ISSN 1725-2423

doi:10.3000/17252423.C_2011.127.eng

Official Journal

of the European Union

C 127

European flag  

English edition

Information and Notices

Volume 54
29 April 2011


Notice No

Contents

page

 

IV   Notices

 

NOTICES FROM EUROPEAN UNION INSTITUTIONS, BODIES, OFFICES AND AGENCIES

 

Council

2011/C 127/01

Council conclusions inviting the introduction of the European Case Law Identifier (ECLI) and a minimum set of uniform metadata for case law

1

 

European Commission

2011/C 127/02

Euro exchange rates

8

2011/C 127/03

Commission notice concerning the quantity not applied for to be added to the quantity fixed for the subperiod 1 July to 30 September 2011 under certain quotas opened by the European Union for poultrymeat, eggs and egg albumin

9

 

NOTICES FROM MEMBER STATES

2011/C 127/04

Information communicated by Member States regarding State aid granted under Commission Regulation (EC) No 1857/2006 on the application of Articles 87 and 88 of the Treaty to State aid to small and medium-sized enterprises active in the production of agricultural products and amending Regulation (EC) No 70/2001

11

 

V   Announcements

 

PROCEDURES RELATING TO THE IMPLEMENTATION OF COMPETITION POLICY

 

European Commission

2011/C 127/05

Prior notification of a concentration (Case COMP/M.6224 — Oaktree/TPG/Taylor Morrison Homebuilding Business) — Candidate case for simplified procedure ( 1 )

14

 

Corrigenda

2011/C 127/06

Corrigendum to Commission communication in the framework of the implementation of the Directive 2006/42/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 17 May 2006 on machinery, and amending Directive 95/16/EC (recast) (OJ C 110, 8.4.2011)

15

 


 

(1)   Text with EEA relevance

EN

 


IV Notices

NOTICES FROM EUROPEAN UNION INSTITUTIONS, BODIES, OFFICES AND AGENCIES

Council

29.4.2011   

EN

Official Journal of the European Union

C 127/1


Council conclusions inviting the introduction of the European Case Law Identifier (ECLI) and a minimum set of uniform metadata for case law

2011/C 127/01

I.   INTRODUCTION

1.

Article 67(1) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union provides for the constitution of an area of freedom, security and justice with respect for fundamental rights and the different legal systems and traditions of the Member States.

2.

The multi-annual European e-Justice action plan 2009-2013 of the Council of the European Union stresses the importance of access to national case law, the need for standardisation and a decentralised technical architecture (1).

3.

The European Parliament Resolution of 9 July 2008 on the role of the national judge in the European judicial system (2) stresses the need for cross-border access to national case law to enable the national judge fulfil his role in the European legal order.

II.   IDENTIFICATION OF THE NEEDS

4.

A European area of freedom, security and justice in which judicial cooperation can take place requires not only knowledge of European law, but in particular mutual knowledge of the legal systems of other Member States.

5.

The European e-Justice portal should fulfil the objective of disseminating information about the EU and Member States’ legal systems and should serve as a useful tool for citizens, legal professionals as well as Member States’ authorities.

6.

Knowledge on the substance and application of European Union law cannot be solely acquired from EU legal sources, but also the case law of national courts has to be taken into account, both decisions asking for a preliminary ruling, as well as decisions following a preliminary ruling and those applying EU law on its own.

7.

With financial support or direct involvement from the European Union recent years have witnessed initiatives that support the abovementioned goals, such as the metasearch engine of the Network of the Presidents of the Supreme Judicial Courts of the European Union (3), the Dec.Nat and Jurifast databases of the Association of Councils of State and Supreme Administrative Jurisdictions of the European Union (4), the JURE (Jurisdiction Recognition Enforcement) database of the European Commission (5), EUR-Lex, and the case law database of the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights (6).

8.

The use and support of these initiatives have underlined the need for such databases but experience has shown that searching these databases is often very complex and not user-friendly.

9.

A study (7) performed by a task group of the Working Group on e-Law made it clear that apart from problems with multilingualism, these problems are mostly due to the lack of uniform identifiers for case law. At the national level various identification systems exist, some of them court-designated, others vendor-specific. Databases designed to query case law from various Member States — of which the abovementioned are just a few examples — sometimes invent their own identification system, and sometimes re-use one or more of the national numbering systems. Search and citation of case law in the cross-border context is therefore extremely difficult: identifiers which are issued by one system might not be compatible with other systems.

10.

The abovementioned study made it clear that comparable problems exist with metadata used for describing case law. The fact that nearly all national and European databases use different naming and design rules for metadata jeopardises the possibilities for effective and user-friendly cross-border case law search for judges, legal professionals and citizens.

III.   IDENTIFICATION OF SOLUTIONS

11.

In line with the principle of proportionality, the principle of decentralisation endorsed by the European e-Justice action plan and the principles of the European Interoperability Framework there should be no centralised European database of national case law. Moreover, specific user needs that arise for specific fields of law call for different databases with different functionalities, be they of public or of commercial nature.

12.

Both to facilitate the further development of European case law databases and to serve legal professionals and citizens in their use of these databases, a common system for the identification, citation and metadata of case law is regarded as indispensable. Such a common standard would be compatible with the principles outlined in the previous paragraph.

13.

For the identification of judicial decisions a standard identifier should be used which is recognisable, readable and understandable by both humans and computers, and which is compatible with technological standards. At the same time it is desirable that national case identification systems can work in parallel with such a European standard, but also that a European standard can serve as the sole national standard for those countries that so wish.

14.

Because the organisation of courts and IT-applications used by courts vary not only between Member States, but also within a Member State, it should be possible to implement an identification and metadata system court by court.

15.

In line with the stated principles on proportionality and decentralisation, decisions on the courts and tribunals to participate in this case law identification and metadata system have to be taken at the national level.

16.

As acceptance by the courts and governments of the Member States is of utmost importance for the implementation and use of an identification and metadata system for case law, consultations on this recommendation have taken place with the Network of Presidents of the Supreme Judicial Courts of the European Union, the Association of the Councils of State and Supreme Administrative Jurisdictions of the European Union, the European Network of Councils for the Judiciary, the LEX-initiative, the CEN/Metalex workshop, Semic.EU, the European Commission, the Court of Justice of the European Union and the Publications Office of the European Union.

17.

The identification and metadata system should be made well-known to citizens and legal professionals. Furthermore, to improve the chances of finding case law which is provided with an identifier and metadata as described in the Annex, these judicial decisions should be searchable — by identifier and a minimum set of metadata — via a common interface. The architecture of this common search interface should be decentralised and embedded within the European e-Justice portal. Although a common search interface reinforces the usability of an identification and metadata system, it should not be a prerequisite for the introduction of the identification and metadata at the national level.

18.

The common search interface should not only have the possibility to connect to public websites but also to other websites that disseminate case law, e.g. in summarised or translated versions.

IV.   CONCLUSIONS

19.

Member States are invited to introduce, on a voluntary basis at the national level, the European Case Law Identifier (hereinafter referred to as ECLI) and a minimum set of uniform metadata for case law.

20.

The following recommendations would apply to the Member States who decide to introduce ECLI and a minimum set of uniform metadata for case law:

(a)

ECLI should be applied as specified in § 1 of the Annex for all decisions rendered by all of their courts and tribunals;

(b)

Member States should provide all decisions of courts and tribunals which are published on public websites with the minimum set of metadata as set out in § 2 of the Annex;

(c)

Member States should appoint a national ECLI co-ordinator as described in § 3.1 of the Annex;

(d)

the Court of Justice of the EU should participate in the system of the European Case Law Identifier;

(e)

the European Commission should set up the ECLI-website, as a part of the European e-Justice portal, as described in § 4 of the Annex;

(f)

the European Commission and the Member States should set up, in close mutual collaboration, an interconnected search of identifiers and metadata, as set out in § 5 of the Annex;

(g)

Member States and their courts should disseminate information on ECLI, the ECLI-website and search interface on their national websites and publications, even if ECLI is not introduced in that specific Member State;

(h)

apart from Member States candidate countries and Lugano States (8) are encouraged to use the ECLI-system; and

(i)

Member States should report to the Council each year on the progress made with the introduction of ECLI and metadata for case law.


(1)  OJ C 75, 31.3.2009, p. 1.

(2)  2007/2027(INI).

(3)  http://www.network-presidents.eu/

(4)  http://www.juradmin.eu/

(5)  http://ec.europa.eu/civiljustice/jure/search_en.cfm

(6)  http://infoportal.fra.europa.eu/

(7)  12907/1/09.

(8)  Iceland, Norway and Switzerland.


ANNEX

1.   The format of the European Case Law Identifier

1.

A European Case Law Identifier (ECLI) must consist of the following five components, which must appear in the listed order:

(a)

the abbreviation ‘ECLI’;

(b)

the country code for the country under whose competence the judicial decision is rendered.

(i)

For Member States and candidate countries the codes in the Inter-institutional style guide (1) are used;

(ii)

for other countries ISO 3166 alpha-2 is used;

(iii)

for the European Union the code ‘EU’ is used;

(iv)

for international organizations a code is decided upon by the European Commission, taking into account the codes starting with ‘X’ as already being used by European institutions;

(c)

the abbreviation for the court or tribunal (hereafter: the court code). The court code:

(i)

must have at least one character, and at most seven characters;

(ii)

must always begin with a letter, but may also contain digits;

(iii)

should be chosen in such a way that it appears logical to people familiar with the organisation of the judiciary of the country concerned;

(iv)

must at least be an abbreviation of the name of the court or tribunal, but may also contain an indication of the chamber or division within that court or tribunal, especially if the naming of the chamber or division is habitual in the country’s citation practice;

(v)

should not contain information on the type of document;

(vi)

must be established according to § 5.1;

(vii)

The court code ‘XX’ must be reserved for decisions of courts and tribunals which are not in the list established by the national ECLI-co-ordinator of that Member State (§ 3.1 (2-a)), including decisions from other countries or international courts which do not have an ECLI (yet) by the Member State of the issuing court;

(d)

the year of the decision, which must be written in four digits;

(e)

an ordinal number, which must be unique in the sense that there must not be more than one judgment of the same court within the same year with the same ordinal number. The maximum length of the ordinal number is 25 characters. The ordinal number may contain dots (‘.’), but no other punctuation marks.

2.

All components are separated by a colon (‘:’)

3.

An ECLI must not contain any interspacing or punctuation marks, neither within the constituent components, nor between them — except for those mentioned under (1-e) and (2).

4.

Letters in all of the components must be Latin alphanumerical characters only.

5.

Letters in the components described in (1a), (1b), (1c) and (1e) should be written in capitals; at the very least there must not be a difference in meaning as to their capitalization.

6.

So as not to compromise its use or comprehensibility an ECLI must not be extended with any other components.

7.

The namespace of ECLI must be registered at https://e-justice.europa.eu/ecli

2.   Metadata

1.

To further the understandability and findability of case law, each document containing a judicial decision should have a set of metadata as described in this paragraph. These metadata should be described according to the standards set by the Dublin Core Metadata Initiative (hereafter: DCMI), and as further specified in this paragraph.

2.

Each document which is an instance of a judgment should, and in case it has to be searchable by the interface as described in § 5, must contain the following metadata:

(a)

dcterms: identifier

A URL where this instance document, or information thereon, can be found. This may be in the form of a web-based resolver together with the ECLI, or any other URL.

(b)

dcterms: isVersionOf

The form of this element must be an ECLI, as described in § 1.

(c)

dcterms: creator

The full name of the court. The name of a chamber or division may be included.

(d)

dcterms: coverage

(i)

The country in which the court or tribunal is seated.

(ii)

It may also contain a part of a (federal) state to specify the territorial jurisdiction.

(e)

dcterms: date

The date of the decision, which must be written in conformance with ISO 8601

(f)

dcterms: language

(i)

The language must be abbreviated, in accordance with the Inter-institutional style guide. In case of languages which are not included in this style guide ISO 639 must be used.

(ii)

The language is not (necessarily) the language of the original judgment, but the (main) language of the instance document.

(g)

determs: publisher

The (commercial or public) organization responsible for the publication of this instance of the judgment.

(h)

dcterms: accessRights

This field must have one of two values: ‘public’ or ‘private’. If it is ‘public’ the document on the given URL must be accessible by all, otherwise the value ‘private’ must be used, whether the non-public character access is due to commercial or other reasons.

(i)

dcterms: type

This field may contain information on the type of decision rendered, according to a scheme. The field defaults to ‘judicial decision’ to distinguish it from other types of documents.

3.

Each document which is an instance of judgment may also contain the following metadata:

(a)

dcterms: title

The title field must not be a replication of other fields. Preferably the name of the parties or an alias should be used, according to national practice and data protection rules.

(b)

dcterms: subject

The subject field is used to indicate the field of law. It should contain one or more items from a scheme containing values for civil law, commercial law, family law, insolvency law, private international law, criminal law, EU law, administrative law, tax law, international public law and constitutional law, and may contain a more specific description of the field of law.

(c)

dcterms: abstract

This field contains an abstract or summary of the case, not being a description, classification or interpretation.

(d)

dcterms: description

This field contains descriptive elements, be it in the form of keywords or headnotes.

(e)

dcterms: contributor

Names of judges, Advocate-General or other staff involved.

(f)

dcterms: issued

The date of the publication of this instance document of the decision. The date must be written in conformance with ISO 8601.

(g)

dcterms: references.

(i)

References to other (legal) documents.

1.

If these references are to other national judgments, ECLI must be used if the referred document has an ECLI, otherwise it should contain other references.

2.

If these references are to EU legal instruments, the CELEX-number must be used.

3.

If these references are to national legal instruments, judgments not having an ECLI or to scholarly writings available URL’s or other identification systems should be used.

(h)

dcterms: isReplacedBy

An ECLI, once issued, must be persistent. Renumberings though are unavoidable because of administrative errors or when an ECLI is assigned to decisions with a formerly XX-court code (according to § 1 (8)). In case of such renumberings the new ECLI must be recorded in this field. This field must not contain any other type of information.

4.

All metadata in this paragraph which do not have a fixed format or which are not based on a scheme must have a language attribute.

3.   On national implementation

3.1.   The national ECLI-co-ordinator

1.

Each Member State using the ECLI must appoint a governmental or judicial organization as the national ECLI-co-ordinator. One country must not have more than one ECLI-co-ordinator.

2.

The national ECLI-co-ordinator is responsible for:

(a)

the list of courts and tribunals that can have a code as mentioned in § 1 (1-c) and § 2 (2-c);

(b)

the scheme on the types of documents as mentioned in § 2 (2-i)

3.

The national ECLI-co-ordinator should publish on the ECLI-website, as defined in § 4, information describing the way the ordinal number is composed.

Existing national identification systems for case law should — to the widest possible extent — be encapsulated in the ECLI. However, the formatting rules of § 1 must be obeyed.

3.2.   Implementation

1.

National implementation of ECLI is a national responsibility, notwithstanding the possible availability of European funding.

2.

Courts and tribunals within one country may join the ECLI-system at different moments in time.

3.

The ECLI should also be used within physical embodiments of the judgment itself, to facilitate easy referral.

4.

The ECLI should be used on all judgments which are rendered, and not only on those which are published on judiciary websites.

5.

The ECLI may be assigned to historical judgments.

6.

At the national level the assignment of the ECLI should be organized as a separate service, in accordance with the guidelines of the European Interoperability Framework.

4.   The ECLI-website

1.

An ECLI website should be established; this website should be part of the European e-Justice portal.

2.

The website should contain:

(a)

information on the format and use of ECLI. Regarding the format it should contain:

(i)

the formatting rules as described in § 1.

(ii)

(a reference to) the list with abbreviations of participating countries.

(iii)

lists per country of the abbreviations used for the participating courts and tribunals. Names of the courts should be translated in all languages, according to the multilingual thesaurus of names of organisations as set up to be used within the e-justice portal, and with hyperlinks to the descriptions of these courts as comprised on the e-Justice portal — if available.

(iv)

description of formatting rules of the ordinal number per country (if available).

(v)

technical information.

(b)

information on the availability of metadata, as set out in § 2.

(c)

information on the national ECLI-co-ordinators: their role and responsibilities, but also contact information per country.

(d)

the website should offer access to the common search interface, described in § 5, once it is available.

5.   The ECLI search interface

1.

There should be a common search interface for searching national case law by ECLI and (some of) the metadata as defined in § 2. The introduction of the ECLI and the common set of metadata is not dependent on the availability of the search interface.

2.

In accordance with the European e-Justice action plan the interface should be decentralized in nature: no database at European level should be built; only a search possibility on interconnected national databases or websites should be provided for.

3.

The European Commission is responsible for the technical functioning of the search interface.

4.

For end-users the ECLI search interface must be available via the ECLI-website, although it does not have to be an integral technical part of it.

5.

The European Commission must make available a well-described interface for web applications to connect to the search interface. It must also make available a mechanism to the national ECLI-co-ordinators to update their list of courts and tribunals and to publish information on the formatting of the ordinals numbering system(s).

6.

In case of abuse or misbehaviour the Commission reserves the right to deny an organization the right to be connected to the search interface.

7.

A resolver must be available at https://e-justice.europa.eu/ecli/ meaning that an ECLI typed after this address will show the available data on this ECLI via the search interface.

6.   ECLI within the EU

1.

The ECLI co-ordinator for the EU is the Court of Justice.

2.

Where appropriate in the Annex ‘country’ or ‘Member State’ should be read ‘EU.’


(1)  http://publications.europa.eu/code/en/en-370100.htm


European Commission

29.4.2011   

EN

Official Journal of the European Union

C 127/8


Euro exchange rates (1)

28 April 2011

2011/C 127/02

1 euro =


 

Currency

Exchange rate

USD

US dollar

1,4794

JPY

Japanese yen

120,97

DKK

Danish krone

7,4574

GBP

Pound sterling

0,88880

SEK

Swedish krona

8,9280

CHF

Swiss franc

1,2954

ISK

Iceland króna

 

NOK

Norwegian krone

7,8090

BGN

Bulgarian lev

1,9558

CZK

Czech koruna

24,124

HUF

Hungarian forint

264,48

LTL

Lithuanian litas

3,4528

LVL

Latvian lats

0,7093

PLN

Polish zloty

3,9393

RON

Romanian leu

4,0810

TRY

Turkish lira

2,2487

AUD

Australian dollar

1,3586

CAD

Canadian dollar

1,4065

HKD

Hong Kong dollar

11,4960

NZD

New Zealand dollar

1,8495

SGD

Singapore dollar

1,8191

KRW

South Korean won

1 588,99

ZAR

South African rand

9,8032

CNY

Chinese yuan renminbi

9,6161

HRK

Croatian kuna

7,3608

IDR

Indonesian rupiah

12 698,33

MYR

Malaysian ringgit

4,3990

PHP

Philippine peso

63,596

RUB

Russian rouble

40,7350

THB

Thai baht

44,293

BRL

Brazilian real

2,3298

MXN

Mexican peso

17,0797

INR

Indian rupee

65,7300


(1)  Source: reference exchange rate published by the ECB.


29.4.2011   

EN

Official Journal of the European Union

C 127/9


Commission notice concerning the quantity not applied for to be added to the quantity fixed for the subperiod 1 July to 30 September 2011 under certain quotas opened by the European Union for poultrymeat, eggs and egg albumin

2011/C 127/03

Commission Regulations (EC) No 1384/2007 (1) and (EC) No 1385/2007 (2) opened tariff quotas for imports of products in the poultrymeat sector. The applications for import licences lodged during the first seven days of March 2011 for the subperiod 1 April to 30 June 2011 do not, for quotas 09.4091, 09.4092, 09.4411 and 09.4421, cover the quantities available. Pursuant to the second sentence of Article 7(4) of Commission Regulation (EC) No 1301/2006 (3), the quantities that were not applied for are to be added to the quantity fixed for the following quota subperiod, from 1 July to 30 September 2011; they are set out in the Annex to this notice.


(1)  OJ L 309, 27.11.2007, p. 40.

(2)  OJ L 309, 27.11.2007, p. 47.

(3)  OJ L 238, 1.9.2006, p. 13.


ANNEX

Quota order number

Quantities not applied for, to be added to the quantity fixed for the subperiod 1 July 2011 to 30 September 2011

(in kg)

09.4091

280 000

09.4092

363 003

09.4411

2 550 000

09.4421

350 000


NOTICES FROM MEMBER STATES

29.4.2011   

EN

Official Journal of the European Union

C 127/11


Information communicated by Member States regarding State aid granted under Commission Regulation (EC) No 1857/2006 on the application of Articles 87 and 88 of the Treaty to State aid to small and medium-sized enterprises active in the production of agricultural products and amending Regulation (EC) No 70/2001

2011/C 127/04

Aid No: SA.32268 (11/XA)

Member State: Spain

Region: Salamanca

Title of aid scheme or name of company receiving an individual aid: Denominaciones de Origen, Indicaciones Geográficas Protegidas, Asociaciones con Marca de Garantía, Asociaciones de Vinos de Calidad Producidos en Región Determinada 2011.

Legal basis: Proyecto de bases reguladoras de la convocatoria de subvenciones dirigidas a las Denominaciones de Origen, Indicaciones Geográficas Protegidas, Asociaciones con Marca de Garantía, Asociaciones de Vinos de Calidad Producidos en Región Determinada de la provincia de Salamanca y a las entidades asociativas que promuevan el reconocimiento de alguna de estas figuras de calidad, anualidad 2011.

Annual expenditure planned under the scheme or overall amount of individual aid granted to the company: Annual overall amount of the budget planned under the scheme: EUR 0,05 million

Maximum aid intensity: 0,70 %

Date of implementation: —

Duration of scheme or individual aid award: 22.1.2011-31.12.2011

Objective of aid: Production of quality agricultural products (Article 14 of Regulation (EC) No 1857/2006), technical support (Article 15 of Regulation (EC) No 1857/2006)

Sector(s) concerned: Support activities to agriculture and post-harvest crop activities

Name and address of the granting authority:

Excma. Diputación Provincial de Salamanca

C/ Felipe Espino, 1

37002 Salamanca

ESPAÑA

Website: http://www.lasalina.es/areas/eh/ProyConvocatorias/2011/Denominaciones.pdf

Other information: —

Aid No: SA.32269 (11/XA)

Member State: Spain

Region: Comunidad Valenciana

Title of aid scheme or name of company receiving an individual aid: Convocatoria control oficial lechero 2011

Legal basis: Resolución de convocatoria para el ejercicio 2011. Orden de 10 de julio de 2008 de la Consellera de Agricultura Pesca y Alimentación, que modifica la Orden de 5 de mayo de 2006 por la que se aprueban las bases reguladoras de las ayudas al control oficial lechero del rendimiento lechero para la evaluación genética de las hembras de las especies bovina, ovina y caprina y se convocan las ayudas para 2008 (XA 413/08)

Annual expenditure planned under the scheme or overall amount of individual aid granted to the company: Annual overall amount of the budget planned under the scheme: EUR 0,06 million

Maximum aid intensity: 70 %

Date of implementation: —

Duration of scheme or individual aid award: 5.2.2011-31.12.2011

Objective of aid: Livestock sector (Article 16 of Regulation (EC) No 1857/2006)

Sector(s) concerned: Crop and animal production, hunting and related service activities

Name and address of the granting authority:

Conselleria de Agricultura, Pesca y Alimentación

Generalitat Valenciana

Conselleria de Agricultura, Pesca y Alimentación

C/ Amadeo de Saboya, 2

46010 Valencia

ESPAÑA

Website: http://www.agricultura.gva.es/web/c/document_library/get_file?uuid=7cdda6d8-3df2-4468-bec4-e458dae0e4bc&groupId=16

Other information: —

Aid No: SA.32270 (11/XA)

Member State: Spain

Region: Comunidad Valenciana

Title of aid scheme or name of company receiving an individual aid: Régimen de ayudas a explotaciones ganaderas a través de asociaciones legalmente constituidas que presten servicios de sustitución en las mismas.

Legal basis: Resolución de … de enero de 2011 de la Consellera de Agricultura, Pesca y Alimentación por la que se convocan las ayudas a servicios de sustitución en explotaciones ganaderas para el ejercicio 2011. [Orden de 22 de marzo de 2007 de la Conselleria de Agricultura, Pesca y Alimentación, por la que se establecen ayudas a servicios de sustitución en explotaciones ganaderas, modificada por la Orden de 23 de abril de 2008 (XA 327/07)].

Annual expenditure planned under the scheme or overall amount of individual aid granted to the company: Annual overall amount of the budget planned under the scheme: EUR 0,09 million

Maximum aid intensity: 100 %

Date of implementation: —

Duration of scheme or individual aid award: 18.2.2011-31.12.2011

Objective of aid: Technical support (Article 15 of Regulation (EC) No 1857/2006)

Sector(s) concerned: Crop and animal production, hunting and related service activities

Name and address of the granting authority:

Conselleria de Agricultura, Pesca y Alimentación

C/ Amadeo de Saboya, 2

46010 Valencia

ESPAÑA

Website: http://www.agricultura.gva.es/web/c/document_library/get_file?uuid=f4e4b981-fcdf-4906-bdd8-8645201ea140&groupId=16

Other information: —

Aid No: SA.32437 (11/XA)

Member State: Belgium

Region: Vlaams Gewest

Title of aid scheme or name of company receiving an individual aid: Fokkerijsteun voor het steunpunt levend erfgoed

Legal basis: Decreet van 23 december 2010 houdende de algemene uitgavenbegroting van de Vlaamse Gemeenschap voor het begrotingsjaar 2011

Besluit van de Vlaamse Regering van 19 maart 2010 betreffende de organisatie van de fokkerij van voor de landbouw nuttige huisdieren

Annual expenditure planned under the scheme or overall amount of individual aid granted to the company: Annual overall amount of the budget planned under the scheme: EUR 0,01 million

Maximum aid intensity: 100 %

Date of implementation: —

Duration of scheme or individual aid award: 11.3.2011-31.12.2011

Objective of aid: Livestock sector (Article 16 of Regulation (EC) No 1857/2006)

Sector(s) concerned: Animal production

Name and address of the granting authority:

Vlaamse overheid

Departement Landbouw en Visserj

Koning Albert II-laan 35, bus 40

1030 Bruxelles/Brussel

BELGIQUE/BELGIË

Website: http://lv.vlaanderen.be/nlapps/docs/default.asp?id=134

Other information: —

Aid No: SA.32440 (11/XA)

Member State: Belgium

Region: Vlaams Gewest

Title of aid scheme or name of company receiving an individual aid: Fokkerijsteun voor het Vlaams Interprovinciaal Verbond van Fokkers van Neerhofdieren

Legal basis: Decreet van 23 december 2010 houdende de algemene uitgavenbegroting van de Vlaamse Gemeenschap voor het begrotingsjaar 2011

Besluit van de Vlaamse Regering van 19 maart 2010 betreffende de organisatie van de fokkerij van voor de landbouw nuttige huisdieren

Annual expenditure planned under the scheme or overall amount of individual aid granted to the company: Annual overall amount of the budget planned under the scheme: EUR 0,01 million

Maximum aid intensity: 100 %

Date of implementation: —

Duration of scheme or individual aid award: 11.3.2011-31.12.2011

Objective of aid: Livestock sector (Article 16 of Regulation (EC) No 1857/2006)

Sector(s) concerned: Animal production

Name and address of the granting authority:

Vlaamse overheid

Departement Landbouw en Visserij

Koning Albert II laan 35, bus 40

1030 Bruxelles/Brussel

BELGIQUE/BELGIË

Website: http://lv.vlaanderen.be/nlapps/docs/default.asp?id=134

Other information: —


V Announcements

PROCEDURES RELATING TO THE IMPLEMENTATION OF COMPETITION POLICY

European Commission

29.4.2011   

EN

Official Journal of the European Union

C 127/14


Prior notification of a concentration

(Case COMP/M.6224 — Oaktree/TPG/Taylor Morrison Homebuilding Business)

Candidate case for simplified procedure

(Text with EEA relevance)

2011/C 127/05

1.

On 18 April 2011, the Commission received a notification of a proposed concentration pursuant to Article 4 of Council Regulation (EC) No 139/2004 (1) by which the undertakings Oaktree Capital Group, LLC (‘Oaktree’) and TPG Holdings II, L.P. (‘TPG’), both from the United States, acquire within the meaning of Article 3(1)(b) of the Merger Regulation joint control of the undertaking Taylor Morrison, United States, by way of purchase of shares.

2.

The business activities of the undertakings concerned are:

for Oaktree: alternative and non-traditional investment funds,

for TPG: a holding vehicle for various investments funds,

for Taylor Morrison: a homebuilding enterprise with activities in the United States and Canada.

3.

On preliminary examination, the Commission finds that the notified transaction could fall within the scope of the EC Merger Regulation. However, the final decision on this point is reserved. Pursuant to the Commission Notice on a simplified procedure for treatment of certain concentrations under the EC Merger Regulation (2) it should be noted that this case is a candidate for treatment under the procedure set out in the Notice.

4.

The Commission invites interested third parties to submit their possible observations on the proposed operation to the Commission.

Observations must reach the Commission not later than 10 days following the date of this publication. Observations can be sent to the Commission by fax (+32 22964301), by email to COMP-MERGER-REGISTRY@ec.europa.eu or by post, under reference number COMP/M.6224 — Oaktree/TPG/Taylor Morrison Homebuilding Business, to the following address:

European Commission

Directorate-General for Competition

Merger Registry

J-70

1049 Bruxelles/Brussel

BELGIQUE/BELGIË


(1)  OJ L 24, 29.1.2004, p. 1 (the ‘EC Merger Regulation’).

(2)  OJ C 56, 5.3.2005, p. 32 (‘Notice on a simplified procedure’).


Corrigenda

29.4.2011   

EN

Official Journal of the European Union

C 127/15


Corrigendum to Commission communication in the framework of the implementation of the Directive 2006/42/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 17 May 2006 on machinery, and amending Directive 95/16/EC (recast)

( Official Journal of the European Union C 110 of 8 April 2011 )

2011/C 127/06

On page 14:

for:

‘CEN

EN 1493:2010

Vehicle lifts

This is the first publication

EN 1493:1998+A1:2008

Note 2.1

The date of this publication’

read:

‘CEN

EN 1493:2010

Vehicle lifts

This is the first publication

EN 1493:1998+A1:2008

Note 2.1

4.8.2011’