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Document 52012DC0191
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE COUNCIL assessing progress reported by Italy to the Commission and the Council on recovery of additional levy due by milk producers for the periods 1995/96 to 2001/02 (pursuant to Article 3 of Council Decision 2003/530/EC)
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE COUNCIL assessing progress reported by Italy to the Commission and the Council on recovery of additional levy due by milk producers for the periods 1995/96 to 2001/02 (pursuant to Article 3 of Council Decision 2003/530/EC)
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE COUNCIL assessing progress reported by Italy to the Commission and the Council on recovery of additional levy due by milk producers for the periods 1995/96 to 2001/02 (pursuant to Article 3 of Council Decision 2003/530/EC)
/* COM/2012/0191 final */
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE COUNCIL assessing progress reported by Italy to the Commission and the Council on recovery of additional levy due by milk producers for the periods 1995/96 to 2001/02 (pursuant to Article 3 of Council Decision 2003/530/EC) /* COM/2012/0191 final */
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE
COUNCIL assessing progress reported by Italy to
the Commission and the Council on recovery
of additional levy due by milk producers for the periods 1995/96 to 2001/02
(pursuant to Article 3 of
Council Decision 2003/530/EC) The present assessment report is
made by the Commission pursuant to Article 3 of Council Decision N° 2003/530/EC
of 16 July 2003 on the compatibility with the common market of an aid that the
Italian Republic intends to grant to its milk producers. Under Article 1
of that Decision, the aid, constituted by the Italian Republic itself making
payment to the Union of the amount due by milk producers by virtue of the
additional levy on milk for the period 1995/96 to 2001/02 and by allowing these
producers to pay their debt by way of deferred payment over a number of years
without interest, is exceptionally considered compatible with the common market
on condition that: –
repayment by producers be in full by yearly
instalments of equal size, and –
the repayment period not exceed 14 years,
starting from 1 January 2004. Under Article 2
of the Decision the grant of the aid is conditional on Italy declaring the
total additional levy for the periods concerned to the EAGGF and upon Italy
deducting the outstanding debt in three yearly instalments of equal size from
the expenditure financed by the EAGGF for November 2003, November 2004 and
November 2005 respectively. The declaration
by Italy of the total additional levy for the periods concerned was duly made
under cover of a letter of 26 August 2003. Deductions of the
remaining outstanding debt were duly made from expenditure financed by the
EAGGF for November 2003, 2004 and 2005. Article 3 of the
Decision requires the competent Italian authorities to report annually to the
Council and the Commission on the progress made by them in recovering the
amount due from producers by virtue of the additional levy for the period
1995-96 to 2001-02. The Italian
authorities presented their seventh report under this provision to the Commission
under cover of a letter from AGEA dated 31 October 2011 concerning the 2010
instalment payment. Payment of
levy under instalment facility. Of the
approximately 23 140 producers in total now owing levy for the 7 periods
covered by the Council Decision, but having obtained orders suspending payment
by national courts pending final rulings, 15 433 opted to pay under the
instalment scheme. Opting to pay under the instalment scheme implied withdrawal
of all pending litigation. Furthermore the failure to make any one annual
instalment payment results in exclusion from the scheme and consequently
exposes producers to seizure of the entire amount due with accrued interest. The 15 433
participating producers owed in total some € 345 million in 2004 before the
first instalment was paid, representing about one
fourth of the total outstanding amount of levy at producer level. It
therefore appears that the greater number of producers responsible for the
smaller levels of individual excess deliveries opted to enter the scheme. On
the other hand, the producers with more significant individual excess
deliveries (some 8000 producers to whom some € 1 billion in levy due over the
seven periods is billed) have instead preferred not to enter the instalment
scheme. Please note however that around 69 new applications for payment by
instalments, corresponding to roughly € 1.2 million, have been received by the
Italian authorities during 2010. The seventh
instalment was to be paid by 11 406 producers for a total amount of € 24 331
454.59 before 31 December 2010. The verifications carried out by the Italian
authorities show that 10 802 producers have duly paid amounts totalling € 22 040
163.61 during 2010. This means that 95 % of the producers have paid 90,5 % of
the levies in time under the seventh instalment. Timely payment of the first,
second, third, fourth, fifth and sixth instalments had previously been recorded
to the extent of 99,6%, 97,9%, 99,5%, 99,7%, 96,4% and 96,2% of the due amounts
respectively. The total levy collected under the first seven instalments
therefore amounts to some € 175 million (approximately 98 % of the total amount
due). Whilst these
levels are certainly indicative of an engagement on the part of the
participating producers to meet their obligations, the Commission considers
that the follow-up given to cases where the payment has not been recorded
within the time-limit is a prime indicator of the level of commitment on the
part of the authorities to ensure correct observance of the conditions of the
regime and ultimately collection in full of the levy due. In respect of the
seventh instalment, the payments have not been identified for the remaining 604
producers for a value of € 2 291 279.38. For the sixth
instalment period 148 producers failed to make payment corresponding to € 921
417.20 at the end of 2009. According to the information received from the
Italian authorities all these cases were notified by the central authorities to
the relevant regional authorities to enforce the payment of the entire amount
due with interest rate outside the instalment facility scheme. Out of the 148
producers first though not to have paid it later showed that only 23 of them
had actually not paid. This resulted in the revocation of the possibility to
pay by instalments for these producers and the launching of the enforced
recovery procedures. The Commission
also started a State aid procedure against Italy[1],
in relation to decreto-legge No 225 of 29 December 2010, approved
with amendments by law No 10 of 26 February 2011, which postponed the deadline
for the payment of the levies for the 1995-1996 and 2001-2002 campaigns (due in
principle for the 31st December 2010 according to the 2003 scheme
approved by Council Decision n°2003/530/EC) until the 30th June 2011
(see art. 2, paragraph 12-duodecies). Such postponement is indeed in conflict
with article 1, first indent of Council Decision N° 2003/530/EC, according to
which the instalments shall be paid on a yearly basis and therefore constitutes
new and illegal State aid within the meaning of Article 108 paragraph 3 TFEU. Levy due for
periods 1995-96 to 2001-02 not entered into the instalment payment scheme Reference has
been made to the relatively low uptake of the instalment payment facility in
terms of the amount of levy entered. Approximately three-fourths of the overall
outstanding amounts of unpaid levies for the concerned period have not been
entered into the instalment facility scheme. The levy not covered by the 2003
scheme corresponds (according to the last available figures from April 2010) to
€ 767 million and about 91 % of this amount, roughly € 701 million, is
instead being contested before the Italian courts. In its previous
assessment reports presented to the Council, the Commission expressed the view
that annual reports presented by Italy should specifically address litigation
pertaining to the seven periods concerned and provide details confirming
payment by producers whose litigation had failed. Without such indications the
Commission is not in a position to correctly monitor progress in collection of
that part of the levy which was not entered into the instalment payment
facility. However, the
report on the seventh instalment does not contain any information on these
court proceedings Nevertheless,
some additional information received in April 2010 by the Italian authorities
in response to a Commission request shows that the Italian administration has
been successful in cases corresponding to roughly € 13 million. The actual
collection of these amounts corresponds to € 6.8 million, and around € 580
million is still being contested in front of the Italian courts. Regrettably, the Italian authorities failed
to provide in their communication of 02 February 2011 updated figures on these
court proceedings. As regards to the system introduced in 2009 of reimbursing
levies due with an interest rate equal to a reference rate for the Union
increased by several percentage points, 332 debtors have opted for it (for a
total of € 90.5 million), while 1774 debtors have not opted for it (for a total
of € 535 million). The Commission
strongly regrets the slow progress in collection of the part of the levy which
was not entered into the instalment payment facility and the level of
information provided by the Italian authorities, which is not sufficient. The
slow progress relates both to the length of court proceedings and, in turn, the
length of the recovery of the sums where litigation has terminated (the Italian
report on the seventh instalment contains no information on recovery, but
previous information submitted in response to a Commission request demonstrates
that only some € 6.8 million had been collected up till 2010 after successful
court proceedings). Moreover, the figures representing the collection of levy
which had never in fact been contested, and therefore immediately recoverable,
reflect a deficiency in the actual collection process (about € 18 million out
of € 66 million levy never contested has up till 2010 not been collected). The Commission
has been continuing to closely follow the recovery process in Italy,
particularly the recovery of levy not covered by the instalment facility
scheme. The Commission services have on several occasions brought their
observations (including negative remarks) to the attention of the Italian
authorities and requested detailed information on different aspects concerning
the recovery of milk levy and the behaviour of the Italian authorities in front
of the Italian courts. Conclusion The Commission considers that the progress made by the Italian authorities in
recovering the amount due from producers who opted to enter the instalment
regime approved by the Council in 2003 for the periods 1995-96 to 2001-02
demonstrates relatively adequate management thereof. However, the Commission
services have also noticed that timely payment of the seventh instalment has
been recorded to the extent of 90,5%, which is the lowest among all seven
instalments (timely payment of the first, second, third, fourth, fifth and
sixth instalments had previously been recorded to the extent of 99,6%, 97,9%,
99,5%, 99,7%, 96,4% and 96,2% of the due amounts respectively). Moreover, the
Commission deplores that in the absence of any indication of amounts actually
collected from participating producers who failed to make instalment payments
and who were thereby excluded from further participation, it is not in a
position to assess the diligence employed or the progress made in the
collection of the corresponding levy. The Commission requests, as already
expressed in its previous assessment reports, that it is indispensible that future
reports from the Italian authorities contain sufficiently detailed information
on such collection. As to the amounts
of levy which were not entered into the instalment regime, and regarding which
litigation is being carried out in front of the Italian courts, the Commission
has already stated, in its assessment reports presented to the Council in 2010
and 2011, its dissatisfaction with the extremely slow progress in recovering
milk quota levies and considered that the recovery of levies in this way needs
to be improved significantly. In the lack of
sufficiently detailed information provided by the Italian authorities, as
mentioned above, the Commission is not in a position to correctly monitor
progress in collection of that part of the levy which was not entered into the
instalment payment facility. However, some limited information received in
February 2012 from the Italian authorities shows that – despite some
improvements – no major new developments are to be noticed and the
effectiveness of EU law in this case is far from being achieved with such large
amount of levies being unpaid over such a long period of time. The Commission
expects - as already requested in its previous assessment reports - future
annual reports to document the evolution of the litigation pursued for the
periods 1995/96 to 2001/02 and 2003/04 - 2008/09, and execution of final
judgements confirming levy due. [1] SA.33726