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LEADER+
The Community Initiative Leader+ is part of the Community's rural development policy, the second pillar of the common agricultural policy (CAP). In the period 2000-06, it is geared to the diversification of economic activity in rural areas by applying innovative, integrated and participative territorial development strategies. This communication defines the Commission's guidelines for Leader+, focusing on cooperation between territories and networking.
ACT
Commission Communication of 14 April 2000 to the Member States laying down guidelines for the Community Initiative for Rural Development (Leader+) [See amending acts].
SUMMARY
Changes in the agricultural sector as a result of the reform of the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) and the increasing demands of consumers, environmental pressure, the rapid spread of new technology, the ageing population and rural depopulation are all factors affecting the countryside today. Under the Community's innovative rural development policy, rural areas have embarked on a debate on their socio-economic role and are making structural adjustments in order to meet these important challenges effectively.
As the second pillar of the CAP and a major factor in economic and social cohesion, the Community's rural development policy is not restricted to boosting the competitiveness of agriculture. It also encourages the development of new activities and sources of employment. The Community Initiatives Leader I (1991-94) and Leader II (1994-99) also played an experimental role, which has made it possible to define and implement innovative, integrated and participative local schemes.
All those participating in the experiment had such a positive overall view of it that the Commission wished to proceed further along this road. It therefore included Leader+, the new Community Initiative for rural development, in the general rules on the Structural Funds for the 2000-06 programming period.
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Objectives
Drawing on the specific resources of rural areas as part of a development strategy which is relevant and tailored to the local circumstances seems increasingly to be the only way of adapting them to an ever-changing socio-economic context.
Leader I and II taught the following lessons:
The Leader+ Initiative continues its role as a laboratory, which can encourage the emergence of new approaches to integrated and sustainable rural development. These approaches will complement national and European rural development policy in the context of the "mainstream" programmes, in particular under Objective 1, Objective 2 and Objective 3 of the Structural Funds.
The aim of Leader+ is thus to encourage rural actors to think about the longer-term potential of their area. The local actors implement the original strategy that they themselves have designed, experimenting with new ways of:
Cooperation is a key component of Leader+, be it between different areas in the same Member State, between rural areas in several Member States and even beyond if necessary. Relevant new rural development models will be exploited and disseminated through a major networking exercise.
Financial provisions
The Community budget for Leader+ for 2000-06 is 2 020 million at 1999 prices under the European Agricultural Guidance and Guarantee Fund (EAGGF) Guidance Section.
Leader+ supports all measures eligible for financing by the EAGGF Guidance Section, the ERDF and the European Social Fund. All expenditure related to participating in the networks and running them, providing information, and managing, monitoring and evaluating the programme is eligible for part-financing. With the exception of small-scale projects, investments in infrastructure and productive investments of a unit cost higher than a certain ceiling are not eligible.
The rules on the rates of Community contribution laid down in the general Regulation of the Structural Funds apply. In particular, the maximum EAGGF Guidance Section contribution is 75% of the total eligible volume in the regions covered by Objective 1 and 50% in other areas.
SCOPE
Unlike Leader I and II, all rural areas are eligible under Leader+, in particular those which did not take part in the earlier Community Initiatives. In order to concentrate Community resources on the most promising proposals, Community funding under actions 1 and 2 is granted to a limited number of rural territories only. Accordingly, the national authorities must set up an open and rigorous procedure for selecting which rural areas may benefit under Leader+ through one (or more) national call(s) for proposals. Selection is based on general criteria laid down in the Commission's guidelines and specific criteria taking account of both the specific situation of the rural areas concerned and the objectives that the Member States are seeking to attain through Leader+.
The rural areas designated do not necessarily coincide with national administrative boundaries or with zones established for the purpose of eligibility under Objectives 1 and 2 of the Structural Funds. These are small rural territories which form a homogeneous unit in geographical, economic and social terms and which have the resources needed to implement a development strategy. As a general rule, the population of the territories selected should not number less than 10 000 inhabitants, and not more than 100 000 in the most densely populated areas (around 120 inhabitants/km²). However, in some areas of northern Europe, properly justified exceptions to these criteria may be accepted.
BENEFICIARIES
The final beneficiaries of assistance under Leader+ are the local action groups (LAGs). These groups draw up the development strategy for their territory and are responsible for implementing it on the basis of a specific development plan.
The LAGs create an open local partnership which clearly allocates the powers and responsibilities to the different partners. They are made up of a balanced and representative selection of partners drawn from the different socio-economic sectors in the local area. The economic and social partners and non-profit (voluntary) associations must make up at least 50% of the local partnership.
The members of the LAGs must be locally based. They either select an administrative and financial head qualified to administer public funds, or come together in a legally-constituted common structure which fulfils the same function.
ACTIONS
Leader+ is structured around three actions:
Action 1: Integrated territorial rural development strategies of a pilot nature
This action provides support for rural areas which devise and implement an integrated and sustainable pilot development strategy. These territories present the national authorities with a development plan based on a representative partnership and structured around a strong theme typical of the identity of the territory concerned.
The development plans drawn up by the LAGs must take into account the following:
Action 2: Support for cooperation between rural territories
Only the areas selected for Action 1 of Leader+ are eligible for Action 2, which supports cooperation between rural territories. Under Action 2, financial assistance covers both upstream expenditure on technical assistance to set up cooperation and the joint project proper.
Cooperation often enables rural territories to achieve the critical mass necessary for a joint project to be viable and encourage complementary actions between partners. It involves pooling know-how and/or human and financial resources which are usually dispersed across the territories. Two types of cooperation are possible:
Action 3: Networking
Exchanging know-how, experience and information on rural development successes is a priority of Leader+. Active participation in the network is therefore mandatory for beneficiaries under the Initiative.
The networking of all rural areas in the European Union, whether or not they are beneficiaries under Leader+, and all rural development actors, such as the rural information and promotion carrefours, which act as relays for information about the European Union located in rural areas, stimulates cooperation and the exchange of expertise.
Each Member State lays down the rules needed to set up a network organisation unit at national level. The job of this unit is to coordinate the network, identify, analyse and disseminate good practice, organise exchanges of experience and know-how for the benefit of less-advanced territories and provide technical assistance for local and transnational cooperation.
The Commission is setting up an Observatory of rural areas at European level, which may not cost more than 2% of the total budget for Leader+. The Observatory will be responsible for organising the network of rural territories at Community level, for the purpose of:
IMPLEMENTATION
Leader+ Community Initiative programmes
The Commission makes an indicative financial allocation to each Member State (see the table at the end of this sheet). On this basis, the Member States consult the most representative partners at all the appropriate levels. The Member States then have six months following the publication of the Commission's guidelines in the Official Journal in which to submit their Leader+ Community Initiative Programme (CIP) to the Commission. The Commission must approve these programmes within five months of receiving them, whereupon it adopts the contribution of the EAGGF Guidance Section. 56 programmes were approved in 2001, of which 11 were at national level and 45 regional. The 17 remaining programmes will be adopted during the first quarter of 2002 (see the summary table at the end of this sheet).
The Member States all opted to draw up Operational Programmes accompanied by a programming complement. In line with the results of the ex ante evaluation, all the CIPs deal with:
Management, control, monitoring and evaluation
The parts of the general Regulation on the Structural Funds dealing with the management, control, monitoring and evaluation of assistance apply to the Leader+ Initiative.
In terms of financial management, programmes must clearly describe the management arrangements and the procedures for the mobilisation and circulation of financial flows, in particular of Community funds. Moreover, the procedures set up must ensure effective control of expenditure.
At the level of the LAGs, a monitoring committee monitors the operations using financial and structural indicators to analyse financial execution, the actual implementation of operations and their impact on the territory. The results are then transmitted to the European Observatory for processing and dissemination. At regional and national level, a steering committee must meet at least once a year to analyse the progress on implementing Leader+.
To find out about the Community Initiative Programmes at the relevant level in each Member State, please consult the pages on Leader+ on the Directorate-General for Agriculture's website.
References
Act |
Entry into force |
Deadline for transposition in the Member States |
Official Journal |
Commission communication of 14 April 2000 |
- |
- |
C 139 of 18.5.2000 |
Amending act(s) |
Entry into force |
Deadline for transposition in the Member States |
Official Journal |
Commission communication |
- |
- |
C 262 of 31.10.2003 |
Commission communication |
- |
- |
C 294 of 4.12.2003 |
RELATED ACTS
Commission Decision C (2000) 1220 of 12 May 2000 fixing an indicative allocation by Member State of the commitment appropriations under the Community Initiative Leader+ for the period 2000-06. The allocation is as follows:
Member State |
Amounts(in million) |
Belgium |
15 |
Denmark |
16 |
Germany |
247 |
Greece |
172 |
Spain |
467 |
France |
252 |
Ireland |
45 |
Italy |
267 |
Luxembourg |
2 |
Netherlands |
78 |
Austria |
71 |
Portugal |
152 |
Finland |
52 |
Sweden |
38 |
United Kingdom |
106 |
European network |
40 |
Total |
2020 |
Commission Decisions approving the national/regional Community Initiative Programmes for Leader+:
Member State |
Decision |
SPAIN |
18 programmes |
Andalusia |
C(2001) 2158 of 5.9.2001 |
Aragon |
C(2001) 2067 of 31.7.2001 |
Asturias |
C(2001) 2857 of 18.10.2001 |
Balearic Islands |
C(2001) 4206 of 17.12.2001 |
Catalonia |
C(2001) 2128 of 27.8.2001 |
Castile-León, |
C(2001) 2176 of 20.8.2001 |
Castile-La Mancha |
C(2001) 2066 of 31.7.2001 |
Canary Islands |
C(2001) 2177 of 20.8.2001 |
Cantabria |
C(2001) 2065 of 31.7.2001 |
Extremadura |
C(2001) 2159 of 5.9.2001 |
Galicia |
C(2001) 2179 of 20.8.2001 |
Madrid |
C(2001) 2068 of 31.7.2001 |
Murcia |
C(2001) 2183 of 23.8.2001 |
Navarre |
C(2001) 2184 of 23.8.2001 |
Basque Country |
C(2002) 210 of 8.2.2002 |
Rioja |
C(2001) 2178 of 20.8.2001 |
Valencia |
C(2001) 2761 of 1.10.2001 |
Network |
C(2001) 1245 of 18.5.2001 |
FRANCE |
1 national programme: C(2001) 2094 of 7.8.2001 |
NETHERLANDS |
4 programmes |
North |
C(2001) 1298 of 31.7.2001 |
East |
C(2001) 1299 of 30.7.2001 |
West |
C(2001) 1297 of 30.7.2001 |
South |
C(2001) 1300 of 31.7.2001 |
ITALY |
22 programmes |
Abruzzo |
C(2001) 4207 of 17.12.2001 |
Basilicata |
C(2002)247 of 19.2.2002 |
Bolzano |
C(2001) 2743 of 25.09.2001 |
Calabria |
C(2002) 246 of 19.2.2002 |
Campania |
C(2002) 168 of 29.1.2002 |
Emilia-Romagna |
C(2001) 3561 of 19.11.2001 |
Friuli-Venezia Giulia |
C(2001) 3563 of 19.11.2001 |
Lazio |
C(2001) 3626 of 26.11.2001 |
Liguria |
C(2001) 3559 of 19.11.2001 |
Lombardy |
C(2001) 3560 of 19.11.2001 |
Marche |
C(2001) 4144 of 13.12.2001 |
Molise |
C(2002) 250 of 19.2.2002 |
Piedmont |
C(2001) 3558 of 19.11.2001 |
Apulia |
C(2002) 171 of 29.1.2002 |
Sardinia |
C(2002) 248 of 19.2.2002 |
Sicily |
C(2002) 249 of 19.2.2001 |
Tuscany |
C(2001) 4012 of 3.12.2001 |
Trentino |
C(2001) 3490 of 7.11.2001 |
Umbria |
C(2001) 3489 of 7.11.2001 |
Valle d'Aosta |
C(2001) 2744 of 25.09.2001 |
Veneto |
C(2001) 3564 of 19.11.2001 |
Network |
C(2002) 251 of 19.2.2002 |
GERMANY |
14 programmes |
Baden-Württemberg |
C(2002) 110 of 12.3.2002 |
Bavaria |
C(2001) 1314 of 17.12.2001 |
Brandenburg |
C(2002) 1308 of 9.1.2002 |
Hessen |
C(2002) 108 of 22.3.2002 |
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern |
C(2002) 109 of 13.2.2002 |
Lower Saxony |
C(2001) 1312 of 17.12.2001 |
North Rhine -Westphalia |
C(2001) 1305 of 22.11.2001 |
Rhineland-Palatinate |
C(2002) 107 of 30.1.2002 |
Saxony |
C(2002) 106 of 29.1.2002 |
Schleswing-Holstein |
C(2001) 1306 of 29.11.2001 |
Saarland |
C(2002) 4699 of 19.12.2002 |
Saxony-Anhalt |
C(2001) 1303 of 3.12.2001 |
Thuringia |
C(2001) 1311 of 17.12.2001 |
Network |
C(2001) 1304 of 22.11.2001 |
DENMARK |
1 programmeC(2001) 2129 of 27.08.2001 |
UNITED KINGDOM |
4 programmes |
England |
C(2001) 2100 of 9.8.2001 |
Wales |
C(2001) 1379 of 2.7.2001 |
Northern Ireland |
C(2001) 2741 of 21.9.2001 |
Scotland |
C(2002) 37 of 8.1.2002 |
BELGIUM |
2 programmes |
Flanders |
C(2001) 4738 of 20.12.2001 |
Wallonia |
C(2001) 4202 of 17.12.2001 |
LUXEMBOURG |
1 programmeC(2001) 1315 of 13.12.2001 |
FINLAND |
1 programmeC(2001) 785 of 22.3.2001 |
SWEDEN |
1 programmeC(2001) 1383 of 3.7.2001 |
PORTUGAL |
1 programmeC(2001) 3148 of 25.7.2001 |
GREECE |
1 programmeC(2001) 3562 of 19.11.2001 |
IRELAND |
1 programmeC(2001) 1296 of 3.7.2001 |
Last updated: 04.05.2004