While the Hungarian presidency’s CAP conclusions, published yesterday (23 October), have been presented as overwhelmingly supported by members states – all except Romania – half of the EU countries felt it urgent and necessary to sign declarations clarifying their position on some parts of the text.
Retrieve Maria’s story on the conclusions presented at the AGRIFISH Council here.
Unsurprisingly, all six declarations focus on budgetary issues, which took centre stage at the negotiations in Luxembourg. Most of them touch on the distribution of CAP payments among member states, the point that led the Romanian delegation to vote against the text and thus prevent a full consensus.
Romania signed a document, seen by Euractiv, together with other Eastern European countries – Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, and Slovakia – denouncing the fact that they receive a lower level of CAP support. The statement calls on the Commission to finalise the “external convergence” process in the next seven-year EU budget, saying that these countries do not longer count on advantages such as lower production costs.
But others disagree.
Denmark and theNetherlands emphasised in a joint declaration, seen by Euractiv, that the “fair distribution of CAP support” mentioned in the conclusions must take into account differences in costs across the bloc, a view echoed by Cyprus and Greece in another joint statement.
Italy also issued a separated declaration with the same political goal, a diplomatic source said.
Another key theme at the Council were the Commission’s potential plans of integrating farm subsidies into the EU cohesion policy. The Hungarian conclusions made a subtle to reference to this by defending the need for a “dedicated” CAP – an earlier draft included the word “separate”, which one diplomatic source said was removed at the request of Germany.
The country also presented its own statement, insisting that the next budget – for which the Commission will table a proposal in 2025 and which EU leaders will then discuss – should be kept out of the Agri Council discussions.
Finally, a diplomatic source told Euractiv that Portugal made a statement calling for independent and sufficient farm subsidies. Speaking to journalists at the Council, the country’s agriculture minister, José Manuel Fernandes, insisted that the CAP must not be “weakened”. |