05/09/24View in Browser

EU’s three biggest islands

By Georgi Gotev

The EU’s biggest islands, according to geography, are Ireland, with 84 thousand square kilometres, Sicily (25,000 sq. km), and Sardinia (24,000 sq. km). But it can be argued that the EU’s biggest islands are three other, much bigger territories.

Sicily and Sardinia are islands, but they are part of Italy and completely integrated into the EU and Schengen.

Ireland is a special case because its largest part, the Republic of Ireland, is an EU territory (70,000 sq. km), but the rest – Northern Ireland (14,000 sq. km) – is part of the UK.

The Republic of Ireland, however, is not part of Schengen. The reason Ireland gave for not joining other EU states in forming the Schengen zone in 1985 was the existence of the Common Travel Area (CTA) with the UK, which would have disappeared if Ireland joined Schengen and the UK did not.

Cyprus is also an island (strictly speaking, part of the Asian continent, not Europe), smaller than Sicily and Sardinia, with only 9,000 sq. km. The Republic of Cyprus, an EU member, is legally obliged to join Schengen in the future, unlike Ireland, which maintains an opt-out policy and operates its own visa policy. Cyprus, however, does not yet meet the requirements to join Schengen.

There are, however, bigger territories that are part of the EU, which are de facto islands when it comes to EU integration.

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The Roundup

At long last, President Emmanuel Macron has picked former EU Brexit negotiator and French presidential candidate Michel Barnier to become France’s prime minister on Thursday (5 September).

Russia would be rooting for US Democratic candidate Kamala Harris over Republican candidate Donald Trump to win the November presidential election for her “infectious laugh,” President Vladimir Putin joked on Thursday (5 September) as worries over Moscow’s US election interference grow.

The Spanish government is working against the clock to come up with a temporary “strategic plan” to alleviate the severe migration crisis in the Canary Islands and the Spanish enclave of Ceuta in North Africa. Meanwhile, the European Border and Coast Guard Agency (Frontex) has encouraged Madrid to formally ask for help to contain the humanitarian emergency.

Germany’s GDP growth forecast was downgraded to zero percent by a leading think tank on Thursday (5 September), corroborating widespread fears that low productivity and sustained weakness in manufacturing could lead to weak growth becoming entrenched in Europe’s largest economy.

The European Court of Auditors (ECA) has made a series of recommendations to the ECDC, the EMA, and the European Commission to better prepare for future pandemics, set out in a critical report.

Mario Draghi’s presentation of his long-awaited report on the future of Europe’s competitiveness to EU officials on Wednesday (4 September) was light on details and policy proposals, according to EU diplomats and MEPs – with Commission President Ursula von der Leyen signalling she has not accessed the full document yet.

Court proceedings by the Irish Data Protection Commission (DPC) against social media platform Xare officially over as of Wednesday (4 September), after the company agreed to permanently stop processing some personal data collected in the EU for training artificial intelligence (AI).

Untreated dossiers like hydrogen, nuclear energy, and carbon capture are piling up on the desks of absent ministers, as France remains without a government since the July elections. Industry fears this governmental paralysis puts the country’s energy and climate goals and associated investment at risk.

The Spanish energy minister and designated Commissioner, Teresa Ribera, says connecting EU countries’ grid would further the European project, meaning that France may have to abandon its obstruction of power links across the Pyrenees.

French and German industries have similar carbon intensities, despite a largely decarbonised French electricity supply, according to a La Fabrique de l’industrie and McKinsey report published Thursday (5 September).

EU, UK, US, and Israel sign the world's first AI Treaty. But the treaty has been watered down to exclude the private sector, thanks to pressure from non-EU countries like the US.

Look out for…

  • The European Commission with various national ministries held a conference titled “From Theory to Practice: Implementing the EU Health Technology Assessment Regulation” in Budapest, Hungary.
  • The European Economic and Social Committee (EESC) organised a public debate on “Reforms for a more resilient economy for all: the new EU legislature” in Brussels, Belgium.
  • Informal meeting of ministers responsible for cohesion policy continues for a second day, in Budapest, Hungary.
  • European Commission Vice-President for Values and Transparency, Věra Jourová, meets the Lead coordinator of the Central European Digital Media Observatory Václav Moravec, in Prague, Czechia.
  • European Commissioner for Economy Paolo Gentiloni, participates in the 'Festa dell’Unita’ in Reggio Emilia, Italy.
  • European Commissioner for Agriculture Janusz Wojciechowski meets Uzbek Deputy Prime Minister Jamshid Khodjaev, and Presidential Adviser on agricultural development Shuxrat Ganiev in Uzbekistan.
  • European Commissioner for Budget and Administration Johannes Hahn meets Austrian Minister for Foreign Affairs Alexander Schallenberg, in Vienna, Austria.

[Edited by Rajnish Singh]

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