02/11/23View in Browser

The mother of all EU battles

By Gerardo Fortuna | @gerardofortuna

Unlike the proverbial grass, the EU’s next long-term budget – or as insiders like to call it, the multi-annual financial framework (MFF) – is not expected to be ‘greener’, to the chagrin of many Green Deal enthusiasts.

It’s the mother of all EU policy battles and it’s just started.

The coming months in Brussels will be marked by extensive talks between member states and the EU executive over the seven-year budget.

Although it might seem too early to talk about something that will be operational from 2028 to 2035, we must not forget that an agreement on the current budget reached at the gong of the previous financial programme led to a two-year delay in the implementation of all EU core policies such as the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP).

“Four years ago, it was a very difficult debate and a very difficult political decision. And it will be, again, a very difficult political decision in the weeks to come,” European Council President Charles Michel said last Friday (27 October) after a meeting with EU leaders that kicked off the MFF talks.

Many budget allocations will be discussed at a later stage, for instance, whether the massive cohesion policy – the EU’s main investment policy to tackle regional disparities – will be redesigned in a bid to look more like the NextGenerationEU, the flagship initiative to mitigate the economic and social impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, from which it has been easier to disburse funds.

Or whether the other big portion of the budget devoted to the EU’s farming subsidies will be spared from cuts in view of the future accession of Ukraine.

The initial talks at last week’s European Council, however, were more about the proposed top-up of roughly €100 billion to the trillion euro budget, needed partly to repay the debt issue for the €750 billion Recovery plan and partly to serve new priorities.

But those who expected a boost to the EU’s sustainability ambitions included in the Green Deal among these priorities have been let down.

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A firefigthting helicopter drops water on bushfires near the town of Dalveen, Queensland, Australia, 02 November 2023. A cool change may be forecast but Queensland firefighters will remain on high alert as blazes continue to threaten homes across the state. EPA-EFE/DARREN ENGLAND AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND OUT



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The Roundup

The economic models used to calculate the risks of climate change to economic growth and financial stability are “disconnected” from climate science and perpetuate an inaction bias in policymakers, a new report by the financial policy NGO Finance Watch warned.

The European Data Protection Board said Wednesday it had adopted a binding decision that will ban Facebook and Instagram owner Meta from using the personal data of users for targeted ads without their explicit consent.

Poland’s strategies for managing chronic pain seem to be insufficient and the use of strong opioid analgesics for acute and chronic pain is significantly below the European average, health experts have noted, emphasising that more action is needed.

Most European countries lack a plan for how to care for stroke survivors, missing out on an opportunity to ease a big burden weighing on already stretched health systems.

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Tattoo inks still contain potentially carcinogenic and allergenic substances in forbidden concentrations despite the introduction of an EU regulation in January 2022, according to an analysis by the Swedish Medical Products Agency.

Full justice has been achieved in fewer than 5% of murders of journalists since 1992, with four unsolved cases in the EU, the media freedom association the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) found in its 2023 Global Impunity Index.

Don’t miss this week’s Health Brief: A calm before the storm, and the EU Politics Decoded: Cash for Cairo.

Look out for…

  • Committee on Constitutional Affairs visit Washington D.C., U.S. and Ottawa, Canada Monday-Friday.
  • Agriculture Commission Janusz Wojciechowski speaks via video link at farming conference organised by European Conservatives and Reformists Party on Saturday.

Views are the author’s

[Edited by Zoran Radosavljevic/Benjamin Fox]

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