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Document 52013DC0332
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE COUNCIL AND THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT Seventh Annual Report 2012 on the implementation of Community assistance under Council regulation (EC) No 389/2006 of 27 February 2006 establishing an instrument of financial support for encouraging the economic development of the Turkish Cypriot community
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE COUNCIL AND THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT Seventh Annual Report 2012 on the implementation of Community assistance under Council regulation (EC) No 389/2006 of 27 February 2006 establishing an instrument of financial support for encouraging the economic development of the Turkish Cypriot community
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE COUNCIL AND THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT Seventh Annual Report 2012 on the implementation of Community assistance under Council regulation (EC) No 389/2006 of 27 February 2006 establishing an instrument of financial support for encouraging the economic development of the Turkish Cypriot community
/* COM/2013/0332 final */
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE COUNCIL AND THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT Seventh Annual Report 2012 on the implementation of Community assistance under Council regulation (EC) No 389/2006 of 27 February 2006 establishing an instrument of financial support for encouraging the economic development of the Turkish Cypriot community /* COM/2013/0332 final */
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE
COUNCIL AND THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT Seventh Annual Report 2012 on the
implementation of Community assistance under Council regulation (EC) No
389/2006 of 27 February 2006 establishing an instrument of financial support for
encouraging the economic development of the Turkish Cypriot community 1. Introduction Council Regulation (EC) No 389/2006[1] (the "Aid
Regulation") is the basis for the assistance to the Turkish Cypriot
community (TCc) and requires annual reporting to the Council and the European
Parliament. This report covers the year 2012. 2. Programming of the
assistance Between 2006 and the end of 2012, €311 million
was programmed for operations under the Aid Regulation. Development of the 2012
programme (€28 million) used input from stakeholder consultations, particularly
workshops at sector level, from external evaluations and took account of the
European Court of Auditors (ECA) Special Report No. 6 on assistance to the
Turkish Cypriot community[2].
The 2012 allocation was made available under two Commission Decisions[3]. 3. Implementation mechanisms
The programme is
implemented in those areas of the Republic of Cyprus in which the Government
does not exercise effective control and where the application of the acquis communautaire
is temporarily suspended pursuant to Protocol 10 of the Treaty of Accession.
Assistance is implemented primarily through centralised management by the
European Commission. Some projects are jointly managed with the United Nations
Development Programme (UNDP). The Commission
operates in a unique political, legal and diplomatic context. Ad hoc
arrangements are needed to implement the programme while respecting the
principles of sound financial management. In EU-funded aid programmes, in
normal circumstances, agreements with a beneficiary government would establish
the legal framework for development assistance. No such agreements can be made
for the assistance to the TCc and the Commission has to rely on what it
understands to be the rules and conditions applicable locally. This introduces
a certain level of risk. Management and mitigation of this risk is part of the
Commission's responsibility and measures adopted include intensive monitoring
and support to beneficiaries, revised payment conditions and a more widespread
use of bank guarantees. The TCc needs to
provide sufficient priority and resources to make this programme a success and
in particular to ensure its long-term sustainability. They have to make sure
that the EU-funded assets remain in public hands. Turkish Cypriot (TC)
stakeholders are consulted about their needs for future funding and TC experts
take part in tender evaluations and play a key role in project steering
committees. Cooperation between the Turkish Cypriot and Greek Cypriot communities
remains necessary for full effectiveness of the programme and for achieving the
ultimate goal of reunification. The Programme
Team uses the EU Programme Support Office (EUPSO) in the northern part of Nicosia. The Representation of the Commission in Cyprus also hosts meetings and seminars
and communicates to the Cypriot public on the programme as part of its standard
role. Due to the
specific circumstances described above, sector development programmes cannot
easily be conceived. The assistance instead includes a significant amount of
grant support, particularly to non-public actors. Management of these schemes
is demanding in terms of the Programme Team's resources, where the staffing
situation is particularly disrupted by a high turnover rate due to the short
duration of staff contracts. The challenges
of medium and long-term planning remain, due to the current arrangement of
financing from the margins of the EU Budget. This means that the budget is
unpredictable, with no guarantee of annual allocations. In its Report mentioned
above, the ECA assessed that this uncertainty makes programme management more
difficult and, has a negative impact on its effectiveness and sustainability. 4. Implementation during the
reporting period 4.1. General overview The ECA
concluded that, despite the difficult political context and a compressed
timetable, the Commission managed to establish a programme which reflected the
Regulation’s objectives, appropriately prioritised all sectors referred to in
the Regulation's objectives, and introduced largely suitable implementation
methods and risk mitigation measures. The ECA also noted a number of weaknesses
in programme management, and considered that sustainability of projects is
often in doubt due to limited administrative capacity, the delayed adoption of
relevant legal texts and the uncertainties over future funding on the part of
the TCc. The Commission has accepted the ECA's recommendations with some
caveats. The Council adopted conclusions on the ECA's Report[4] in July. The European
Parliament's Committee on Budgetary Control adopted a report[5] in December. The part of the
programme originating from the large 2006 financial allocation included major
supply and construction contracts in water/wastewater, solid waste, nature
protection, energy and telecommunications as well as substantial technical
assistance programmes, and around 1000 grant contracts under various schemes
for NGOs, SMEs, farmers, rural communities, schools, and students. By the end
of 2012, many of these were completed. Consequently, 2012 was a year when
programme deliverables became particularly visible and benefits to the TCc
materialised. Focus has been maintained on the bi-communal activities and
confidence building, particularly with continued and increased support to the
Committee on Missing Persons and to the bi-communal Technical Committee on
Cultural Heritage through joint management with UNDP. Work also included
preparation for the full application and implementation of the acquis
following a possible solution to the Cyprus problem, and the dissemination of
information on the European Union's political and legal order to the TCc. Four
new grant schemes were launched in the course of 2012 to provide support to
rural enterprises, SMEs, schools, students and teachers. Many contracts
(190) were closed during 2012, primarily grants, leaving 402 contracts still
open at the end of the year. This number will rise as the 2011 and 2012
programmes reach full speed. The past year, with the winding down of the
activities originating from 2006, was also the occasion to launch a substantial
evaluation effort. The problem that
arose in 2011 concerning the status of bank guarantees remained unsolved. As
reported last year, a local contractor filed a suit with a local
"court", rather than following the dispute settlement procedures
foreseen in the contract, which resulted in injunctions preventing call-up of
bank guarantees issued by local banks. In order to safeguard the EU's financial
interests, the Commission will refrain from signing contracts of a similar
nature with TC beneficiaries and contractors until this issue is satisfactorily
solved. Local contractors imposed a boycott of UNDP contracts affecting EU
funded cultural heritage projects for a period of eight months over issues
related to the place of jurisdiction for disputes. Sustainability of investments is another,
on-going concern. The beneficiaries have not always prepared sufficiently well
for the handover of projects, despite considerable support from the EU. The TCc
has struggled to find resources for operation and maintenance of new
infrastructure, although contracts are finally in place for management of
recently delivered wastewater treatment plants. 4.2. Progress by objectives The overall
objective of the Aid Programme is to facilitate the reunification of Cyprus by encouraging the economic development of the TCc, with particular emphasis on the
economic integration of the island, on improving contacts between the two
communities and with the EU, and on preparation for the acquis. A
considerable contribution has been made towards improvements in some areas,
notably water, wastewater and environment. 4.2.1. Objective 1: Developing and
restructuring of infrastructure The new
Morphou/Güzelyurt wastewater treatment plant was taken over by the
beneficiary in January. Plant management has been handed over to an operating
company engaged by the local beneficiary. Once the local beneficiary has
completed all the house connections to the sewerage network handed over in 2011,
the system will provide, for the first time, wastewater collection and
treatment in this region for about 10,700 people. Commissioning of
the new wastewater treatment plant in Famagusta was underway at the end
of the year, with the treatment process functioning and the plant producing
clean effluent. Work was still in progress on the sewerage and drinking water
networks (95 km total) with some delays, however, due to defective pipe
connections causing ingress of saline water leading to corrosion problems in
the treatment plant. The plant will serve about 30,000 people. The construction
of the new Nicosia bi-communal wastewater treatment plant at Mia
Milia/Haspolat, co-funded by the EU and the Sewerage Board of Nicosia and
implemented through the UNDP, continued in 2012. In November, the sewage
treatment was started up and the input volume is gradually being increased.
Completion and take-over of the works is foreseen for the first half of 2013.
The plant will serve about 270,000 people. The water/wastewater
capacity building programme ended in December with a concluding workshop.
Outputs of the project included inter alia the preparation of legal
texts aligned with the EU acquis, awareness raising, asset management
planning, and training in analytical techniques. On nature
protection, no progress has been possible on the unfinished information and
management centres in four Special Environmental Protection Areas (SEPAs).
Following a contract termination in 2011, the Turkish Cypriot contractor filed
a suit with the local “court” to prevent the Commission from calling the
guarantees from the local bank. Projects initiated by the TCc, for example road
widening project in the Karpasia/Karpaz peninsula or extensive quarrying in the
Kyrenia mountains raise concerns about the implementation by the TCc of its own
management plans for the SEPAs, which were prepared with EU assistance. In the area of solid
waste, the new Koutsoventis/Güngör landfill, Famagusta transfer station and
related waste handling equipment were handed over in March. Management of the
landfill passed to an operating company engaged by the beneficiary. The
Kato Dhikomo/Aşağı Dikmen dump, after rehabilitation and
closure, was handed over in October. The solid waste management capacity
building project finished in December. In the energy
sector, the main action was the integration of the 1.27 MW Solar Power
Plant, fully operational since November 2011, with the control system for
remote monitoring. However, the allocation of dedicated staff by the
beneficiary is still missing for the effective and sustainable use of some of
the equipment supplied, for instance in the case of the customer care call
centre. All "next
generation network" telecommunications equipment has been
installed. The testing phase has, however, required further capacity building
of the operator and several outstanding issues still have to be addressed by
the supplier and the beneficiary. Legal texts detailing the modalities of
liberalisation of the electronic communications sector were adopted in December
2011, but the conditions necessary to separate the provision of services from
the network operation are still missing. Under the traffic
safety project, almost all contracts are now closed. The remaining
component to eliminate traffic accident “black spots” was completed in the
third quarter of 2012. Potential further actions in this sector will depend on
a clear policy decision from the beneficiary 4.2.2. Objective 2: Promoting
social and economic development Aid was given to farmers, veterinarians and rural
development stakeholders on animal husbandry and disease eradication, plant
health, crop diversification, organic farming and support for grant
implementation. The Animal Husbandry Project and the Technical Assistance team
supporting the Rural Development Policy completed their activities. A pilot
project for the agricultural reuse of treated sewage water was carried out and
pilot epidemiological surveillance was initiated for diseases in cattle, sheep
and goats in order to prepare for a larger intervention in animal disease
eradication. A new rural development €3.3 million
grant call for "Increasing Competitiveness, Diversification and
Sustainability" was launched. Ten grant projects from the 2009 scheme
"Community Development through Village Initiatives" were completed,
but a number of others suffered delays, arising, in particular, from
infrastructure works through the grant contracts. Under the project Upgrading of Urban and Local Infrastructure
implemented through joint management with UNDP, the renovation of the old
market in the northern part of the walled city of Nicosia was completed early
in 2012 and the market was opened by Commissioner Füle in June. In order to
revitalise this historical location, small grants, awarded through UNDP, were
implemented for cultural and community activities. A second grant call was
launched in December, targeting the market in Famagusta and Nicosia as well as
villages, where EU-financed renovations have been carried out. In the education sector, a €700,000
call: School Initiatives for Innovation and Change was launched in September.
Seven of the 72 grants awarded under previous calls continued into 2012 and at
year's end, five of these were close to completion. The TA programme developing vocational
education training and labour market (VETLAM) finished during 2012 and a study
was conducted to assess future needs in these areas. Supporting SME Competitiveness, a €5
million grant scheme was launched in June to aid SME modernisation, with a
component for start-ups. Training sessions on EU grant procedures were given to
over 300 TC enterprises. Help was also given on entrepreneurship, ICT, company
law and business management. A Project Management Unit (PMU) has been set up to
support beneficiaries both of SME grants and of rural development grants (see
above). The Nicosia and Famagusta downtown market initiatives have started to
promote local products and services with modern approaches to marketing.
Development work was carried out on e-commerce and e-service strategies and a
workshop took place in December on possible future EU support for the Private
Sector Development Strategy. Economic progress is monitored through a Trust
Fund with the World Bank. An Economic Update Report was provided in June. 4.2.3. Objective 3: Fostering
reconciliation, confidence building measures, and support to civil society Support to the Committee on Missing Persons,
managed jointly with UNDP, continued and a new Contribution Agreement was
signed. During 2012, UNDP signed a contract with the International Committee on
Missing Persons (ICMP) for DNA analyses at the ICMP facilities in Bosnia and Herzegovina. CMP achievements 2012 include: excavations at 92 sites, 284 set of
remains prepared by the anthropological laboratory and sent for DNA analyses,
22 sets of remains identified and 22 sets returned for burial to their
families. It would be important to increase the contribution by other donors. Programme visibility has been enhanced through
distribution of a brochure to schools and a UN-organised visit to Cyprus of family members of missing persons from conflicts in Kosovo[6]
and Serbia. A CMP live music event took place in December, attended by families
of missing persons. Out of 27 remaining projects funded under three
grant schemes of the Cypriot Civil Society in Action programme, 23 were
completed in 2012. An impact assessment of the civil society support was
launched in December. Cultural
Heritage protection has continued with a €2 million
Contribution Agreement signed with the UNDP in April for emergency
stabilisation on sites selected by the bi-communal Technical Committee,
including the Othello Tower in Famagusta. The project was delayed eight months
by a boycott of TCc Contractors Union over the conditions for dispute
settlement. This problem was finally resolved early in 2013. The project for demining the buffer zone
was completed and a closure event was organised jointly with UNDP in March, to
mark the International Day of Demining (4 April). 4.2.4. Objective 4: Bringing the
TCc closer to the EU After five annual scholarship schemes, an
evaluation was carried out in 2012. The 2012-13 programme was a pilot scheme,
adopting a number of proposals from the evaluation, and 28 scholarships were
awarded. Other recommendations, including widening of the scheme to
professionals outside the academic fields and outsourcing the grant management,
will be pursued. The InfoPoint project continued its role
as an information channel to the TCc preparing events, videos and providing
information on grant calls. The frequently visited bi-lingual web site was
maintained and six news bulletins in Turkish were published. 4.2.5. Objective 5: Preparing the
Turkish Cypriot community to introduce and implement the acquis The Commission's Technical Assistance and
Information Exchange (TAIEX) instrument helps prepare the TCc for
implementation of the EU acquis following the settlement of the Cyprus problem. TAIEX supports the preparation of acquis-compliant legal drafts. EU
experts carried out 415 actions in 2012, including training courses, workshops,
and study visits. Progress of draft legal texts aimed at acquis-alignment
was critically slow in 2012, although legal texts on environment, animal health
and seatbelts were adopted. Preliminary work was also done on Free Movement of
Goods, Intellectual Property Rights and Mutual Recognition of Professional
Qualifications. Support to trade across the Green Line
(Regulation 866/2004) continued. EU Member State experts carried out regular
phytosanitary inspections of potatoes and citrus products. Analyses of local
honey showed that the conditions of Commission Decision 2007/330 (movement of
animal products) have been met, opening the possibility of trade in honey under
the Green Line Regulation. 4.3. Financial execution
(contracts and payments) 4.3.1. Contracting Commitments in 2012 (€14.6 million) were 85% of
the forecast figure. Delays in the launching of grant calls prevented reaching
the target. 4.3.2. Payments In 2012, payments were €25.2 million, 69% of
the forecast amount. The deficit was almost entirely due to a shortfall in
payments for works and supply contracts from the 2006 programme. The 40%
payment due on final acceptance of the €10 million telecom system was delayed
beyond 2012 due to testing problems. 4.4. Monitoring Since the Commission acts as Contracting
Authority, the level of supervision by Commission staff is high, with
"spot-check" visits, site meetings, steering committees and Project Management
Unit reporting. In addition, the Implementation Review Mechanism (IRM) provides
a detailed review together with the beneficiaries of all projects. TAIEX
activities are monitored through more than 20 Project Steering Groups, plus
bi-annual Monitoring Mechanism meetings. TAIEX logistics are monitored through
the on-line TAIEX Management System. Low capacity of grant beneficiaries causes
implementation difficulties, for example with EU procedures for procurements
using grant funds. To address this, the PMU set up in 2008 to support the Rural
Development projects was extended to the SME grant sector in 2012. 4.5. Audit and controls Between 2010 and 2012, a total of 96 grant
beneficiaries were subject to financial monitoring and 16 audits were carried
out. Problems were cleared on a case-by case basis. Findings on grant contracts
included observations on accounting, procurement, rule of origin, budget
management and VAT. This will be addressed in future grant calls by extended
training and grantee supervision. The Internal Audit Capability of DG ELARG
conducted an audit on Joint Management to assess internal control systems of
the DG. The report is expected in 2013. The Commission introduced improvements in the
implementation of the programme following ECA's recommendations. It also made
proposals in the context of the Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF) to
improve sustainability by increasing the predictability of funding. 4.6. Evaluation Four sector-level evaluations/needs assessments
were carried out in 2102 on: 1) scholarships, confirming appreciation by
beneficiaries and recommending widening of the scheme; 2) water/wastewater,
giving a clear list of priorities; 3) vocational training/lifelong learning,
recommending a follow-up to support career guidance and employment services; 4)
solid waste, identifying the lack of waste recycling or composting, the need
for closure of old dumpsites and for better medical waste treatment. An overall
programme evaluation, to be completed in 2013 was also launched. Evaluations in
the fields of education and civil society were contracted in December. 4.7. Information, Publicity and
Visibility There were 86 visibility actions in 2012,
considerably more than in 2011, including many project-related events and
information or networking activities organised by the InfoPoint. A
Europe Day event was carried out at the historic, EU-renovated Bedestan and a
CMP live music event took place. There were art and photography exhibitions,
project events and handovers, plus information sessions on grants. A brochure
on the main achievements under the aid programme was produced[7]. Press releases on the aid
programme for the TCc were disseminated by the Commission Representation in Cyprus. 4.8. Consultations with the
Government of the Republic of Cyprus Regular meetings were held with representatives
of the Government of the Republic of Cyprus, in particular when senior
Commission officials visited the island. The Commission continues to rely on
its cooperation for verification of property rights, and also meets regularly
with the Permanent Representation in Brussels. 5. Conclusions The programme, which effectively started its
implementation on the ground in 2009, has brought some visible benefits to the
TCc during 2012, notably with big contributions to wastewater and solid waste
management. More efforts will have to be made, however, to make progress in other environmental
sectors, in particular on nature protection, and especially in respect of potential Natura 2000 sites. It is important to
show that the EU can deliver effective assistance and a positive message. It is
now up to the TCc to ensure the sustainability of projects which have been
delivered and accelerate the implementation of the assistance. Progress towards meeting the main objective of
the Regulation to facilitate the reunification of Cyprus by encouraging the
economic development is difficult to achieve, given the operating context
in the northern part of the island. In order to protect the
EU's financial interests, the Commission will not sign contracts requiring bank
guarantees until legal certainty is ensured. Preparation for the future adoption and
implementation of the acquis slowed down in 2012. The TCc needs
considerable support in order to meet acquis requirements in many areas
following a settlement and reunification. Lack of resources, inefficient
structures and unclear responsibilities remain serious issues to be urgently
addressed in order to ensure the sustainability of EU-funded projects. The TCc
has reassured the Commission that EU-funded assets shall not be subject to
privatisation. Some parts of the programme have become
established as core components with particular value in confidence building or
in bringing the TCc closer to the EU. These include the support to the CMP and
to the Committee on Cultural Heritage and the scholarship programme. The completion of many of the projects from the
2006 programme brings a natural milestone and a considerable evaluation effort
has been made in 2012. Medium and long-term planning is challenging in
the absence of predictability of annual allocations. Sectors important for
future acquis compliance require multi-annual support for intervention
to succeed fully. In its 2012 report, the ECA linked the lack of multi-annual
programming to problems of programme sustainability. [1] OJ L65, 7.3.2006, p.5. [2] http://eca.europa.eu/portal/page/portal/pressroom/Presspacks/Previouspresspacks/2012/PresspackSR62012 [3] Commission Decisions C(2012)4628 and C(2012)8361. [4] 12526/12 [5] PE497.895v03-00 [6] This designation is without prejudice to positions on
status, and is in line with UNSCR 1244 and the ICJ Opinion on the Kosovo
declaration of independence. [7] http://ec.europa.eu/cyprus/documents/2012/eu_assistance_to_tcc_brochure.pdf