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Document 52012SC0402
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF THE IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document Proposal for a Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council on the accessibility of public sector bodies' websites
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF THE IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document Proposal for a Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council on the accessibility of public sector bodies' websites
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF THE IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document Proposal for a Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council on the accessibility of public sector bodies' websites
/* SWD/2012/0402 final */
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF THE IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document Proposal for a Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council on the accessibility of public sector bodies' websites /* SWD/2012/0402 final */
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF THE IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document Proposal for a Directive of the European Parliament and of
the Council on the accessibility of public sector bodies' websites 1. Introduction The present document
is the executive summary of the impact assessment carried out in preparation of
the proposal for the approximation of laws,
regulations, and administrative provisions of the Member States on web-accessibility. Most Member States have developed their own
policies and specifications for web-accessibility based on W3c WAI WCAG, resulting
in fragmentation of the market for web developers. By harmonising web-accessibility
specifications for a set of basic public sector services, an important step to
solve the problem of fragmentation and insecurity in the market would be achieved,
generating benefits for governments and citizens, and a bigger and better web-accessibility
market. Definitions and background Information and Communication Technologies in
general, and the Internet in particular, are major drivers of economic growth. Web-accessibility refers to principles and techniques to be observed
when constructing websites, in order to render the content of these websites
accessible to all users, in particular those with disabilities[1]. There are internationally
recognised and technology-neutral guidelines for the design of accessible
websites and content: the Success Criteria and Conformance Requirements Level
AA in version 2.0 of the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG 2.0) from
the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). A European standard that includes web
accessibility based on those guidelines is under development within the
European Commission Mandate 376. Web-accessibility is of great importance for
public sector bodies, as it allows them to extend their reach and to fulfil
their public sector responsibilities. The number of government websites (ca 380.500
in EU) and public sector websites (ca. 761.000 in the EU) is growing rapidly. While
web-accessibility is beneficial to all users, it is essential for people with
disabilities (15 % of the EU population, or 80 million people).[2] The web-accessibility market comprises all those described as web-developers: professionals and
companies specialised in designing the technical architecture and content of
web pages, parties writing software tools to create and implement web pages,
and companies providing relevant consulting services and web-development
training. In the EU, this market still has plenty of room for growth, as fewer than
10 % of websites comply with WGAC 2.0. The EU web-accessibility market is
estimated at € 2 billion, but realises less than 10 % of its
potential. Harmonisation will lead to better market conditions, more jobs, lower
web-accessibility costs and more accessible websites: a triple win for
governments, businesses, and citizens. 2. Policy context,
Procedural issues and consultation A significant number
of Member States (21) have already taken measures on web-accessibility; and others
will probably follow, as Most member States have ratified the United Nations
Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. Nevertheless, there are
significant and evident differences among the Member States with regard to their
legislative approaches. Many
political initiatives relate to web-accessibility: the European Disability
Strategy 2010-2020 (ICT accessibility); the eGovernment Action Plan 2011-2015 (inclusive
and accessible eGovernment services); the ‘Digital Agenda for Europe’ (Commission proposes to ensure fully-accessible public sector
websites by 2015). EU funding programmes (FP7, CIP) support R&D of
technological web-accessibility solutions. Web-accessibility will also be
stimulated by the Commission’s Standardisation Mandate 376 (for functional-accessibility
requirements for ICT products, services and web-content, to be used in public
procurement procedures) and the revision of the Public Procurement Directives. Numerous public consultations and
analytical studies have been carried out to identify problems and needs,
addressing relevant stakeholders, including Member States’ representatives, industry
and civil-society organisations. An Impact Assessment Steering Group, led by
the Directorate General for the Information Society and Media, was established
with a wide representation of services and departments of the Commission. These
included the Legal Service, the Secretariat-General, and the
Directorates-General Communication; Economic and Financial Affairs; Employment,
Social Affairs and Inclusion; Enterprise and Industry; Eurostat; Health and
Consumers; Informatics; Internal Market and Services; and Justice. Their task
has been to analyse and discuss the issues and perspectives relevant to this
proposal on web accessibility. Drafts of
the Impact Assessment report were submitted to the Impact Assessment Board and
its final version incorporates responses to the Board’s recommendations. 3. Problem Definition Despite ten years of voluntary EU policy
actions, including Council conclusions, Parliament resolutions, Commission
communications and Ministerial declarations, there has been no adequate
progress on web-accessibility. Market fragmentation and insecurity are at the
root of the problem. The internal web-accessibility market does not function
properly. Web-developers face barriers in the form of additional
production costs if they operate across borders. Enterprises, SMEs in
particular, do not have the knowledge and capacity to cope with all the different
specifications and procedures. This hampers competition and economic growth. Website
owners receive fewer and more expensive bids to provide services. Web-accessibility
users may be confronted with non-interoperable web browsers, screen readers
or other assistive technologies. The consequence could be different and
disruptive user-experiences in different countries. In
addition for people with functional limitations, including people with
disabilities, there is a risk of a growing social exclusion. Member States cannot benefit from sharing experiences in responding to societal
and technological developments. Without harmonisation at EU level of web-accessibility
requirements, fragmentation and uncertainty in the web-accessibility market
cannot be reduced. Such harmonisation would help fulfil existing political
commitments and would ensure the effectiveness of the European and
international standardisation efforts for accessibility (e.g. Mandate 376 and new
ISO/IEC 40500), the upcoming European Accessibility Act and the revised Public Procurement
Directives. The proposal could be limited to public
sector websites, as this alone would result in a
sizable market for web-developers. Since the Member
States cannot achieve a single web-accessibility market, the Union proposes to
adopt measures, while respecting subsidiarity and proportionality, on the legal
basis of Article 114.1 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European
Union. This states that the Commission ‘shall adopt the measures
for the approximation of the provisions laid down by law, regulation or
administrative action in Member States which have as their object the
establishment and functioning of the internal market’. Now is the time
to act, as modest intervention now can prevent extensive
reparative measures later. 4. Objectives General
objectives include improving the internal
market for web-accessibility-related products and services, and augmenting the
number of accessible websites. Specific objectives include harmonised requirements
for a minimum list of types of public sector websites and promoting
web-accessibility for public sector websites beyond this list. The main operational
objective is to achieve by 2015 full web-accessibility for all public
sector websites on the list mentioned. 5. Policy options The Digital Agenda for Europe (DAE)[3] announced: “The Commission
will, based on a review of options, make proposals by 2011 that will make sure
that public sector websites (and websites providing basic services to citizens)
are fully accessible by 2015”. Three policy options have been identified: 1 — Baseline Scenario (‘no additional action’) 2 — A Recommendation (‘soft
law’) This option concerns the adoption of a
Recommendation expressing a common approach for Web-accessibility, in
particular the implementation of the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG
2.0 level AA) for a minimum list of types of public sector websites concerned. 3 — Legally binding measure A legally binding measure, to approximate
the laws, regulations and administrative provisions of the Member
States on web-accessibility, lays down the rules for making a minimum list of
public sector websites accessible, according to harmonised web-accessibility
requirements. Member States are still free to extend the approximated
provisions to other types of public sector websites. The proposal specifies the common requirements for web-accessibility
and the recognition and referral to relevant standards. . The
proposal follows the usual approach to standardisation based on presumption of
conformity and is in line with the modernised approach for dealing
with ICT standards. . Member
States shall have their laws, regulations and administrative provisions in
place by 30 June 2014 and apply their measures by 31 December 2015. They shall
participate via their standardisation organisations and via relevant committees
and platforms in the establishment of a harmonised standard for web
accessibility and in the definition of both the monitoring methodology and the
reporting arrangements. In addition, Member States shall promote web-accessibility
in general and cooperate with industry and civil society to exchange best
practices and review new developments. A Directive is the
appropriate instrument because of its flexibility. It would respect the fact that
some Member States already have related legislation in place. Moreover, Member
States could extend the minimum list of types of websites and organise implementation
(such as the way complaints are handled) in their preferred way. A Regulation would be
immediately enforceable and would probably make it possible to fulfil the DAE
commitments in time. However, web-developers would incur considerable
compliancy costs even if they were to operate only in their own country. 5.1. Deferred and discarded
options Civil organisations such
as AGE, ANEC, EBU[4],
and EDF[5]
have asked for the scope to be extended to other relevant websites (e.g. with ‘basic
services to citizens’). This sub-option has been deferred, because the scope would
then extend to the private sector with different specificities, domain already
considered for coverage in the European Accessibility Act under parallel
preparation. Three additional
options were considered but have been discarded because they failed to tackle market
fragmentation, could question proportionality or imposed a considerable
administrative burden. These were, respectively, a legally binding measure
based on the combat of discrimination according to art. 19 of the TFEU, the use
of public procurement legislation and the extension of the proposal to either authoring
tools or assistive technologies. 6. Analysis of impacts 6.1. Policy Option 1: Baseline scenario — no change in
policies The impact of continued weak EU
coordination would be limited: slow progress on web-accessibility, with new national
measures causing further fragmentation. Economic impacts: Web developers would still face high entry barriers for
cross-border sales of products and services, and smaller domestic demand.
Public administrations would not benefit from better offers and from sharing their
approaches. They would not be able to benefit from taking off-line information
and services on-line. Social impact: Persisting ‘Digital exclusion’ of those not able to benefit from
on-line facilities (e.g. for employability). Political impact: The efficiency of service provision and social responsibility
would be in jeopardy. Commitments, as those in the Digital Agenda for Europe,
could not be achieved. 6.2. Policy Option 2: Adoption of a Recommendation (‘soft law’) The impact of a Recommendation depends on
the willingness of Member States. It would not guarantee that the fragmentation
problem would be tackled. Studies and consultations show that this approach
over the past ten years has not been able to resolve the problems and remove
the drivers behind these. Economic impacts: Web-developers might still be confronted with a fragmented
internal market. If all Member States did fully endorse the recommendation, the
net-benefits would be similar to those in section 6.3 below. Social impacts: Possibly persisting ‘Digital exclusion’ of those not able to
benefit from on-line facilities (e.g. for searching job opportunities). Political/reputational impacts: similar risks as in option 1. 6.3. Policy Option 3 — legislative measure based on Internal
Market Economic impacts If the six Member
States without existing web-accessibility measures would have zero web-accessibility in their public sector web sites, they
would have to invest between € 37 and 88 million to achieve 100 %
compliance. The yearly expenditures are estimated at € 41 million,
assuming redevelopment of one third of these websites and maintenance and
monitoring of web-accessibility for the rest. For the 21 Member States with existing
web-accessibility measures, additional investments are minimal, since the public
sector websites concerned fall under the existing national regulation. The
proposed measure will accelerate implementation and lower prices, while giving
a clear schedule of delivery. Countries that adhere to WCAG 1.0 (e.g. UK) would
save money, as the ‘(re-)development’ of websites according to WCAG 2.0 is about
8 % cheaper. For Member States that follow (variations of) WCAG 2.0 the prices
eventually decline because of improved competition and cheaper
web-accessibility tools. The reporting schemes for common monitoring
and Information Obligations would cost around € 1.65 million. To achieve 100 %
compliance of the websites concerned in one year for the entire EU would take
an investment between € 260
and 560 million. Suppliers
of web accessibility services would benefit from economies of scale, due to
a larger market and a lower go-to-market price for their services. Economic benefits for governments from reaching a wider population could be considerable. Table 1 below
indicates the cost and benefits if 100% web-accessibility is achieved – after
EU intervention - within a year. In that case the benefits outweigh the costs in
both the high and low scenario. The effect would be even stronger if they were
spread over a 3- or 5-year period. People with disabilities || Low estimate (Simple websites) || High estimate (Large websites) || Benefits || Costs || Costs Reach in % || Net benefits || Net benefits || Basic public sector services || Low estimate (Simple websites) || High estimate (Large websites) 100 || 487.327.060 || 191.147.305 || 747.750.307 || 260.423.247 || 556.603.002 75 || 300.389.484 || 4.209.728 || 560.812.730 || 260.423.247 || 556.603.002 50 || 113.451.907 || -182.727.849 || 373.875.153 || 260.423.247 || 556.603.002 25 || -73.485.670 || -369.665.425 || 186.937.577 || 260.423.247 || 556.603.002 5 || -223.035.731 || -519.215.487 || 37.387.515 || 260.423.247 || 556.603.002 Table 1 Calculation of net
benefits of reaching full compliance with WCAG 2.0 in EU27 Costs and
benefits for the six Member States without web-accessibility policies to reach 100 %
web-accessibility for basic public sector services within 3 years, is estimated
in Table 2. Target group (people with disabilities) || Low estimate (Simple websites) || High estimate (Large websites) || Benefits || Costs || Costs || Reach in % || Net benefits || Net benefits || Basic public sector services || Simple websites || Larger websites || 100 || 31.502.980 || 14.597.479 || 43.780.725 || 12.277.745 || 29.183.246 75 || 20.557.798 || 3.652.298 || 32.835.544 || 12.277.745 || 29.183.246 50 || 9.612.617 || -7.292.883 || 21.890.362 || 12.277.745 || 29.183.246 25 || -1.332.564 || -18.238.064 || 10.945.181 || 12.277.745 || 29.183.246 5 || -10.088.709 || -26.994.209 || 2.189.036 || 12.277.745 || 29.183.246 Table 2 Cost of reaching full compliance in the six
EU Member States with no web-accessibility measures Economic benefits for web-developers would be substantial, as they could improve their economies of scale
and make attractive bids in adjacent markets. This measure could create a cascade
of spillovers to other public sector bodies' websites. Social impacts and sensitivity analysis: Better opportunities for economic and social participation for
many citizens, in particular older people and those with functional
limitations. Better job opportunities across Europe for experts on
web-accessibility with disabilities. Monetary impacts would be € 400
Million for every 1 % increase in labour participation, € 30 million in
time saving for every 1 % increase of online access and € 300 million
for every 10 % increase in online shopping. 7. Preferred option Option 3 is recommended as the preferred
option. 8. Monitoring and evaluation Member States shall monitor on a
continuous basis the conformity of the websites concerned with the
web-accessibility requirements. A common methodology will be established by the
Commission together with Member States, to be published in the Official
Journal of the European Union. Member
States shall report annually on the sampling of the websites concerned and the
results of their monitoring activities. Their reports should also include their
decisions on possible extensions of the list of types of public sector websites
and any other additional measures. 8.1. Prospective evaluations The Commission
shall review the application of this directive within three years from its
entry into force. [1] According to the United Nations Convention on the
Rights of Persons with Disabilities, persons with disabilities include
those who have long-term physical, mental, intellectual or sensory impairments
which in interaction with various barriers may hinder their full and effective
participation in society on an equal basis with others. [2] See website European Disability Forum: http://www.edf-feph.org/Page_Generale.asp?DocID=12534.
[3] https://ec.europa.eu/digital-agenda/ [4] European Blind Union [5] European Disability Forum