12
Jun
2023
Watch
Assessment of the new Commission communication on outermost regions (short presentation)
Madam President, Commissioner, ladies and gentlemen, the Union is taking concrete action which will first of all create de facto solidarity between the various Member States, as Robert Schuman taught us just over 73 years ago. It was exactly this motto that guided all our action during the discussion with the different political groups and the analysis of the four opinions of the Committees on Budgets, Employment and Social Affairs, Agriculture and Rural Development and Transport and Tourism, whose work we thank and which culminated in the presentation of this report. Let me thank all the shadow rapporteurs, their teams, our political group advisers and, of course, our secretariat, for their positive and constructive attitude. A word of thanks also to the Committee of the Regions and the Conference of Presidents of the Outermost Regions who have followed this whole process very closely. We have always had the outermost regions and their populations in mind, which has facilitated the achievement of relevant, positive and appropriate commitments for the sustainable development and growth of these regions. That is why there is unanimous support from left to right in the Committee on Regional Development. Our first objective was to complement the work of the European Commission with objectivity, listing concrete measures for concrete problems, and we therefore call, first of all, for an action plan that should have specific and adequate financial allocations and take into account the characteristics, strengths and challenges of each outermost region, defining an individual action plan if they so request. I believe that this is the only way we can ensure that this strategy is no longer a role, another admirable expression of intent, without any kind of impact on these regions and their population. Ladies and gentlemen, coming here, I am in a position to say that the partnership between the European Union and the outermost regions is a partnership that adds value. Strengthening it means, on the one hand, creating targeted policies to mitigate the impact of their natural and permanent constraints in strict compliance with Article 349 of the Treaty, which gives them their own status, and, on the other hand, creating policies that realise their full potential, all the contribution they can make to making the European project bigger. And here the range is wide, first of all because of the strategic maritime dimension that they give to the Union, because they host about 80% of its biodiversity, the potential for developing pilot projects in the areas of marine research, ocean protection, renewable energy, sustainable tourism. For maintaining a responsible fishing sector, respectful of the marine environment and an agricultural sector that privileges animal welfare, sustainable practices, producing products of excellence with a seal of safety and quality. They have historical links with a number of other regions and third countries, allowing the Union to expand and strengthen its sphere of influence, and the installed capacity for the development of space activities. And it could go on. The European Union must ensure that they overcome the effects of the recent crises and are properly supported in the urgent and triple transition they have to implement: digital, energy and environmental. It is important to strengthen and further support the empowerment of their human resources, as well as to support policies and strategies to combat brain drain and to retain professionals in these regions. As for their permanent constraints, the combination of the specificities of these regions results in a huge dependence on air and maritime transport that wants to be safe, regular and affordable, in order to guarantee the free and fair movement of people, services and goods, respecting the principle of territorial cohesion. This is the greatest challenge for the outermost regions, a good transport policy, and we are therefore in favour of a specific European transport programme, POSEI. Madam President, ladies and gentlemen, to conclude, and as a Portuguese and representative of the two ORs – the Azores and Madeira – I am extremely pleased with the work achieved, which I hope you will be able to validate with your approval tomorrow and which the Commission will be able to welcome and convert into concrete policies for our outermost regions. Finally, the Member States with the outermost regions should use it in a positive way in order to fulfil their responsibilities towards these regions more effectively.