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Document 52013DC0566
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION ANNUAL REPORT 2012 ON SUBSIDIARITY AND PROPORTIONALITY
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION ANNUAL REPORT 2012 ON SUBSIDIARITY AND PROPORTIONALITY
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION ANNUAL REPORT 2012 ON SUBSIDIARITY AND PROPORTIONALITY
/* COM/2013/0566 final */
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION ANNUAL REPORT 2012 ON SUBSIDIARITY AND PROPORTIONALITY /* COM/2013/0566 final */
REPORT FROM
THE COMMISSION ANNUAL REPORT 2012
ON SUBSIDIARITY AND PROPORTIONALITY
1.
Introduction
This is the twentieth
annual report on the application of the principles of subsidiarity and
proportionality in EU law making. The report is submitted in accordance with Article
9 of Protocol No 2 on the application of these principles (hereinafter ‘the
Protocol’) attached to the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union
(TFEU). The report looks at how
the different EU institutions and bodies have implemented these two principles
and whether practice has changed in comparison to previous years. It analyses
in more detail certain Commission proposals that were the subject of reasoned
opinions in 2012. As 2012 saw the first ‘yellow card’ by national Parliaments,
as introduced by the Lisbon Treaty, the report focuses on that particular case.
Given the close links between the subsidiarity control mechanism and the
political dialogue between national Parliaments and the Commission, this report
should be seen as complementary to the Commission’s Annual Report 2012 on
relations with national Parliaments.[1]
2.
Application of the principles by
the institutions
2.1.
The Commission
Given its right of
initiative, the Commission has a responsibility to ensure that the correct choices
about whether and how to propose action at EU level are made at an early stage
of policy development. Accordingly, and in line
with its commitment to smart regulation, before proposing new initiatives, the
Commission verifies whether the EU has the right to take action and whether the
objectives of the proposed action cannot be sufficiently achieved by the Member
States. First, the Commission
prepares publically available roadmaps[2] for all
major initiatives. Roadmaps provide a preliminary description of possible
initiatives and outline the Commission’s plans for policy and consultation work.
They always include an initial justification for action in terms of subsidiarity
and proportionality. Later in the policy
development phase, a fuller analysis of subsidiarity issues is carried out as
part of the impact assessment (IA) process, taking into account the views
expressed during stakeholder consultations. To this end, a set of structured
questions for the subsidiarity and proportionality analysis is provided in the
IA guidelines,[3] and serves
as a basis for assessing the EU’s right to act and the justification for EU
action. Therefore, the
subsidiarity and proportionality of possible EU action is assessed on the basis
of all available evidence. It is then thoroughly scrutinised by the Impact
Assessment Board.[4] Conscious of the key
role played by impact assessments in setting out the evidence for political decision-makers,
the Board flagged in its 2012 annual report[5] the need to provide
robust
and detailed subsidiarity justification in all IAs. In 2012, the IAB examined
97 impact assessments and issued 144 opinions. Comments on issues of
subsidiarity were included in 33 % of its opinions. One of the cases the IAB
commented on with regard to subsidiarity was the IA for the proposal for a
Directive on the collective management of copyright and related rights
(COM(2012) 372) . In this case, the IAB asked the lead service ‘to
strengthen the assessment of the need for, the timing and added value of EU
action under the proposed (single market and cultural diversity) legal basis’. As
a result, the revised IA presented more clearly the reason for the proposed EU
initiative, for instance a better explanation of the trans-national
nature of the identified problems showing that the existing legal framework
at both national and EU levels has proved to be insufficient to address the
problems. For the IA for the
proposal for a regulation on a European Voluntary Humanitarian Aid Corps,[6] the IAB suggested
to ‘present more clearly the necessity and value added of EU action so that
political expectations can be framed in their proper context’. It also
asked the lead service to ‘address more explicitly the complementarity and
coordination of [the European Voluntary Humanitarian Aid Corps] with the work
of other organisations, given stakeholders’ concerns about duplication and
competition’. The revised IA report followed these recommendations and provided
a more thorough justification for EU action. The IAB opinions help
improve the analysis of compliance with the principles of subsidiarity and
proportionality, and they constitute, along with the IA reports themselves,
important elements underpinning the Commission’s political decision-making
process.
2.2.
National Parliaments
In 2012, the Commission
received from national Parliaments 70 reasoned opinions, similar to the number received
the previous year (64 in 2011), with a slight increase of around 9 %. However,
the proportion of reasoned opinions received in 2012 was the same as the overall
number of opinions the Commission received in the context of its broader
political dialogue with national Parliaments in 2012 (663). As in 2010 and
2011, they totalled slightly over 10 %. 2012 saw the first use of the yellow
card by national Parliaments in the context of the subsidiarity control
mechanism, in response to the Commission’s proposal for a regulation on the
exercise of the right to take collective action within the context of the
freedom of establishment and the freedom to provide services. This case is
described in more detail in chapter 3. Reasoned opinions
continue to vary greatly in terms of their form and the type of arguments put
forward by national Parliaments underpinning their conclusion that the
principle of subsidiarity was breached. Similarly to the previous year, the
focus of reasoned opinions issued by national Parliaments varied greatly. The
70 reasoned opinions covered no fewer than 23 Commission proposals. After the
Monti II proposal (12 reasoned opinions), the proposal for a regulation on the
Fund for European Aid to the Most Deprived elicited the second highest number
of reasoned opinions (5). Eight other proposals elicited three reasoned
opinions each (for details see the annex). This trend seems to confirm the
varying political interests of national Parliaments, which follow different
priorities when choosing Commission proposals to be scrutinised in the context
of the subsidiarity control mechanism and apply different criteria when
assessing compliance with the principle of subsidiarity. This means that
coordination among them remains a challenge. As in 2011, the Swedish Riksdag
was the national Parliament which adopted by far the highest number of reasoned
opinions (20), almost double the number in 2011 (11). The Riksdag scrutinises
all Commission proposals in terms of subsidiarity, and it decentralises scrutiny
to all parliamentary committees, which seem to apply different criteria. This
may have an impact on the number of reasoned opinions issued by the Riksdag.[7] The French Sénat
issued the second highest number of reasoned opinions (7), followed by the
German Bundesrat (5). These three chambers alone issued almost 50 %
of all reasoned opinions issued by national Parliaments in 2012. The eighteenth bi-annual
report of COSAC[8]
gives an overview of the procedures and practices regarding parliamentary
scrutiny.[9]
This document, based on the replies sent by national Parliaments/chambers to a
questionnaire, concludes that procedures differ in particular in terms of
national Parliaments’ views on the relationship between the subsidiarity and
proportionality principles. While some believe that they are equally important,
others believe that the proportionality principle is merely a component of
subsidiarity. But most national Parliaments are of the opinion that
subsidiarity checks are not effective unless a proportionality check is
included. The report states that a
large majority of national Parliaments report that their reasoned opinions are
often based on a broader interpretation of the principle of subsidiarity than
the wording in Protocol No 2. For example, the Dutch Eerste Kamer
believes that ‘it is not possible to exclude the principles of legality and
proportionality when applying the subsidiarity check …’. The Czech Senát
is of the opinion that subsidiarity has a ‘general and abstract nature … is
not a strict and clear legal concept’ and therefore a broad interpretation
should be used. The UK House of Lords gave a similar view, arguing in favour of
a wider interpretation of this principle because ‘although the principle is a
legal concept, in practice its application depends on political judgement’. The differing views of
national Parliaments on the understanding and application of the principle of
subsidiarity led to differing views on the need for guidelines to clarify the
scope of subsidiarity control and related criteria. Only half of the national
Parliaments responding to the COSAC questionnaire were in favour of this. All
who supported it insisted that any guidelines must be non-binding.
2.3.
The European Parliament and the Council
In the Council, the
Committee of the Permanent Representatives of each Member State (Coreper)
ensures that the subsidiarity and proportionality principles are respected. The
European Parliament created in 2012 a new horizontal directorate to provide a
broader range of services to EP committees on impact and European added-value
assessments. The work on impact
assessments covers the screening of Commission roadmaps that show the planned
policy and consultation work and making an initial appraisal of Commission
impact assessments. At the request of individual committees, it can also
provide detailed assessments of Commission impact assessments, complementary
analyses on aspects of the proposals that are not originally covered by the
Commission and impact assessments of amendments considered by the Parliament. The European
Parliament now also looks at the European added value of proposals, analysing
the potential benefit of future EU action. At the request of a European Parliament
committee, European added-value assessments can be provided to assess the
potential impacts and identify the advantages and disadvantages of proposals
made in legislative reports of the Parliament. The European Parliament can now
also produce reports on the cost of not taking EU-level action, on policy areas
with significant potential for greater efficiency and/or on achieving ‘public
good’ by taking action at EU level, where such action is currently absent. In 2012, the European
Parliament issued 10 initial appraisals of Commission impact assessments, one
detailed appraisal of a Commission impact assessment and three reports on
European added value. On 13 September 2012,
the European Parliament adopted a resolution on better law making, which to a
certain extent responds to the Commission’s Annual Report 2010 on Subsidiarity
and Proportionality.[10]
In this respect, the European Parliament, similar to the COSAC, suggests that the
case should be examined for setting criteria at EU level for evaluating
compliance with the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality. In addition, the European
Parliament report emphasises the regional and local dimension of subsidiarity
scrutiny and calls for an independent Commission analysis of the role of
regional and local parliaments in the area of subsidiarity control. In its
reply to the European Parliament report,[11]
the Commission confirmed that the Committee of the Regions has already prepared
this analysis.[12]
2.4.
The Committee of the Regions
In 2012, the Committee
of the Regions (CoR) adopted a new strategy on monitoring the principle of
subsidiarity. The aim is to reinforce the governance structure of the CoR’s
subsidiarity monitoring work, establish a comprehensive approach to monitoring
subsidiarity throughout the EU decision-making process, involving EU and
national institutions in this work and consolidating the CoR’s readiness to
take action before the Court of Justice. In this context, a
Subsidiarity Steering Group was set up to provide political governance of the
CoR’s subsidiarity monitoring work. It coordinates and gives political
follow-up to subsidiarity monitoring activities throughout the year. It is
responsible for highlighting annual subsidiarity priorities and for making
proposals on the use of the most appropriate tools and procedures of the
Subsidiarity Monitoring Network in order to support the work of CoR rapporteurs
in the legislative process. The revised strategy
highlights that CoR subsidiarity monitoring activities should commence during
the pre-legislative phase. This approach relies on the role of a Subsidiarity
Expert Group, comprising 16 officials from the Subsidiarity Monitoring Network
selected according to their expertise in terms of subsidiarity and for their
strong background in EU law. The Group met for the first time on 25 October
2012 and selected initiatives for priority monitoring. On this basis, the CoR
Bureau adopted on 30 January 2013 the Subsidiarity Work Programme.[13] It includes
four initiatives scheduled in the Commission Work Programme 2013 (E-invoicing
in the field of public procurement, a Blue Belt for a single market for
maritime transport, the Review of Waste Policy and Legislation, the
Environmental climate and energy assessment framework to enable safe and secure
unconventional hydrocarbon extraction) and Urban Mobility (which is not covered
by the CWP 2013, but the Commission has announced its intention to issue a
Communication on the urban dimension of EU transport policy in 2013). Set up in 2007, the
Subsidiarity Monitoring Network (SMN) is the CoR’s main monitoring tool, and
included 141 partners at the end of 2012. Its membership and representation
base increased again in 2012, particularly as regional parliaments and
governments have joined. Consultations of SMN partners are the main operating
tool used during the preparation of a draft opinion by a CoR rapporteur. Three
consultations were carried out in 2012 — on the Connecting Europe Facility,[14] on the 7th
Environment Action Programme (EAP)[15]
and on the Exercise of the right to take collective action within the context
of the freedom of establishment and the freedom to provide services (‘Monti II’).[16] Under the SMN
Action Plan, a group worked throughout the year on the Revision of the TEN-T
Guidelines and Connecting Europe Facility. In February 2012,
REGPEX, the Regional Parliamentary Exchange, was launched as a sub-network of
the Subsidiarity Monitoring Network, open to parliaments and governments of
regions endowed with legislative powers. It supports these regions in playing
their part in subsidiarity monitoring of EU legislation, particularly in the
context of the post-Lisbon early warning system and their possible consultation
by national Parliaments. The CoR sees REGPEX not just as a technical database,
providing access to information sources and publishing regional positions, but
also as a network to foster contacts among the EU’s ‘legislative regions’. The following opinions
adopted by the CoR in 2012 raised concerns with regard to compliance with the
subsidiarity and proportionality principles, some citing potential infringements:
the proposal for a Regulation on the ERDF; the 7th Environment Action
Programme; the Public Procurement package, the Data Protection package and the
posting of workers in the framework of the provision of services.
2.5.
The Court of Justice
In 2012 the Court of
Justice did not give any judgments that significantly developed the
subsidiarity principle. However, in case C-288/11 P, Mitteldeutsche
Flughafen, judgment of 19 December 2012, the Court of Justice confirmed
that the subsidiarity principle does not apply in the field of State aid, in
which the Commission has exclusive competence. Moreover, in case C-221/10
P, Artegodan, judgment of 19 April 2012, the Court re-stated that subsidiarity,
and more generally the competence rules of the Treaty, do not give rise to
individual rights, and therefore an infringement of these rules does not in
itself cause non-contractual liability of the Union and its institutions.
3.
Key cases where subsidiarity and proportionality
concerns were raised
Proposal for a
Regulation on the exercise of the right to take collective action within the
context of the freedom of establishment and the freedom to provide services
(Monti II). National Parliaments
issued 12 reasoned opinions on the Monti II proposal, representing 19 votes (18
being the threshold), and thus for the first time triggered a so-called yellow
card.[17] The aim of the
Commission proposal was to clarify the interaction between the exercise of
social rights and the exercise of freedom of establishment and to provide services
enshrined in the Treaty. It tried to address the concerns raised by
stakeholders (especially trade unions) that, in the single market, economic
freedoms prevail over the right to strike following the Viking Line and Laval
judgments of the Court of Justice, by clarifying in a legislative instrument
that no primacy exists between the two. The Commission was aware of the
sensitivity of the issue and the difficulty in finding common ground between
contrasting interests on how best to deal with industrial conflict in
situations involving business and workers in different Member States. The reasoned opinions
were issued by SE Riksdag (2 votes), DK Folketing (2 votes), FI Eduskunta
(2 votes), FR Sénat (1 vote), PL Sejm (1 vote), PT Assembleia
da República (2 votes), LV Saeima (2 votes), LU Chambre des
Députés (2 votes), BE Chambre des Représentants (1 vote), UK House
of Commons (1 vote), NL Tweede Kamer (1 vote) and MT Kamra
tad-Deputati (2 votes). Most of the national
Parliaments that adopted reasoned opinions questioned the use of Article 352
TFEU as the legal basis for the proposal. Most found the use of this legal
basis to be insufficiently justified. Some considered that excluding the right
to strike from the scope of Article 153 TFEU would also exclude the possibility
to use Article 352 TFEU as a legal basis. The same number of national
Parliaments expressed doubts as to the added value of the proposal and the need
for the action proposed. Some chambers pointed out that the proposal would not
change the current legal situation, others claimed that it would not contribute
to greater legal clarity and certainty. In addition, five national Parliaments
argued that Article 153(5) TFEU would exclude the right to strike from EU
competence, while others claimed that the general principle and the
proportionality test included in the proposal are not in line with the
principle of subsidiarity and they could create a negative impact on the right
to strike. Among the other issues raised, national Parliaments questioned the
need for the alternative dispute settlement mechanism, fearing that it would
interfere with national systems. They also raised doubts as to the need for an
alert mechanism. After an in-depth
assessment of the arguments put forward by national Parliaments in their
reasoned opinions, the Commission found that the principle of subsidiarity had not
been breached. In its replies to the
national Parliaments that issued reasoned opinions,[18] the
Commission explained that the aim of the Commission proposal was to clarify the
general principles and applicable rules at EU level concerning the exercise of
the fundamental right to take collective action within the context of the
freedom to provide services and the freedom of establishment, including the
need to reconcile them in practice in cross-border situations. The Commission
maintained that this could not be achieved by the Member States alone and
required action at European Union level. Concerning the issue of
the legal basis, the Commission decided to use Article 352 TFEU given the
absence of an explicit provision in the Treaty. Although it is true that
Article 153(5) TFEU excludes the right to strike from the range of matters that
can be regulated across the EU by minimum standards set in a directive, Court
rulings have clearly shown that the fact that Article 153 does not apply to the
right to strike does not exclude collective action from the scope of EU law.
Moreover the Commission considered that a regulation would have been the most
appropriate legal instrument to use as it is directly applicable and as such
would have reduced regulatory complexity and given greater legal certainty to
those subject to the legislation across the Union by clarifying the applicable
rules. In addition, the
proposed regulation would have recognised the role of national courts in
establishing the facts and ascertaining whether actions pursue objectives that
constitute a legitimate interest, are suitable for attaining these objectives,
and do not go beyond what is necessary to attain them. It would also have
recognised the importance of existing national laws and procedures for the
exercise of the right to strike, including existing alternative
dispute-settlement institutions, which would not have been changed or affected
by the proposal. It would have explained the role of alternative informal
resolution mechanisms that exist in a number of Member States. The Commission concluded
that the subsidiarity principle had not been breached, but it took note of the
views expressed by national Parliaments as well as the state of play of the
discussions on the draft regulation among stakeholders. It recognised that its
proposal was unlikely to gather the necessary political support within the
European Parliament and Council to enable adoption. In view of this, the
Commission informed the European Parliament, the Council and national
Parliaments by letters of 12 and 13 September 2012 of its intention to withdraw
its proposal and explained that, by so doing, it also hoped to facilitate a
rapid negotiation of the proposal for a Directive of the European Parliament
and the Council on the enforcement of Directive 96/71/EC, and to allow to move
forward on the enforcement of posted workers’ rights as underlined in point 3
l) of the ‘Compact for Growth and Jobs’ adopted by the European Council on
28-29 June 2012. The Commission took its decision to withdraw the Monti II
proposal on 26 September 2012.[19] Proposal for a
regulation on the Fund for European Aid to the Most Deprived [20] The Commission proposal that
elicited the second highest number of reasoned opinions in 2012 (5) was the
proposal for the establishment of the Fund for European Aid to the Most
Deprived. All national Parliaments that sent reasoned opinions [21] raised the
same issue, namely the lack of sufficient justification as regards the proposal’s
compliance with the subsidiarity principle.[22]
DE Bundestag submitted that Articles 174 and 175 TFEU do not provide for
EU competence to fight poverty, that social policy and measures under such
policy fall under the competence of Member States and that the proposal breached
the principle of proportionality. SE Riksdag argued that poverty and
social exclusion are best prevented by employment allowing for self-support and
by a social security system for the whole population. In its view, social
security is the responsibility of Member States and aid is most efficiently managed
by Member States. This view was shared by DK Folketing, which claimed
that the aim of supporting the most deprived can best be fulfilled by Member
States, either centrally, regionally or at local level. The UK House of Lords
found that no convincing argument had been made by the Commission to justify
its proposal in the light of the principle of subsidiarity and that any
uncertainty about the ability of all Member States to sustain social
expenditure and investment at sufficient levels could be met by action under
existing EU cohesion programmes. The UK House of Commons questioned the need
for the proposed action. In its replies to these
reasoned opinions, the Commission underlined that it had examined the EU’s right
to act and its added value during the impact assessment process and that these
findings were summarised in the explanatory memorandum accompanying the
proposal. The Commission acknowledged that promoting work and self-support is
the best way to counteract social exclusion and that the European Social Fund
will remain the main EU instrument for fighting poverty and social exclusion by
supporting activation measures. However, it pointed out that a growing number
of Europeans are too far from the labour market to benefit from the support
that can be provided from existing funds. The Commission drew attention to the
proposed obligation to couple the distribution of material assistance with
accompanying measures, aiming at the social reintegration of the assisted
persons, making the proposed Fund an instrument that goes beyond passive
interventions. It highlighted that the proposed Fund would be based on national
support schemes and would be implemented under shared management, leaving to
the Member States the primary responsibility for identifying the most
appropriate target groups and types of interventions. Proposal for a
regulation on the protection of individuals with regard to the processing of
personal data and on the free movement of such data.[23]
Among the eight
Commission proposals which gave rise to three reasoned opinions, the proposal
for a regulation on data protection was the one that was criticised not only on
the grounds of subsidiarity, but also of proportionality. Some national
Parliaments were of the view that the scope of the proposed act should remain
limited to cross-border exchanges. In terms of proportionality they argued that
the proposal could influence the treatment of personal data by the public
sector (particularly in the area of health and social services). Finally,
several national Parliaments questioned the scope and number of delegated powers
granted to the Commission by the proposal. The latter argument was largely
echoed by the Member States in the Council discussions as well as by some
Members of the European Parliament. In its replies the
Commission explained that the choice of a regulation aims at further
harmonising the existing European data protection legislation to ensure a high
level of protection throughout the Union and guarantee in this way the free
flow of personal data in the internal market. Within the limits of the Regulation,
Member States would maintain a certain margin of manoeuvre in the public
sector, as already specified by the proposal. As to the delegated powers, the
Commission clarified that they would ensure the appropriate adaptability of the
legislation to the ever progressing world of electronic data without the
necessity of renegotiating the act at the level of co-legislators.
4.
Conclusions
2012 brought increased awareness of the
principles of subsidiarity and proportionality in the inter-institutional
context, not least due to national Parliaments triggering the first yellow
card. Subsidiarity control and
monitoring issues also figured prominently on the agenda of the European
Parliament and the Committee of the Regions, who both adapted their internal
procedures to be able to better examine the impact and added value of their
work. EU institutions and bodies are also exploring synergies in terms
of assessing compliance with the subsidiarity and proportionality principles. As
a result, the Committee of the Regions can now feed information, at the explicit
request by the Commission, relating to the regional and local impact of a
planned proposal into the Commission’s impact assessments. The European
Parliament also strengthened its approach to assessing impact and EU added
value. 2012 saw an
intensification of discussions concerning the definition of the principles of
subsidiarity and proportionality, namely the need to better define the scope of
subsidiarity control as described in the Treaty. Although national Parliaments
see clear benefits in closer coordination of their scrutiny work and more
voices call for guidelines, they wish to maintain the right to interpret these
principles. In this context, it should be recalled that the Commission’s Impact
Assessment Guidelines[24]
already set out clearly the criteria used to assess the compliance of
Commission proposals with subsidiarity and proportionality, and the Commission
has always encouraged other institutions to apply the same criteria. Annex List of Commission initiatives on which
national Parliaments issued in 2012 reasoned opinions[25]
regarding compliance with the subsidiarity principle[26] || Commission document || Title || Reasoned opinions (Protocol 2) || National chamber submitting reasoned opinions 1 || COM(2012)130 || The exercise of the right to take collective action within the context of the freedom of establishment and the freedom to provide services (Monti II) || 12 || BE Chambre des Représentants DK Folketing FI Eduskunta FR Sénat LV Saeima LU Chambre des Députés MT Kamra tad-Deputati NL Tweede Kamer PL Sejm PT Assembleia da República UK House of Commons SE Riksdag 2 || COM(2012)617 || Fund for European Aid to the Most Deprived || 5 || DE Bundestag DK Folketing UK House of Commons UK House of Lords SE Riksdag 3 || COM(2012)380 || Periodic roadworthiness tests for motor vehicles and their trailers and repealing Directive 2009/40/EC || 5 || CY Vouli ton Antiprosopon NL Eerste Kamer NL Tweede Kamer FR Sénat SE Riksdag 4 || COM(2012)11 || Protection of individuals with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data (General Data Protection Regulation) || 4 || DE Bundesrat BE Chambre des Représentants FR Sénat SE Riksdag 5 || COM(2011)778 || Proposal amending Directive 2006/43/EC on statutory audits of annual accounts and consolidated accounts || 3 || BE Chambre des Représentants SK Národná Rada SE Riksdag 6 || COM(2011)779 || Specific requirements regarding statutory audit of public-interest entities || 3 || BE Chambre des Représentants SK Národná Rada SE Riksdag 7 || COM(2011)828 || Establishment of rules and procedures with regard to the introduction of noise-related operating restrictions at Union airports within a Balanced Approach and repealing Directive 2002/30/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council || 3 || DE Bundesrat FR Sénat NL Tweede Kamer 8 || COM(2011)897 || Award of concession contracts || 3 || DE Bundesrat AU Bundesrat ES Congreso de los Diputados/Senado 9 || COM(2012)372 || Collective management of copyright and related rights and multi-territorial licensing of rights in musical works for online uses in the internal market || 3 || FR Sénat PL Sejm SE Riksdag 10 || COM(2012)381 || Proposal amending Council Directive 1999/37/EC on the registration documents for vehicles || 3 || CY Vouli ton Antiprosopon NL Eerste Kamer NL Tweede Kamer 11 || COM(2012)382 || Proposal on the technical roadside inspection of the roadworthiness of commercial vehicles circulating in the Union and repealing Directive 2000/30/EC || 3 || CY Vouli ton Antiprosopon NL Eerste Kamer NL Tweede Kamer 12 || COM(2012)576 || Access to Genetic Resources and the Fair and Equitable Sharing of Benefits Arising from their Utilization in the Union || 3 || FR Sénat IT Senato della Repubblica SE Riksdag 13 || COM(2012)614 || Improving the gender balance among non-executive directors of companies listed on stock exchanges and related measures || 3[27] || DK Folketing NL Eerste Kamer/Tweede Kamer SE Riksdag 14 || COM(2011)821 || Common provisions for monitoring and assessing draft budgetary plans and ensuring the correction of excessive deficit of the Member States in the euro area || 2 || FR Sénat SE Riksdag 15 || COM(2012)10 || Protection of individuals with regard to the processing of personal data by competent authorities for the purposes of prevention, investigation, detection or prosecution of criminal offences or the execution of criminal penalties, and the free movement of such data || 2 || DE Bundesrat SE Riksdag 16 || COM(2012)167 || Proposal amending Regulation (EC) No 223/2009 on European statistics || 2 || AU Bundesrat ES Congreso de los Diputados/Senado 17 || COM(2012)48 || Proposal amending Directive 2001/83/EC as regards information to the general public on medicinal products subject to medical prescription amending, as regards information to the general public on medicinal products subject to medical prescription, Directive 2001/83/EC on the Community code relating to medicinal products for human use || 2 || PL Senat SE Riksdag 18 || COM(2012)49 || Proposal amending Regulation (EC) No 726/2004 as regards information to the general public on medicinal products for human use subject to medical prescription || 2 || PL Senat SE Riksdag 19 || COM(2012)84 || Transparency of measures regulating the prices of medicinal products for human use and their inclusion in the scope of public health insurance systems || 2 || AU Nationalrat LU Chambre des Députés 20 || COM(2011)793 || Alternative dispute resolution for consumer disputes and amending Regulation (EC) No 2006/2004 and Directive 2009/22/EC (Directive on consumer ADR) || 2 || DE Bundesrat NL Eerste Kamer 21 || COM(2011)895 || Procurement by entities operating in the water, energy, transport and postal services sectors || 2 || SE Riksdag UK House of Commons 22 || COM(2011)896 || Public procurement || 2 || SE Riksdag UK House of Commons 23 || COM(2011)747 || Proposal amending Regulation (EC) No 1060/2009 on credit rating agencies || 1 || SE Riksdag 24 || COM(2011)794 || Online dispute resolution for consumer disputes (Regulation on consumer ODR) || 1 || NL Eerste Kamer 25 || COM(2011)824 || Groundhandling services at Union airports and repealing Council Directive 96/67/EC || 1 || LU Chambre des Députés 26 || COM(2011)834 || Establishing a Programme for the Competitiveness of Enterprises and small and medium-sized enterprises (2014 - 2020) || 1 || SE Riksdag 27 || COM(2011)873 || Establishing the European Border Surveillance System (EUROSUR) || 1 || SE Riksdag 28 || COM(2011)877 || Proposal amending Directive 2003/98/EC on re-use of public sector information || 1 || SE Riksdag 29 || COM(2012)150 || Proposal amending Directives 1999/4/EC, 2000/36/EC, 2001/111/EC, 2001/113/EC and 2001/114/EC as regards the powers to be conferred on the Commission || 1 || AU Bundesrat 30 || COM(2012)280 || Establishing a framework for the recovery and resolution of credit institutions and investment firms and amending Council Directives 77/91/EEC and 82/891/EC, Directives 2001/24/EC, 2002/47/EC, 2004/25/EC, 2005/56/EC, 2007/36/EC and 2011/35/EC and Regulation (EU) No 1093/2010 || 1 || SE Riksdag 31 || COM(2012)35 || Statute for a European Foundation (FE) || 1 || LT Seimas 32 || COM(2012)363 || Fight against fraud to the Union's financial interests by means of criminal law || 1 || SE Riksdag 33 || COM(2012)369 || Clinical trials on medicinal products for human use, and repealing Directive 2001/20/EC || 1 || PL Sejm 34 || COM(2012)511 || Conferring specific tasks on the European Central Bank concerning policies relating to the prudential supervision of credit institutions || 1 || SE Riksdag || Reasoned opinions on proposals counted individually || || 83 || || Reasoned opinions on packages of proposals[28] || || -13 || || TOTAL || || 70 || [1] COM(2013) 565. [2] http://ec.europa.eu/governance/impact/planned_ia/planned_ia_en.htm. [3]
SEC(2009) 92. [4]
http://ec.europa.eu/governance/impact/iab/iab_en.htm. [5]
http://ec.europa.eu/governance/impact/key_docs/docs/iab_report_2012_en_final.pdf. [6] COM(2012) 514. [7] Report of the Constitutional committee of the Riksdag — 2012/13:KU8. [8]
COSAC is a Conference of the committees of the national Parliaments of the
European Union Member States dealing with the European Union affairs as well as
representatives of the European Parliament. [9] Eighteenth Bi-annual Report: Developments in European Union
Procedures and Practices Relevant to Parliamentary Scrutiny, 27 September 2012. [10] COM(2011) 344. [11] SP (2012) 766/2. [12] http://extranet.cor.europa.eu/subsidiarity/regpex/Pages/Study-on-Regional-Parliaments.aspx. [13] CDR2336-2012. [14] COM(2011) 659. [15] COM(2012) 95. [16] COM(2012) 130. [17] See Article 7(2) of Protocol No 2 on the application of the
principles of subsidiarity and proportionality. [18] Letter of 14 March 2013. [19] PV(2012) 2017; http://ec.europa.eu/transparency/regdoc/rep/10061/2012/EN/10061-2012-2017-EN-F-0.Pdf. [20] COM(2012) 617; its predecessor was the EU programme for Food
Distribution to the Most Deprived People which is to be discontinued in 2013 —
the Commission proposal COM(2010) 486 had also received three reasoned
opinions. [21] DE Bundestag, DK Folketing, UK House of Lords, UK
House of Commons and SE Riksdag. [22] Article 5 of Protocol No 2. [23] COM(2012) 11. [24] SEC(2009) 92. [25] To qualify as a reasoned opinion according to the definition in
Protocol 2, an opinion must clearly state a breach of subsidiarity and be sent
to the Commission within eight weeks of the transmission of the proposal to
national Parliaments. [26] Ranked according to number of reasoned opinions received by the
Commission between 1 January and 31 December 2012. [27] On this proposal the Commission received six reasoned opinions in
total. Three reasoned opinions (PL Sejm; PL Senat; UK House of Lords) were
received after the 31 December 2012, but before the deadline of 15 January
2013. [28] As some opinions concern packages of proposals, the table sets out
the number of reasoned opinions issued for each proposal. In order also to show
the number of reasoned opinions received by the Commission, the number of
reasoned opinions covering more proposals than one is deducted.