EUR-Lex Access to European Union law

Back to EUR-Lex homepage

This document is an excerpt from the EUR-Lex website

Document 31998D0261

98/261/EC: Council Decision of 30 March 1998 on the principles, priorities, intermediate objectives and conditions contained in the accession partnership with Romania

OJ L 121, 23.4.1998, p. 11–15 (ES, DA, DE, EL, EN, FR, IT, NL, PT, FI, SV)

Legal status of the document In force

ELI: http://data.europa.eu/eli/dec/1998/261/oj

31998D0261

98/261/EC: Council Decision of 30 March 1998 on the principles, priorities, intermediate objectives and conditions contained in the accession partnership with Romania

Official Journal L 121 , 23/04/1998 P. 0011 - 0015


COUNCIL DECISION of 30 March 1998 on the principles, priorities, intermediate objectives and conditions contained in the accession partnership with Romania (98/261/EC)

THE COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION,

Having regard to the Treaty establishing the European Community,

Having regard to Council Regulation (EC) No 622/98 of 16 March 1998 on assistance to the applicant countries in the framework of the pre-accession strategy, and in particular on the establishment of accession partnerships (1), and in particular to Article 2 thereof,

Having regard to the proposal from the Commission,

Whereas the Luxembourg European Council stated that the accession partnership is a new instrument, the key feature of the enhanced pre-accession strategy;

Whereas Regulation (EC) No 622/98 sets out that the Council shall decide, by a qualified majority and following a proposal from the Commission, on the principles, priorities, intermediate objectives and conditions contained in the individual accession partnerships, as they are submitted to each applicant country, as well as on subsequent significant adjustments applicable to them;

Whereas Community assistance is conditional on the fulfilment of essential elements, and in particular on the respect of the commitments contained in the Europe Agreements and on progress towards fulfilment of the Copenhagen criteria; whereas, where an essential element is lacking, the Council, acting by a qualified majority on a proposal from the Commission, may take appropriate steps with regard to any pre-accession assistance;

Whereas the Luxembourg European Council decided that the implementation of the accession partnership and progress in adopting the acquis will be examined in the Europe Agreement bodies;

Whereas the Commission's opinion presented an objective analysis on Romania's preparations for membership and identified a number of priority areas for further work;

Whereas, in order to prepare for membership, Romania should draw up a national programme for the adoption of the acquis; whereas this programme should set out a timetable for achieving the priorities and intermediate objectives established in the accession partnership,

HAS DECIDED AS FOLLOWS:

Article 1

In accordance with Article 2 of Regulation (EC) No 622/98, the principles, priorities, intermediate objectives and conditions contained in the accession partnership for Romania are set out in the Annex hereto, which forms an integral part of this Decision.

Article 2

The implementation of the accession partnership will be examined in the Europe Agreement bodies and through the appropriate Council bodies to which the Commission will report regularly.

Article 3

This Decision shall enter into force on the third day following its publication in the Official Journal of the European Communities.

Done at Brussels, 30 March 1998.

For the Council

The President

M. BECKETT

(1) OJ L 85, 20.3.1998, p. 1.

ANNEX

ROMANIA

1. Objectives

The purpose of the accession partnership is to set out in a single framework the priority areas for further work identified in the Commission's opinion on Romania's application for membership of the European Union, the financial means available to help Romania implement these priorities and the conditions which will apply to that assistance. The accession partnership will provide a framework for a number of policy instruments which will be used to help the candidate countries in their preparations for membership. These will include inter alia the national programme for the adoption of the acquis to be adopted by Romania, the joint assessment of economic policy priorities, the pact against organised crime and the internal market road maps. Each of these instruments is different in nature and will be prepared and implemented according to specific procedures. They will not be an integral part of this partnership but the priorities they contain will be compatible with it.

2. Principles

The main priority areas identified for each candidate country relate to their ability to assume the obligations of meeting the Copenhagen criteria which state that membership requires:

- that the candidate country has achieved stability of institutions guaranteeing democracy, the rule of law, human rights and respect for and protection of minorities,

- the existence of a functioning market economy, as well as the capacity to cope with competitive pressure and market forces within the Union,

- the ability to take on the obligations of membership, including adherence to the aims of political, economic and monetary union.

At its meeting in Madrid, the European Council stressed the need for the candidate countries to adjust their administrative structures to ensure the harmonious operation of Community policies after accession and at Luxembourg, it stressed that incorporation of the acquis into legislation is necessary, but not in itself sufficient; it is necessary to ensure that it is actually applied.

3. Priorities and Intermediate Objectives

The Commission's opinions and the Council's examination of these have highlighted the extent of the efforts which still have to be made in certain areas by the candidate countries to prepare for accession and took the view that none of these countries fully satisfies all of the Copenhagen criteria at the present time. This situation will require the definition of intermediate stages in terms of priorities, each to be accompanied by precise objectives to be set in collaboration with the countries concerned, the achievement of which will condition the degree of assistance granted and the progress of the negotiations under way with some countries and the opening of new negotiations with the others. The priorities and intermediate objectives have been divided into two groups - short and medium term. Those listed under the short-term have been selected on the basis that it is realistic to expect that Romania can complete or take them substantially forward by the end of 1998. In view of the short time span, and taking into account the administrative capacity required to achieve them, the number of priorities selected for the short term has been limited. The priorities listed under the medium term are expected to take more than one year to complete although work may and should also begin on them during 1998.

Romania will be invited to draw up a national programme for the adoption of the acquis (NPAA) by the end of March which should set out a timetable for achieving these priorities and intermediate objectives and, where possible and relevant, indicate the necessary staff and financial resources.

The accession partnership will indicate that Romania will have to address all issues identified in the opinion. Incorporation of the acquis into legislation is not in itself sufficient; it will also be necessary to ensure that it is actually applied to the same standards as those which apply within the Union. In all of the areas listed below there is a need for credible and effective implementation and enforcement of the acquis.

Drawing on the analysis of the Commission's opinion and the Council's examination of this, the following short- and medium-term priorities and intermediate objectives have been identified for Romania.

3.1. Short-term (1998)

Economic reform: establishment of medium-term economic policy priorities and joint assessment within the framework of the Europe Agreement; make satisfactory progress on the government's economic reform programme, including the privatisation of two banks, the transformation into commercial companies of most régies autonomes, the efficient and transparent implementation of the foreign investment regime, and restructuring/privatisation of a number of large State-owned industrial (e.g. coal and steel) and agricultural companies (notably by reducing their losses and financial arrears); continue the implementation of the agreements with the international financial institutions.

Reinforcement of institutional and administrative capacity: adoption of draft law on the civil service and progress in public administration reform, phytosanitary and veterinary controls, particularly as regards facilities at the external borders, the financial sector (strengthening of supervisory bodies of banking, financial services and capital markets), customs; strengthening of financial control and auditing mechanisms and competition, anti-trust and State aid monitoring bodies and environment, begin to set up structures needed for regional and structural policy.

Internal market: including the restructuring of the banking sector and the capital markets, the completion of company law reform, including measures for the promotion of enterprise development and small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), foreign direct investment, harmonisation and improved application of indirect taxation, harmonisation of public procurement, adoption of a law on State aid and a first State aid inventory. Establishment of standardisation and conformity assessment structures.

Justice and home affairs: in particular further efforts to implement measures to combat corruption and organised crime and improve border management.

Environment: continue transposition of framework legislation, establishment of detailed approximation programmes and implementation strategies related to individual acts. Planning and commencement of implementation of these programmes and strategies.

3.2. Medium-term

Political criteria: continuation of child protection reform, further efforts to integrate the Roma, consolidation of protection of individual liberties and improvement of the functioning of the courts.

Economic reform: particular attention should be devoted to creating the basis for a sustained increase of productivity and to the further restructuring/privatisation of State-owned enterprises, including banks.

Economic policy: regular review of the joint assessment of economic policy priorities, within the Europe Agreement framework, focusing and satisfying the Copenhagen criteria for membership of the Union and the acquis in the area of economic and monetary policy (coordination of economic policies, submission of convergence programmes, avoidance of excessive deficits); while Romania is not expected to adopt the euro immediately on accession, it is expected to pursue policies which aim to achieve real convergence in accordance with the Union's objectives of economic and social cohesion, and nominal convergence compatible with the ultimate goal of adoption of the euro.

Reinforcement of institutional and administrative capacity: in particular of a comprehensive public administration reform programme; major efforts to improve public administration including competition, strengthening of internal financial control; improved operation of the judicial system; training for the judiciary in Community law and its application; reinforcement of justice and home affairs institutions (ensuring sufficient and properly trained personnel in particular police, border guards, ministries and courts), reform of customs and tax administrations to ensure readiness to apply the acquis, the reinforcement of food control administration, strengthening of the nuclear regulatory authority.

Internal market: promotion of enterprise development, including SMEs, alignment with the acquis in the fields of telecommunications, consumer protection, the internal energy market and audiovisual policies, enforcement of intellectual property rights, insurance, competition policy, in particular effective enforcement of competition law, reinforcement of standardisation of conformity assessment structures, establishment of a market surveillance system and alignment of technical legislation on industrial products.

Justice and home affairs: improvement of border management systems, capacity to handle asylum and migration questions, alignment of visa policy with that of the Union and completion of alignment on international conventions, fight against organised crime (in particular money laundering, drugs and trafficking in human beings) and corruption, notably in view of the Schengen aquis.

Agriculture: including the establishment of a land register and functioning land market, alignment with the agricultural acquis (including veterinary and phytosanitary matters, in particular external border controls), attention to environmental aspects of agriculture and biodiversity. Development of the capacity to implement and enforce the common agricultural policy (CAP), in particular the fundamental management mechanisms and administrative structures to monitor the agricultural markets and implement structural and rural development measures, adoption and implementation of the veterinary and phytosanitary requirements, upgrading of certain food-processing establishments and testing and diagnostic facilities, restructuring of the agri-food sector.

Fisheries: development of capacity to implement and enforce the common fisheries policy.

Transport: further efforts on alignment with the acquis in particular on maritime, rail and road freight sectors (safety rules and taxation), and to provide necessary investment for transport infrastructure, notably extension of trans-European networks.

Employment and social affairs: development of appropriate labour-market structures and joint review of employment policies as preparation for participation in Union coordination; alignment of labour and occupational health and safety legislation and development of enforcement structures, in particular early adoption of the framework directive on health and safety at work; enforcement of equal opportunities between women and men; further development of active, autonomous social dialogue; development of adequate social protection, undertake steps to bring public health standards into line with Union norms.

Environment: including the development of monitoring and implementation control structures and capacities, continuous planning and implementation of approximation programmes related to individual legal acts. A particular emphasis should be given to the air and water sectors. Environmental protection requirements and the need for sustainable development must be integrated into the definition and implementation of national, sectoral policies.

Regional policy and cohesion: complete establishment of legal basis, development of administrative structures and budgetary procedures. Strengthening financial instruments and control mechanisms in order to participate in Union structural programmes after membership.

4. Programming

The PHARE allocation for the period 1995 to 1997 has totalled ECU 284 million. Subject to the approval of the PHARE budget for the remaining period, the Commission will confirm the allocations for 1998 and 1999. In addition, Romania is eligible for support from the catch-up facility envisaged for 1998. Financial proposals will be submitted to the PHARE Management Committee as provided for in Regulation (EEC) No 3906/89. Joint financing by the applicant countries will be systematically required for all investment projects. Financial assistance from the year 2000 onwards will comprise aid for agriculture and a structural instrument which will give priority to measures similar to the Cohesion Fund.

5. Conditionality

Community assistance will be conditional on respect by Romania of its commitments under the Europe Agreement, further steps towards satisfying the Copenhagen criteria and progress in implementing this accession partnership. Failure to respect these general conditions could lead to a decision by the Council on the suspension of financial assistance on the basis of Article 4 of Regulation (EC) No 622/98.

6. Monitoring

The implementation of the accession partnership will be monitored in the framework of the Europe Agreement. This will begin in 1998 before the Commission presents its first regular report to the Council reviewing the progress made by Romania including implementation of the accession partnership.

The relevant sections of the accession partnership will be discussed in the appropriate sub-committee. The Association Committee will discuss overall developments, progress and problems in meeting its priorities and intermediate objectives as well as more specific issues referred to it from the sub-committees. The Association Committee will report to the Association Council on the implementation of the accession partnership.

The PHARE Management Committee will ensure that financing decisions are compatible with the accession partnerships.

The accession partnership will be amended as necessary in accordance with Article 2 of Regulation (EC) No 622/98. The Commission will propose, before the end of 1999 and at regular intervals thereafter, a review of this partnership, on which the Council will take a formal decision. These reviews will include consideration of the need to further specify intermediate objectives in the light of the progress made by Romania in meeting the objectives set out in this partnership.

Top