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Policy summaries for EU simulation Environment Foreign and Security Policy Trade.

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Presentation on theme: "Policy summaries for EU simulation Environment Foreign and Security Policy Trade."— Presentation transcript:

1 Policy summaries for EU simulation Environment Foreign and Security Policy Trade

2 Questions Does the EU need an environmental policy? If so, what about NAFTA?

3 Environment EU legislation covers Sustainable development Waste Noise Air pollution Water Nature and biodiversity Soil protection Civil protection Climate change

4 Environment Policy Instruments 1.Legislation 2.Funding: LIFE programLIFE program 3.Technical: eco-labeling, Community System of Environmental Management and Auditing, environmental inspections in MS 4.Institutions: European Environmental Agency 5.Procedural: freedom of access to information

5 Sixth Action Program for the Environment Sixth Action Program for the Environment (until 2010) Focus on 4 areas: 1.climate change 2.nature and biodiversity 3.environment and health 4.management of natural resources and waste

6 Energy Intensity of Economy http://epp.eurostat.cec.eu.int/portal/page?_pageid=1996,39140985&_dad=portal&_schema=PORTAL &screen=detailref&language=en&product=EU_strind&root=EU_strind/strind/enviro/en020 http://epp.eurostat.cec.eu.int/portal/page?_pageid=1996,39140985&_dad=portal&_schema=PORTAL &screen=detailref&language=en&product=EU_strind&root=EU_strind/strind/enviro/en020

7 Renewable Electricity as % of Total Electricity Production http://epp.eurostat.cec.eu.int/portal/page?_pageid=1996,39140985&_dad=portal&_schema=PORTAL&screen=detailref&language =en&product=Yearlies_new_environment_energy&root=Yearlies_new_environment_energy/H/H2/H23/en061 http://epp.eurostat.cec.eu.int/portal/page?_pageid=1996,39140985&_dad=portal&_schema=PORTAL&screen=detailref&language =en&product=Yearlies_new_environment_energy&root=Yearlies_new_environment_energy/H/H2/H23/en061

8 Focus: Climate Change http://ec.europa.eu/environment/climat/pdf/cc_factsheet_aug2005.pdf http://ec.europa.eu/environment/climat/pdf/cc_factsheet_aug2005.pdf

9 EU Foreign Policy External economic relations: one external tariff, EU negotiates with the WTO on behalf of 25 member states; bilateral and multilateral agreements between EU and third countries; trade, aid and cooperation policies with developing countries External political relations: established only since 1993 Treaty on European Union (2 nd pillar); intergovernmental decision-making; “too many foreign policies”;

10 Common Foreign and Security Policy (1993 Maastricht Treaty) Intergovernmental decision-making Council may decide on common positions and joint actions  marginal role of European Parliament  Predominance of unanimity voting Failure of EU to respond adequately to wars in Yugoslavia

11 Amsterdam Treaty (in force since 1999): European Security and Defense Policy Member states can abstain from decisions without weakening unanimity High Representative of EU Foreign Policy (Javier Solana) 1999: EU decides on rapid reaction force of 50,000-60,000 troops for humanitarian and rescue tasks, peacekeeping, and crisis management, to be ready by 2003  First such deployment may be this year to Democratic Republic of Congo to secure elections

12 Instruments of CFSP Common Strategies (unanimity)  Implemented by Common Positions and Joint Actions (qualified majority voting) “feet on the ground”: election monitoring, border monitoring

13 Difficulties of CFSP Strong unanimity requirement, 25 separate member states No joint army – not even coordinated military procurement Some overlap with NATO, but incomplete Capability-expectations gap: EU should be able to intervene close to home (Yugoslavia, Iraq) but cannot agree

14 Trade 1 st pillar/European Community can decide on common international agreements and on financial and economic assistance EU is the world’s largest trading bloc

15 EU decision-making on trade 4 freedoms developed to different degrees  EU has competence in trade in goods, but not in FDI  highly complex decision-making process Setting objectives for negotiations: Council Conduct of negotiations: Commission (Commissioner Peter Mandelson)  de facto, Commission negotiates issues even when EU and MS share competence or MS hold sole competence; MS seek tight control Adoption of results: Council Compare to US: Congress has authority over international commercial policy, must grant authority to executive to negotiate; increasing use of fast-track procedure (Congress adopts or rejects wholesale, without possibility for amendments)

16 Export Regime Common rules for export from the EC based on freedom of export exemption: MS may impose restrictions on grounds of public morality, public policy, public security MS may request consultation with other MS and Commission to address a perceived need for action MS may impose interim measures until Commission and other MS act Agricultural products subject to separate procedure (Commission- driven) Special EU controls for exports of cultural goods (archeological items etc.), dual-use goods

17 High-Profile Trade Disputes under WTO: US-EU: US steel tariffs (resolved 2004) Agricultural subsidies (ongoing) Audiovisuals (mid-1990s) Hormone-treated beef (US won) Ongoing cases in which EU is defendant: hormones, GMOs, customs procedures, aircraft subsidies, geographical indications) Ongoing cases in which EU is complainant: US anti-dumping practices, intellectual property rights, aircraft subsidies, steel, hormones) Other countries: Bananas (EU lost, Latin Americans won)


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