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Document 52016AE2295
Opinion of the European Economic and Social Committee on the ‘Proposal for a Decision of the European Parliament and of the Council on establishing an information exchange mechanism with regard to intergovernmental agreements and non-binding instruments between Member States and third countries in the field of energy and repealing Decision No 994/2012/EU’ (COM(2016) 53 final)
Opinion of the European Economic and Social Committee on the ‘Proposal for a Decision of the European Parliament and of the Council on establishing an information exchange mechanism with regard to intergovernmental agreements and non-binding instruments between Member States and third countries in the field of energy and repealing Decision No 994/2012/EU’ (COM(2016) 53 final)
Opinion of the European Economic and Social Committee on the ‘Proposal for a Decision of the European Parliament and of the Council on establishing an information exchange mechanism with regard to intergovernmental agreements and non-binding instruments between Member States and third countries in the field of energy and repealing Decision No 994/2012/EU’ (COM(2016) 53 final)
OJ C 487, 28.12.2016, p. 81–85
(BG, ES, CS, DA, DE, ET, EL, EN, FR, HR, IT, LV, LT, HU, MT, NL, PL, PT, RO, SK, SL, FI, SV)
28.12.2016 |
EN |
Official Journal of the European Union |
C 487/81 |
Opinion of the European Economic and Social Committee on the ‘Proposal for a Decision of the European Parliament and of the Council on establishing an information exchange mechanism with regard to intergovernmental agreements and non-binding instruments between Member States and third countries in the field of energy and repealing Decision No 994/2012/EU’
(COM(2016) 53 final)
(2016/C 487/13)
Rapporteur: |
Vladimír NOVOTNÝ |
Consultation |
European Commission, 16/02/2016 Council, 02/03/2016 European Parliament, 07/03/2016 |
Legal basis |
Articles 194(2) and 304 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union. |
Section responsible |
Section for Transport, Energy, Infrastructure and the Information Society |
Adopted in section |
07/09/2016 |
Adopted at plenary |
21/09/2016 |
Plenary session No |
519 |
Outcome of vote (for/against/abstentions) |
139/0/4 |
1. Conclusions and recommendations
1.1. |
The EESC welcomes the Commission’s proposal and the proposal for a decision as a whole, and sees it as a step towards strengthening legal certainty in the area of energy investment and related infrastructure projects, increasing transparency with regard to security of gas supplies, and improving the functioning of the internal energy market. |
1.2. |
The EESC is in favour of carrying out, by means of an ‘ex-ante’ mechanism, an evaluation of international agreements in the energy sector that are concluded with third parties (IGA), as a means of avoiding the risk that agreements could come into conflict with EU law and the requirements of the internal energy market. At the same time, it considers prevention in this case to be a more effective approach than ex-post corrective measures. |
1.3. |
The EESC proposes that the procedure of notification and verification prior to the conclusion (ex ante) of international agreements in the energy sector be restricted to agreements on supplying gas in the Member States, which is the most sensitive energy commodity as it is usually supplied to several EU Member States. |
1.4. |
The EESC takes the view that the revised decision should only concern the drafting of framework agreements with a direct impact on the internal market of the Union and/or the security of energy supply, and the Commission should only assess whether or not the proposed IGA that is submitted to it complies with EU law. |
1.5. |
Better protection of confidential information throughout the process of preparing the IGA will be one of the conditions for the successful implementation of the proposed notification and verification procedures with regard to international agreements on energy that are in preparation or under negotiation. |
1.6. |
In the EESC’s view, the ex-post legal and administrative procedures that are currently in force should be used to evaluate other energy agreements. However, at the same time it suggests that consideration could be given to Member States being able to voluntarily submit these agreements for an ex-ante evaluation at their own request. |
1.7. |
The EESC also considers that the proposed twelve-week period available for the Commission to issue an unfavourable opinion, in the event that the draft agreement is deemed incompatible with EU law, should be the maximum time limit. After this period is over it will be assumed that the Commission has accepted the proposed agreement and that negotiations to conclude the IGA can move forward. |
2. Introduction
2.1. |
The Proposal for a Decision of the European Parliament and of the Council on establishing an information exchange mechanism with regard to intergovernmental agreements between Member States and third countries in the field of energy is part of the European Commission’s ‘winter package’, which focuses on the security of energy supplies as part of the Energy Union project. This package focuses primarily on gas supplies from third countries. |
2.2. |
In 2015, the Commission embarked upon an evaluation — with a view to revision — of the effectiveness of Decision No 994/2012/EU of 25 October 2012 on intergovernmental agreements, which established an information exchange mechanism for energy agreements between Member States and third countries. |
2.3. |
The Commission’s evaluation report concludes that the current decisions do not fulfil one of their main aims, which is to ensure that intergovernmental agreements comply with European Union law. The Commission identified three root causes of this problem:
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2.4. |
The Commission has drawn up a proposal for a decision to repeal Decision No 994/2012/EU. It contains several significant changes aimed at tackling the findings of the review of that decision. This revision has two main objectives:
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3. Commission document
3.1. |
The proposal for a revised decision contains the following elements: |
3.1.1. |
Notification obligations with regard to intergovernmental agreements:
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3.1.2. |
Evaluation by the Commission:
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3.1.3. |
Notification obligations and evaluation by the Commission with respect to non-binding instruments:
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3.2. |
According to the Commission, this decision is expected to favour:
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4. General comments
4.1. |
The EESC has already addressed the issue of agreements in the energy sector in connection with preparations for Decision No 994/2012/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council in 2012 (1). In its opinion, the EESC emphasised that energy agreements should be guided by both strategic and commercial considerations, while at the same time respecting the principles of proportionality and transparency. |
4.2. |
The Committee regretted, inter alia, that the draft decision did not cover significant trade agreements by private parties in the energy sector extending to several Member States, in which there was a risk of conflict with EU law. It warned of potential threats that could arise where strategic partnerships might lead to the enforced adoption of practices imposed by non-EU interests where these may prove to be detrimental. |
4.3. |
With regard to the proposed decision of the EP and the Council revising Decision No 994/2012/EU of the European Parliament and the Council, European employers’ organisations have expressed their reservations in their capacity as key partners in social dialogue and representatives of organised civil society. The employers’ associations maintain that the ex-post mechanism is sufficient. They stress that the evaluation should be targeted at agreements that have an impact upon the internal energy market or the security of energy supply. |
4.4. |
Civil society organisations and a certain number of Member States have also insisted that liability be imposed where there is leakage of sensitive information and the requirement to provide adequate protection for commercial interests. They also supported the exclusion of agreements between private entities and those based on Euratom mechanisms from the scope of the decision and put forward the requirement that the revision of Decision No 994/2012/EU should as a whole respect the freedoms of enterprise and commerce, the protection of trade secrets and the right to good administration. |
4.5. |
During public consultations carried out as part of the proceedings, similar objections were also raised by interested parties, including European sectoral organisations and regulatory organisations. They highlighted, among other things, the fact that the Commission’s supporting documents [SWD(2016) 28 final] do not provide sufficient proof or compelling, evidence-based arguments enabling the reader to legitimately conclude that the legislation currently in force does not fulfil its objectives and must therefore be replaced by new legislation. Stricter enforcement of the existing decision could enable problems with international agreements to be addressed without the need to resort to fresh legislation. |
4.6. |
With a view to reaching an appropriate compromise, in the present opinion the EESC draws on comments and objections set out above from across the spectrum of civil society organisations, as well as on the Commission’s own arguments. It also draws on the conclusions of the EU Energy Council. |
4.7. |
On the basis of the Commission’s experience regarding the difficulty of modifying international agreements that have already been concluded in the energy sector where an inconsistency with EU law is discovered after the fact, the EESC supports the proposal to apply the ex-ante mechanism as a means of preventing violations of EU law and the rules of the internal energy market in cases that are relevant to the EU as a whole or that affect several Member States. |
4.8. |
The EESC takes the view that the revised decision should therefore only affect major intergovernmental agreements with third parties that have a direct impact on the internal market of the Union and/or the security of energy supply, and the Commission should only assess whether or not the proposed IGA that is presented to it complies with EU law. |
4.9. |
The Commission should not be given any specific mandate when it provides assistance to a Member State that is negotiating a small IGA of limited importance. At the same time, the option should be maintained for Member States to themselves request advice from the Commission, with the aim of preventing conflict between the negotiated agreement and EU law. In such cases, the Commission should be bound by strict deadlines to provide relevant information. |
5. Specific comments
5.1. |
The EESC thinks that the control mechanism should continue to apply only to international agreements on gas supplies. |
5.2. |
The Committee endorses the Commission’s view that the obligations set out by the proposal for a decision should not apply to agreements concluded between private entities. It does, nevertheless, recommend that application of the proposed ex-ante mechanism be considered in the case of agreements in the private sector that may have a significant impact on the internal energy market or the security of energy supply. However, the rules for this procedure must be clearly determined. |
5.3. |
The EESC expects accountability to be enshrined in cases where commercially sensitive information is lost and such cases to be examined in the light of criminal law. |
5.4. |
The EESC does not think it necessary or beneficial for the decision under consideration to apply to non-legally binding instruments (Article 2 of the proposal). |
5.5. |
The Committee expresses doubts regarding the Commission’s statement that the proposal will not have any impact on the EU budget. In particular, in cases where the ex-ante mechanism is extended to agreements between private entities, both administrative costs and administrative burdens are likely to rise. The EESC would have liked to see an analysis of how the principle of solidarity will be respected and the principle of proportionality upheld in the new decision. |
5.6. |
The EESC approves the Commission’s proposal to maintain the optional nature of the advice it provides (Article 4 of the proposal): its assistance should never be obligatory in negotiations between a Member State and a third country. |
Brussels, 21 September 2016.
The President of the European Economic and Social Committee
Georges DASSIS