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Document 52013DC0726
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION 30TH ANNUAL REPORT ON MONITORING THE APPLICATION OF EU LAW (2012)
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION 30TH ANNUAL REPORT ON MONITORING THE APPLICATION OF EU LAW (2012)
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION 30TH ANNUAL REPORT ON MONITORING THE APPLICATION OF EU LAW (2012)
/* COM/2013/0726 final */
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION 30TH ANNUAL REPORT ON MONITORING THE APPLICATION OF EU LAW (2012) /* COM/2013/0726 final */
REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION 30TH ANNUAL REPORT ON MONITORING THE
APPLICATION OF EU LAW
(2012) Introduction Effective application of EU law is
essential if the European Union is to meet its policy objectives. While Member
States are responsible for the timely and accurate transposition of directives
as well as the correct application and implementation of the entire acquis[1], the Commission has to monitor
the Member States’ efforts and ensure that their legislation complies with EU
law. The Commission has a wide array of tools to
assess whether EU policies are properly implemented. It also relies on
information from citizens, businesses, NGOs and other stakeholders that point
to potential problems concerning the application of EU law. For many of these
issues the Commission works closely with Member States to find an efficient and
satisfactory solution without resorting to formal legal actions. If this
partnership does not produce desired results and if Member States' do not respect
their obligation under EU law, the Commission launches formal infringement
procedure (under Article 258 TFEU[2]).
Should cases be referred to the Court under Article 260(2) TFEU for not having
complied with a prior judgment and Article 260(3) TFEU, for late transposition
of directives, sanctions can be proposed by the Commission and decided by the
Court. The 30th Annual Report on
monitoring the application of EU law reviews the performance on key aspects of
the application of EU law and highlights strategic issues. The performance and
the challenges in the application of EU law are broken down by Member States and thematic areas in the Staff Working Documents accompanying this Report. 1. Transposition of
directives 1.1. Overview of the 2012
transposition work Reducing late transposition is a Commission
priority.[3]
The Commission proposes fines under the special penalty regime established by
Article 260(3) TFEU against Member States, if they do not transpose directives
in time (details in point 1.2 below). There were less directives to transpose in
2012 compared to the previous years (i.e. 56 in contrast to 131 in 2011 and 111
in 2010). Accordingly, there was a decrease in late transposition infringements
in 2012 compared to the previous year (447 late transposition infringements in
2012 compared to 1185 procedures in 2011 and 855 in 2010). 418 late
transposition cases were open at the end of 2012, which represents a 45 % decrease
when compared to the 763 cases at the end of 2011. The following chart contains the key
figures[4] on late transposition infringements initiated by the Commission
during 2012: The following table shows late
transposition infringements by Member State:[5] The four policy areas where the most late
transposition infringements were launched in 2012 were transport (115
procedures), health & consumers (108), environment (63) and internal market
& services (53). Late transposition infringements were
launched against more than two thirds of the Member States for some directives.
For example, the Commission launched procedures against 24 Member States
concerning late transposition of the Directive on buildings' energy
performance.[6]
Similarly, 23 Member States were involved
in late transposition infringements under the so-called Omnibus I Directive;[7] 20 procedures were launched
concerning the Directive on intelligent road transport systems;[8] and the directive amending the Community
code of medicinal products for human use[9]
triggered 19 procedures. Finally, 18 Member States received a letter of formal
notice due to the late transposition of the modifications in the so-called
Prospectus Directive.[10] 1.2. Referrals to the Court
under Articles 258 / 260(3) TFEU Under Article 260(3) TFEU, when referring a
late transposition infringement to the Court according to Article 258 TFEU, the
Commission may specify financial penalties without having to wait for a first
judgment.[11]
The purpose of this innovation in the Lisbon Treaty is to give a stronger
incentive to Member States to transpose directives within the deadlines laid
down by the legislator. In 2012, the Commission referred a number
of late transposition infringements to the Court with a request for financial
sanctions under Article 260(3) TFEU. Twelve Member States were involved in 35
such decisions in 2012: Poland (10 cases), Slovenia (5), the Netherlands, Finland (4 each), Belgium, Cyprus (3 each), Germany, Bulgaria, Slovakia, Luxembourg, Portugal and Hungary (one each). The proposed daily penalty ranged from
€ 5,909.40 to € 315,036.54. Lump sum payments were not requested. The Member States’ infringement profiles in
the Commission Staff Working Document (Part I) contain more detailed
information on these cases. 2. Incorrect transposition
and bad application of EU laws While the Commission in its duty as the Guardian
of the Treaties conducts its own enquiries to detect infringements of EU law
(point 2.1.2), citizens, businesses and stakeholder organisations make a
significant contribution to monitoring by reporting shortcomings in the
transposition and/or application of EU law by Member State authorities (see
complaints under point 2.1.1). Once detected, problems are followed up by
bilateral discussions between the Commission and the Member State concerned in order to remedy them using the EU Pilot platform (point 2.1.3). 2.1. Detection of problems and
informal solutions 2.1.1. Complaints Citizens, businesses, NGOs or other
organisations file complaints to the Commission frequently. The Commission laid
down its complaint handling rules in a Communication issued in 2002. Improvement
and expansion of methods to properly register and treat correspondence from
complainants concerning the application of Union law, the entry into force of
the TFEU and the need for some linguistic clarification called for an update. This Communication was updated in June
2012.[12]
It maintains the existing general framework of complaint handling. It reaffirms
the administrative measures to be complied with by the Commission when handling
complaints including proper recording of every complaint received, sending an
acknowledgment of receipt, informing the complainant on any steps taken by the
Commission in further processing his/her complaint, and giving prior notice to
the complainant before closing a file. The chart below shows the key data[13] on citizens’ complaints in
2012: 3141 new complaints – The three Member States against which the most complaints were
filed were: Italy (438), Spain (306) and France (242). Similar to 2011, citizens,
businesses and organisations reported irregularities especially in connection
with environment, justice and internal market & services (588, 491 and 462
complaints, respectively). 2859 processed complaints – Following an initial assessment of more than 2800 submissions in
2012, the Commission opened bilateral discussions with the Member State concerned in relation to 621 complaints in order to clarify whether EU rules had
been breached.[14]
Complaints that led to bilateral discussions were most frequently related to
environment, internal market & services and taxation & customs union
(131, 130 and 92 files opened under EU Pilot, respectively). Petitions by citizens to the European
Parliament as well as questions from Members of Parliament could also raise perceived
deficiencies in the way Member States apply EU law. Most frequently, these concerned
environmental issues. On this basis, the Commission has sent two letters of
formal notice under Article 258 TFEU (to the United Kingdom and Greece) and launched further 22 investigations in EU Pilot. The Commission received seven
petitions from the European Parliament in relation to regional policy and four
on health and consumers matters. Two EU Pilot files were launched upon written
questions from the Parliament in the areas of agriculture, two in internal
market and three in transport. More detailed information on petitions and
written questions is provided in the Commission Staff Working Document (Part II
pages on Environment, Agriculture, Internal Market & Services, Transport,
Justice, Fundamental Rights & Citizenship, Regional Policy and Health &
Consumers). 2.1.2. Own initiative cases The Commission's own findings also reveal
potential infringements of EU law. Similar to complaints, the Commission
initiates first a bilateral discussion with the Member State concerned with a
view to finding a solution complying with EU law. 791 investigations were
launched during 2012. Environment, internal market and services and transport
were the three policy areas where the most potential infringements were
identified (386, 196 and 164 new files, respectively). The Member States
primarily concerned were France, Spain and Italy (112, 110 and 107 new files,
respectively). 2.1.3. Partnership with Member
States: EU Pilot EU Pilot is a Commission initiative aimed
at responding to questions and identifying solutions to problems related to the
application of EU law. It is supported by an on-line database and communication
tool. EU Pilot provides the opportunity to resolve problems before entering
into formal infringement procedures. Given that cases should, in principle, be
dealt with within 20 weeks, EU Pilot dialogue facilitates speedy resolution of
problems for the benefit of citizens and businesses and achieving compliance
with EU law obligations. The gradual phase-in of Member States to EU
Pilot has finished in June 2012, when the two remaining Member States, Luxembourg and Malta, signed up to the system. Accordingly, all Member States have become
participants in EU Pilot. The following chart contains the main EU Pilot
figures for 2012:[15] 1405 new dossiers during 2012 – This figure is composed of 621 complaints confirmed by the
Commission and 784 new own initiative files. 1175 files were closed during 2012 – Of the 1175 EU Pilot files in 2012, the Commission closed 803
files because the Member State provided a satisfactory response. This is a 68.34 %
resolution rate for the Member States (a 4.16 % decrease from the 2011
rate of 72.5 %).[16]
1326 files remained pending – By the end of 2012, most of the EU Pilot files were addressed to Italy (135), followed by Spain (107) and Greece (82). From the point of view of policy areas,
environment remained the leading field with 400 open dossiers before internal
market & services (176) and justice & fundamental rights (125). The Commission closed 334 EU Pilot files in
2012 by launching formal infringement procedures. Solutions were not found for
84 environment, 42 taxation & customs union and 42 transport cases. Italy, France and Spain had the highest number of such transfers to infringement proceedings (29, 28
and 26 files, respectively). There were only two formal infringement
procedures in 2012 that the Commission had launched directly by sending a
letter of formal notice under Article 258 TFEU, without using EU Pilot.[17] 2.2. Infringement procedures If a Member State does not resolve the
alleged breach of EU law, the Commission launches infringement procedures under
Art 258 TFEU[18]
and may eventually refer the dispute to the Court of Justice of the European
Union (the “Court”). At the end of 2012, 1343 infringement cases
were open.[19]
The number of open infringement cases has continued to fall – from nearly 2900
cases in 2009, to 2100 cases in 2010 and to 1775 cases in 2011. The following
charts break down the total number of infringement cases and late transposition
infringements according to Member States and policy areas: * LTIs: Late transposition infringements Discussions between the Member State and the Commission continue during the formal procedure, in order to bring
national law or its application in line with EU legislation. Statistics confirm
that Member States make serious efforts to settle their infringements without
Court procedures.[20]
During 2012: · the Commission closed 661 infringements after sending the letter of
formal notice; · 359 cases were solved after reasoned opinion were sent to the Member State; and · 42 infringements were closed (or withdrawn from the Court) after the
Commission decided to refer the case to the Court. In total, 1062 infringement cases were
closed because the concerned Member States had demonstrated their compliance
with EU law. The Court delivered 46 judgements under Article 258 TFEU in 2012,
out of which 42 judgments (91 %) were in favour of the Commission. The
Court passed the most judgments against Belgium (6 of which 1 was in favour of
the Member State), Portugal (5/0), the Netherlands (4/1) and France (4/0). Environment (16), taxation & customs union (11) and internal market &
services (6) were the three policy areas with the most judgments delivered by
the Court during 2012. While Member States frequently take the
necessary measures to comply with the judgment of the Court in a timely manner,
at the end of 2012, the Commission still had 128 open infringement procedures open
because it could not yet confirm whether the Member States concerned complied
with Court judgments under Article 258 TFEU. Most of these cases concerned Portugal (14), Greece (13) and Spain (12) and were related to environment (54), internal market
& services (17) and taxation & customs union (16). Out of these 128 cases, 11 had already been
referred to the Court for the second time. Three Court judgements were
delivered under Article 260(2) TFEU last year, two against Ireland[21] and one against Spain[22]. In principle, a Court
judgment under Article 260(2) TFEU can impose lump sum and / or a (daily)
penalty payment on the defaulting Member State. The latter must pay immediately
the lump sum while paying the daily penalty until it reaches full compliance
with the first and second Court judgment. 3. Policy developments 3.1. EU Regulatory Fitness European lawmakers need to be attentive to
unnecessary burden and red tape. In a Communication[23] published at the end of 2012,
the Commission launched its Regulatory Fitness and Performance Programme (known
as REFIT) strengthening its Smart Regulation tools and governance. This
includes: · Enhanced assistance to Member States in transposing EU directives
(including implementation plans); · More systematic, risk-based conformity assessments of national
implementing rules; and · Fast problem-solving mechanisms before formal legal action
(guaranteed by EU Pilot). 3.2. Better Governance for the
Single Market From 2001 on, Heads of State and Government
of the European Union agreed on a number of targets that Member States should
achieve in order to improve their transposition records as regards the
implementation of EU Single Market law (SM). Internal Market
Scoreboards assess regularly how Member
States performed against SM targets.[24]
Important steps were also taken in SM
governance. "Core EU Single Market laws" are listed in the Annex of
the Communication on the governance of the Single Market adopted in June 2012.[25] To accelerate Member States'
full compliance with the SM rules, the Communication identified new targets for
handling infringements of core EU Single Market law: · 'Zero tolerance' (0 %) as regards the timely and correct
transposition of core EU Single Market law. This target is stricter than the
general 1 % transposition deficit agreed in relation to EU Single Market
law; · Reduction of the duration of infringement procedures to 18 months;
and · Achieving full compliance with the judgments of the Court within 12
months. The Commission has identified infringement
procedures which involve the core EU Single Market laws and has focused its
efforts on attaining full implementation of these laws. In addition, the Communication encourages
the Member States to submit draft implementation measures and explanatory
documents (see point 3.3 below) in relation to core EU Single Market laws. 3.3. Explanatory documents for
directives transposed by Member States The 2011 Annual Report[26] described the solution agreed
between the EU institutions, in the form of Joint Political Declarations, as
regards the provision of 'explanatory documents'[27] by Member State authorities upon notifying their transposition measures for a given directive. Member States are invited to explain how
their national transposition rules responded to the objectives laid down in a
number of directives. Examples include: · The Directive on energy efficiency;[28]
· The Directive concerning the control of major-accident hazards
involving dangerous substances;[29]
and · The Directive on waste electrical and electronic equipment.[30] As agreed in the Joint Political
Declarations, the Commission will report on the implementation of these
instruments by 1 November 2013. 4. Conclusions Member States still have to meet major
challenges in complying with EU law. There was a significant decrease in the
number of late transposition infringements during 2012, which was distributed
proportionally between Member States. The transposition performance of the Netherlands and that of Sweden have particularly improved but in general the ranking of Member
States as regards late transposition infringements did not change. Despite the
positive tendency, a large number of directives still have to be transposed and
implemented. Member States are therefore invited to keep up efforts to
transpose EU law correctly. Member States have demonstrated great
willingness to solve problems before formal steps are taken. With the joining
of Malta and Luxembourg, all 27 Member States participate in EU Pilot, the
on-line platform operated by the Commission to assist fast problem-solving.
Exchanges of views in EU Pilot allowed for a quick resolution of nearly 1,200
potential infringements in 2012. Together with the decrease of the number of
formal infringement procedures, there were also fewer cases that the Commission
had to refer to the Court. The general ranking of Member States as regards the
total number of infringement did not change materially: those Member States had
the fewest and the most infringement proceedings which had similar results in
the previous year. Environment, transport, taxation and internal market
remained the policy areas where the Commission initiates infringements most
frequently. This general trend is partly attributable
to the successful co-operation between the Member States and the Commission.
Where the Commission launched formal procedures, Member States have made
further attempts to achieve compliance with EU law. As the Guardian of the Treaties, the
Commission will continue the active monitoring of the application of EU law.
Proper implementation is an indispensable ingredient in regulatory fitness and performance. [1] By the end of 2012, the acquis of the EU
consisted of 9576 regulations (2011: approx. 8900) and 1989 directives (2011:
approx. 1900) in addition to the primary law (the Treaties). [2] It should be noted that infringement procedures can
also be initiated under other provisions of EU law, for example Article 106
TFEU in combination with Articles 101 or 102 TFEU. [3] Commission Communication on 'A Europe of results –
Applying Community law', COM(2007)502
final, p. 9. [4] From the sum of the 2011 open LTIs and the 2012 new
LTIs (763+447=1210), the number of closed LTIs is deducted (1210-792=418). [5] The table below indicates the number of late
transposition infringements open on 31 December 2012, irrespective of the year
when the infringement was opened. By contrast, the section “Transposition of
directives” in the Member State pages of Part I of the Commission Staff Working
Document shows how many new late transposition infringements were
initiated against the Member States in 2012. [6] Directive
2010/31/EU on the energy performance of buildings [7] Directive
2010/78/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 24 November
2010 amending several Directives in respect of the powers of the European
Supervisory Authority (European Banking Authority), the European Supervisory
Authority (European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority) and the
European Supervisory Authority (European Securities and Markets Authority) [8] Directive
2010/40/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 7 July 2010 on
the framework for the deployment of Intelligent Transport Systems in the field
of road transport and for interfaces with other modes of transport [9] Directive
2010/84/EU amending, as regards pharmacovigilance, Directive 2001/83/EC on
the Community code relating to medicinal products for human use [10] Directive
2010/73/EU amending Directives 2003/71/EC on the prospectus to be published
when securities are offered to the public or admitted to trading and
2004/109/EC on the harmonisation of transparency requirements in relation to
information about issuers whose securities are admitted to trading on a
regulated market [11] Communication
from the Commission - Implementation of Article 260(3) of the Treaty [12] Communication from the Commission to the Council and
the European Parliament on updating the handling of relations with the
complainant in respect of the application of Union law, COM(2012) 154 final [13] From the sum of the 2011 open complaints and the 2012
new complaints (2234+3141=5375), the number of processed complaints is deducted
(5375-2859=2516). [14] The rest of the complaints have not been further
processed because either EU laws were not breached or the Commission lacked
competence or the correspondence did not qualify as complaint. It is also noted
that in urgent and exceptional cases, the Commission may decide to address a
letter of formal notice (Article 258 TFEU) to the Member State without prior
bilateral discussion. [15] From the sum of the 2011 open EU Pilot files and the
2012 new EU Pilot files (1096+1405=2501), the number of processed files is
deducted (2501-1175=1326). [16] Report from the Commission – 29th Annual
Report on monitoring the application of EU law (2011), COM(2012) 714
final, p. 8. [17] Both cases concerned Hungarian measures. Further
details may be found on the Member State page of Hungary in Part I of the
Commission Staff Working Document. [18] Or under other provisions of the TFEU, see footnote 2
above. [19] This includes all procedures where the Member State has received at least a letter of formal notice from the Commission under
Article 258 TFEU. [20] The following figures were calculated for all
infringement cases irrespective of their origin (i.e., complaint, own
initiative of the Commission or late transposition of directives by Member
States). [21] Commission v Ireland, Cases C-374/11
(lump sum payment: € 2,000,000; daily penalty: € 12,000 per day) and C-279/11
(lump sum payment: € 1,500,000) [22] Commission v Spain, C-610/10
(lump sum payment: € 20,000,000; daily penalty: € 50,000 per day pending
compliance with the Court judgment) [23] Communication from the Commission to the European
Parliament, the Council, the European Economic and Social Committee and the
Committee of the Regions on EU regulatory fitness, COM(2012) 746 final (12 December 2012) [24] Both the historical developments and the exact target
rates can be found in the Internal Market
Scoreboards. [25] Communication from the Commission to the European
Parliament, the Council, the European Economic and Social Committee and the
Committee of the Regions on better governance for the Single Market, COM(2012) 259 [26] Report from the Commission – 29th Annual
Report on monitoring the application of EU law (2011), COM(2012) 714
final, p. 12. [27] Explanatory documents have to illustrate the
relationship between national transposing rules and the specific provisions of
a given directive. They may take the form of a correlation table. [28] Directive 2012/27/EU
on energy efficiency, amending Directives 2009/125/EC and 2010/30/EU and
repealing Directives 2004/8/EC and 2006/32/EC [29] Directive 2012/18/EU
on the control of major-accident hazards involving dangerous substances,
amending and subsequently repealing Council Directive 96/82/EC [30] Directive 2012/19/EU
on waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE)