 by the Eurogroup (i.e. the finance ministers of the Member States in the eurozone) on fiscal guidance for 2023. The Eurogroup President, Paschal Donohoe, expects a gradual evolution in fiscal policy, leading to a broadly neutral overall fiscal stance in 2023 for the euro area, but stressed that due to uncertainties and risks, the EU needed to remain agile and flexible in its policy response. Following the latest Eurogroup meeting, given the remaining availability of funds under Next Generation EU (NGEU) and the lack of agreement between Member States, it seems unlikely that EU leaders will return to the idea of creating new mutual bonds, along the lines of the NGEU pandemic recovery fund, to respond to the consequences of the war in Ukraine.
Read this briefing on ‘Outlook for the European Council meeting of 24-25 March 2022‘ in the Think Tank pages of the European Parliament.
Written by Marketa Pape.
The EU aims at becoming a carbon neutral economy by 2050, an ambition outlined in the European Green Deal and enshrined in the EU Climate Law. To achieve climate neutrality, the EU transport sector has to cut its CO2 emissions by 90 %. This requirement contrasts with the fact that transport is the only sector in which greenhouse gas emissions have continued to grow in recent years, albeit with a short pause due to coronavirus-related restrictions on travel and movement.
In December 2020, the European Commission put forward a strategy outlining how it intends to transform the EU transport sector to align it with the European Green Deal, by making it green, digital and resilient. This sustainable and smart mobility strategy has become the blueprint for the Commission’s legislative and support activities. It contains 82 initiatives in 10 key areas, with specific milestones to be achieved by 2030 and 2050.
While the Commission is the key actor in preparing and proposing the legislation needed, the overall impact of this ‘green and digital fabric’ depends on when, and with what amendments, each legislative proposal gets passed into law by the European Parliament and the relevant ministers of EU Member States. And, crucially, how coherent the whole strategy remains.
Since the publication of the strategy just over a year ago, the Commission has progressed and put forward a number of legislative proposals. The EU co-legislators are discussing how the proposals should be amended and are getting ready to negotiate. The European Parliamentary Research Service (EPRS) tracks the progress of these legislative files with dedicated briefings, the most relevant of which are listed below.
In the July 2021 Fit for 55 package, several proposals target transport or modify some key related aspects, such as the energy needed. Here, the Commission proposes to ramp up the production of renewable energy, raising the target of energy from renewable sources from the current 32 % to 40 % by 2030, and to change the rules for energy taxation, replacing the volume-based approach to energy taxation with one based on energy content and environmental performance. For road transport, the Commission proposes to set stricter CO2 emission performance standards for new passenger cars and light commercial vehicles (vans) and allow only zero-emission vehicles from 2035. To support the roll-out of the necessary alternative fuels, a draft regulation on alternative fuels infrastructure proposes binding targets for electric vehicle charging points and hydrogen refuelling points, electric charging for stationary aircraft at airports and onshore power supply for ships at ports. Two specific sectoral proposals, on sustainable aviation fuels and on sustainable maritime fuels, focus on how to ensure sufficient quantities of cleaner fuels for airplanes and ships.
In terms of CO2 emissions, the Commission not only proposes to tighten the existing EU Emission Trading Scheme (EU ETS), but also to extend it to maritime shipping and establish a separate, self-standing emissions trading system for fuel distribution for road transport and buildings. Both these sectors, however, remain included in the Effort Sharing Regulation, so that national policies would continue to support their decarbonisation. Reviewed rules for aviation are dealt with separately, with a proposal to end allowances from 2027 and integrate the global market-based Carbon Offsetting and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation (CORSIA), applicable to international flights, into the revised ETS.
These ‘Fit for 55’ proposals are interlinked and also need to be understood against the background of the EU’s efforts to determine which investment counts as green. While the basic ‘taxonomy’ legal act is already in force, the process of establishing detailed criteria on how to classify activities as ‘green’ is ongoing. For transport, the key issue is whether natural gas and nuclear power will be regarded as sustainable or not.
The ‘Fit for 55’ package also includes a proposed new social climate fund (SCF), meant to help vulnerable households, micro-businesses and transport users meet the costs of the green energy transition in the buildings and road transport sector.
While negotiations on these files are expected to start in 2022, the Commission is already preparing further proposals. It will debate the way forward with transport experts at the 7th annual Future of transport conference on 23 March 2022, together with the most pressing issues facing the European transport sector, such as supply chain disruptions and digital transformation and road safety.
Written by Rosamund Shreeves.
Even – or especially – in complex, emergency situations, a gender perspective is vital in order to take into account the specific needs of women and men and the different risks to which they are exposed. Humanitarian actors are calling for a gender-sensitive response to the Ukraine crisis, to help tackle barriers to accessing vital services, address increased risks of gender-based violence and facilitate the reception and integration of refugees.
The scale of humanitarian needAfter eight years of armed conflict in eastern Ukraine, humanitarian needs were already high. Before Russia launched its full-scale invasion on 24 February, the United Nations (UN) had already projected that 2.9 million Ukrainians – 54 % of whom were women and children – would need humanitarian assistance in 2022. The war has now caused an escalating humanitarian crisis. Shelling and air strikes on residential areas are resulting in increasing civilian deaths and severe damage to homes, hospitals, schools, and water and power supplies. The humanitarian situation is particularly desperate in areas besieged by Russian forces, with dwindling access to food and medicines and no or few safe avenues for aid to get in or people to get out. Two weeks into the conflict, an estimated 12.65 million people were stranded in affected areas, or unable or unwilling to leave due to military action. Around 1.85 million people were already internally displaced within Ukraine, a figure that could rise to 6.7 million. In the space of only three weeks, 3 million people have fled to neighbouring states (Poland, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania, Moldova, Belarus and Russia) and over 360 000 have moved on to other European countries. This complex and fast-moving situation requires a vast humanitarian response, spanning action to meet the immediate needs of those under fire and on the move, through to support for refugees settling in host communities. The UN also warns that a prolonged conflict could have a ripple effect way beyond Ukraine, including a risk of food insecurity in some countries that are heavily reliant on its wheat exports.
Why a gender-sensitive response mattersSince conflicts and humanitarian crises can affect women, men, girls and boys very differently, adopting a gender perspective from the outset ensures that their specific needs and the risks and vulnerabilities they are exposed to are taken into account, and that they are equally able to shape decisions about the support they need. Initial rapid gender analysis and monitoring can serve to identify some of the issues already emerging in relation to the conflict in Ukraine and urgent areas for action:
Since it is mainly women and girls who are seeking refuge, countries hosting refugees from Ukraine will need to pay particular attention to their specific reception and integration needs. Humanitarian actors and stakeholders are also stressing the need for safe and regular pathways to safety for all women and girls, irrespective of their nationality, ethnicity and religion, including for stateless persons and Roma with no documentation to prove their residence status. There are calls for women’s organisations to be involved in shaping the humanitarian response and for meaningful participation of women in peace negotiations, in line with UN Resolution 1325 on women, peace and security, to ensure that their specific situations and needs are taken into account and to achieve more sustainable outcomes.
EU commitments and actionThe EU recognises that crises are not gender neutral, and that EU humanitarian assistance must be sensitive to gender and age if it is to be effective and reach those most in need. It has committed to including a gender dimension in all its humanitarian aid, by tracking how each action integrates gender and age and ensuring that humanitarian responses include strategies for protecting against sexual and gender-based violence, ensuring access to reproductive and sexual healthcare services and promoting women’s participation.
The EU is coordinating deliveries of material assistance to Ukraine and neighbouring countries. Other measures adopted so far to help those fleeing Russian aggression include guidelines on simplifying border controls for vulnerable groups and immediate temporary protection in the EU, giving rights to a residence permit, the possibility to work, housing, and access to social welfare, medical assistance and education. The availability of this legal option to enter and stay in EU countries removes some of the documented risks facing women and girls seeking asylum. However, the Commission has raised concerns about trafficking, particularly for arrivals with no relatives or contacts in the EU. The European Commission’s communication on solidarity with refugees and those fleeing war in Ukraine also recognises that, since women, unaccompanied minors and other children make up the majority of arrivals, the immediate priorities will include ensuring appropriate information and accommodation, preventing gender-based exploitation, supporting childcare, and ensuring swift access to education. Member States will be able to use EU cohesion funding to help refugees access childcare and education, find jobs and get psychological support.
European Parliament positionIn a December 2021 resolution, Parliament stressed the need to focus on the situation of women and vulnerable groups at the Ukrainian border and in Russian-occupied territories of Ukraine. Another resolution, adopted the same month, called for more tangible elements of gender mainstreaming, such as gender analyses, to be implemented in EU humanitarian action. At its plenary session in March 2022, Parliament debated the deteriorating humanitarian situation in Ukraine, highlighting the need for proper assistance for women and children. It also adopted a resolution stressing the need to fight gender-based violence in war and calling for more women to be involved in peace and security.
Read this ‘at a glance’ on ‘Russia’s war on Ukraine: Ukrainian students in the EU‘ in the Think Tank pages of the European Parliament.