REPORT on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, Section III – Commission and executive agencies
24.3.2014 - (COM(2013)0570 – C7‑0273/2013 – 2013/2195(DEC))
Committee on Budgetary Control
Rapporteur: Markus Pieper
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1. PROPOSAL FOR A EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT DECISION
on discharge in respect of the implementation of the European Union general budget for the financial year 2012, Section III – Commission
(COM(2013)0570 – C7‑0273/2013 – 2013/2195(DEC))
The European Parliament,
– having regard to the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012[1],
– having regard to the consolidated annual accounts of the European Union for the financial year 2012 (COM(2013)0570 – C7-0273/2013)[2],
– having regard to the Commission's report on the follow-up to the discharge for the 2011 financial year (COM(2013)0668), and to the Commission staff working documents accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0348 and SWD(2013)0349),
– having regard to the Commission communication of 5 June 2013 entitled ‘Synthesis of the Commission’s management achievements in 2012’ (COM(2013)0334),
– having regard to the Commission's report on the evaluation of the Union's finances based on the results achieved (COM(2013)0461), and to the Commission staff working documents accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0228 and SWD(2013)0229),
– having regard to the Commission's annual report to the discharge authority on internal audits carried out in 2012 (COM(2013)0606), and to the Commission staff working document accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0314),
– having regard to the Court of Auditors’ Annual Report on the implementation of the budget for the financial year 2012, together with the institutions’ replies[3], and to the Court of Auditors’ special reports,
– having regard to the statement of assurance[4] as to the reliability of the accounts and the legality and regularity of the underlying transactions provided by the Court of Auditors for the financial year 2012, pursuant to Article 287 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union,
– having regard to the Council’s recommendation of 18 February 2014 on discharge to be granted to the Commission in respect of the implementation of the budget for the financial year 2012 (05848/2014 – C7-0048/2014),
– having regard to Articles 317, 318 and 319 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union and Article 106a of the Treaty establishing the European Atomic Energy Community,
– having regard to Council Regulation (EC, Euratom) No 1605/2002 of 25 June 2002 on the Financial Regulation applicable to the general budget of the European Communities[5], and in particular Articles 55, 145, 146 and 147 thereof,
– having regard to Regulation (EU, Euratom) No 966/2012 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 25 October 2012 on the financial rules applicable to the general budget of the Union and repealing Council Regulation (EC, Euratom) No 1605/2002[6], and in particular Articles 62, 164, 165 and 166 thereof,
– having regard to Rule 76 of, and Annex VI to, its Rules of Procedure,
– having regard to the report of the Committee on Budgetary Control and the opinions of the other committees concerned (A7-0242/2014),
A. whereas, under Article 17(1) of the Treaty on European Union, the Commission is to execute the budget and manage the programmes and is to do so pursuant to Article 317 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, in cooperation with the Member States, on its own responsibility, having regard to the principle of sound financial management;
1. Grants the Commission discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012;
2. Sets out its observations in the resolution forming an integral part of its decisions on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, Section III – Commission and executive agencies, and in its resolution of ….. on the Court of Auditors’ special reports in the context of the 2012 Commission discharge[7];
3. Instructs its President to forward this decision, and the resolution forming an integral part of it, to the governments and parliaments of the Member States, the Ministers of Finance and Agriculture of the Member-States, the national Courts of Auditors, the Council, the Commission, the Court of Justice of the European Union, the Court of Auditors and the European Investment Bank, and to arrange for their publication in the Official Journal of the European Union (L series).
2. PROPOSAL FOR A EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT DECISION
on discharge in respect of the implementation of the budget of the Education, Audiovisual and Culture Executive Agency for the financial year 2012
(COM(2013)0570 – C7‑0273/2013 – 2013/2195(DEC))
The European Parliament,
– having regard to the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012[8],
– having regard to the consolidated annual accounts of the European Union for the financial year 2012 (COM(2013)0570 – C7-0273/2013)[9],
– having regard to the final annual accounts of the Education, Audiovisual and Culture Executive Agency for the financial year 2012,
– having regard to the Commission's report on the follow-up to the discharge for the 2011 financial year (COM(2013)0668), and to the Commission staff working documents accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0348 and SWD(2013)0349),
– having regard to the Commission's report on the evaluation of the Union's finances based on the results achieved (COM(2013)0461), and to the Commission staff working documents accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0228 and SWD(2013)0229),
– having regard to the Commission's annual report to the discharge authority on internal audits carried out in 2012 (COM(2013)0606), and to the Commission staff working document accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0314),
– having regard to the Court of Auditors’ report on the annual accounts of the Education, Audiovisual and Culture Executive Agency for the financial year 2012, together with the Agency's replies[10],
– having regard to the statement of assurance as to the reliability of the accounts and the legality and regularity of the underlying transactions provided by the Court of Auditors for the financial year 2012 pursuant to Article 287 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union[11],
– having regard to the Council’s recommendation of 18 February 2014 on discharge to be granted to the executive agencies in respect of the implementation of the budget for the financial year 2012 (05850/2014 – C7-0049/2014),
– having regard to Articles 317, 318 and 319 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union and Article 106a of the Treaty establishing the European Atomic Energy Community,
– having regard to Council Regulation (EC, Euratom) No 1605/2002 of 25 June 2002 on the Financial Regulation applicable to the general budget of the European Communities[12], and in particular Articles 55, 145, 146 and 147 thereof,
– having regard to Regulation (EU, Euratom) No 966/2012 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 25 October 2012 on the financial rules applicable to the general budget of the Union and repealing Council Regulation (EC, Euratom) No 1605/2002[13], and in particular Articles 62, 164, 165 and 166 thereof,
– having regard to Council Regulation (EC) No 58/2003 of 19 December 2002 laying down the statute for executive agencies to be entrusted with certain tasks in the management of Community programmes[14], and in particular Article 14(3) thereof,
– having regard to Commission Regulation (EC) No 1653/2004 of 21 September 2004 on a standard financial regulation for the executive agencies pursuant to Council Regulation (EC) No 58/2003 laying down the statute for executive agencies to be entrusted with certain tasks in the management of Community programmes[15], and in particular the first and second paragraphs of Article 66 thereof,
– having regard to Commission Decision 2009/336/EC of 20 April 2009 setting up the Education, Audiovisual and Culture Executive Agency for the management of Community action in the fields of education, audiovisual and culture in application of Council Regulation (EC) No 58/2003[16],
– having regard to Commission Implementing Decision 2013/776/EU of 18 December 2013 establishing the ‘Education, Audiovisual and Culture Executive Agency’ and repealing Decision 2009/336/EC[17],
– having regard to Rule 76 of, and Annex VI to, its Rules of Procedure,
– having regard to the report of the Committee on Budgetary Control and the opinions of the other committees concerned (A7-0242/2014),
A. whereas, under Article 17(1) of the Treaty on European Union, the Commission is to execute the budget and manage the programmes and is to do so pursuant to Article 317 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, in cooperation with the Member States, on its own responsibility, having regard to the principle of sound financial management;
1. Grants the Director of the Education, Audiovisual and Culture Executive Agency discharge in respect of the implementation of the Agency’s budget for the financial year 2012;
2. Sets out its observations in the resolution forming an integral part of its decisions on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, Section III – Commission and executive agencies;
3. Instructs its President to forward this decision, the decision on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, Section III – Commission and the resolution forming an integral part of those Decisions, to the Director of the Education, Audiovisual and Culture Executive Agency, the Council, the Commission, the Court of Justice of the European Union and the Court of Auditors, and to arrange for their publication in the Official Journal of the European Union (L series).
3. PROPOSAL FOR A EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT DECISION
on discharge in respect of the implementation of the budget of the Executive Agency for Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (formerly the Executive Agency for Competitiveness and Innovation) for the financial year 2012
(COM(2013)0570 – C7‑0273/2013 – 2013/2195(DEC))
The European Parliament,
– having regard to the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012[18],
– having regard to the consolidated annual accounts of the European Union for the financial year 2012 (COM(2013)0570 – C7-0273/2013)[19],
– having regard to the final annual accounts of the Executive Agency for Competitiveness and Innovation for the financial year 2012,
– having regard to the Commission's report on the follow-up to the discharge for the 2011 financial year (COM(2013)0668), and to the Commission staff working documents accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0348 and SWD(2013)0349),
– having regard to the Commission’s report on the evaluation of the Union’s finances based on the results achieved (COM(2013)0461), and to the Commission staff working documents accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0228 and SWD(2013)0229),
– having regard to the Commission’s annual report to the discharge authority on internal audits carried out in 2012 (COM(2013)0606), and to the Commission staff working document accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0314),
– having regard to the Court of Auditors’ report on the annual accounts of the Executive Agency for Competitiveness and Innovation for the financial year 2012, together with the Agency’s replies[20],
– having regard to the statement of assurance[21] as to the reliability of the accounts and the legality and regularity of the underlying transactions provided by the Court of Auditors for the financial year 2012 pursuant to Article 287 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union,
– having regard to the Council’s recommendation of 18 February 2014 on discharge to be granted to the executive agencies in respect of the implementation of the budget for the financial year 2012 (05850/2014 – C7-0049/2014),
– having regard to Articles 317, 318 and 319 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union and Article 106a of the Treaty establishing the European Atomic Energy Community,
– having regard to Council Regulation (EC, Euratom) No 1605/2002 of 25 June 2002 on the Financial Regulation applicable to the general budget of the European Communities[22], and in particular Articles 55, 145, 146 and 147 thereof,
– having regard to Regulation (EU, Euratom) No 966/2012 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 25 October 2012 on the financial rules applicable to the general budget of the Union and repealing Council Regulation (EC, Euratom) No 1605/2002[23], and in particular Articles 62, 164, 165 and 166 thereof,
– having regard to Council Regulation (EC) No 58/2003 of 19 December 2002 laying down the statute for executive agencies to be entrusted with certain tasks in the management of Community programmes[24], and in particular Article 14(3) thereof,
– having regard to Commission Regulation (EC) No 1653/2004 of 21 September 2004 on a standard financial regulation for the executive agencies pursuant to Council Regulation (EC) No 58/2003 laying down the statute for executive agencies to be entrusted with certain tasks in the management of Community programmes[25], and in particular the first and second paragraphs of Article 66 thereof,
– having regard to Commission Decision 2004/20/EC of 23 December 2003 setting up an executive agency, the ‘Intelligent Energy Executive Agency’, to manage Community action in the field of energy in application of Council Regulation (EC) No 58/2003[26],
– having regard to Commission Decision 2007/372/EC of 31 May 2007 amending Decision 2004/20/EC in order to transform the Intelligent Energy Executive Agency into the Executive Agency for Competitiveness and Innovation[27],
– having regard to Commission Implementing Decision 2013/771/EU of 17 December 2013 establishing the ‘Executive Agency for Small and Medium-sized Enterprises’ and repealing Decisions 2004/20/EC and 2007/372/EC[28],
– having regard to Rule 76 of, and Annex VI to, its Rules of Procedure,
– having regard to the report of the Committee on Budgetary Control and the opinions of the other committees concerned (A7-0242/2014),
A. whereas, under Article 17(1) of the Treaty on European Union, the Commission is to execute the budget and manage programmes and is to do so pursuant to Article 317 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, in cooperation with the Member States, on its own responsibility, having regard to the principle of sound financial management;
1. Grants the Director of the Executive Agency for Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (formerly the Executive Agency for Competitiveness and Innovation) discharge in respect of the implementation of the Agency’s budget for the financial year 2012;
2. Sets out its observations in the resolution forming an integral part of its decisions on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, Section III – Commission and executive agencies;
3. Instructs its President to forward this decision, the decision on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, Section III – Commission and the resolution forming an integral part of those Decisions, to the director of the Executive Agency for Small and Medium-sized Enterprises, the Council, the Commission, the Court of Justice of the European Union and the Court of Auditors, and to arrange for their publication in the Official Journal of the European Union (L series).
4. PROPOSAL FOR A EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT DECISION
on discharge in respect of the implementation of the budget of the Consumers, Health and Food Executive Agency (formerly the Executive Agency for Health and Consumers) for the financial year 2012
(COM(2013)0570 – C7‑0273/2013 – 2013/2195(DEC))
The European Parliament,
– having regard to the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012[29],
– having regard to the consolidated annual accounts of the European Union for the financial year 2012 (COM(2013)0570 – C7-0273/2013)[30],
– having regard to the final annual accounts of the Executive Agency for Health and Consumers for the financial year 2012,
– having regard to the Commission's report on the follow-up to the discharge for the 2011 financial year (COM(2013)0668), and to the Commission staff working documents accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0348 and SWD(2013)0349),
– having regard to the Commission's report on the evaluation of the Union's finances based on the results achieved (COM(2013)0461), and to the Commission staff working documents accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0228 and SWD(2013)0229),
– having regard to the Commission's annual report to the discharge authority on internal audits carried out in 2012 (COM(2013)0606), and to the Commission staff working document accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0314),
– having regard to the Court of Auditors' report on the annual accounts of the Executive Agency for Health and Consumers for the financial year 2012, together with the Agency's replies[31],
– having regard to the statement of assurance[32] as to the reliability of the accounts and the legality and regularity of the underlying transactions provided by the Court of Auditors for the financial year 2012 pursuant to Article 287 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union,
– having regard to the Council’s recommendation of 18 February 2014 on discharge to be granted to the executive agencies in respect of the implementation of the budget for the financial year 2012 (05850/2014 – C7-0049/2014),
– having regard to Articles 317, 318 and 319 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union and Article 106a of the Treaty establishing the European Atomic Energy Community,
– having regard to Council Regulation (EC, Euratom) No 1605/2002 of 25 June 2002 on the Financial Regulation applicable to the general budget of the European Communities[33], and in particular Articles 55, 145, 146 and 147 thereof,
– having regard to Regulation (EU, Euratom) No 966/2012 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 25 October 2012 on the financial rules applicable to the general budget of the Union and repealing Council Regulation (EC, Euratom) No 1605/2002[34], and in particular Articles 62, 164, 165 and 166 thereof,
– having regard to Council Regulation (EC) No 58/2003 of 19 December 2002 laying down the statute for executive agencies to be entrusted with certain tasks in the management of Community programmes[35], and in particular Article 14(3) thereof,
– having regard to Commission Regulation (EC) No 1653/2004 of 21 September 2004 on a standard financial regulation for the executive agencies pursuant to Council Regulation (EC) No 58/2003 laying down the statute for executive agencies to be entrusted with certain tasks in the management of Community programmes[36], and in particular the first and second paragraphs of Article 66 thereof,
– having regard to Commission Decision 2004/858/EC of 15 December 2004 setting up an executive agency, the ‘Executive Agency for the Public Health Programme’, for the management of Community action in the field of public health pursuant to Council Regulation (EC) No 58/2003[37],
– having regard to Commission Decision 2008/544/EC of 20 June 2008 amending Decision 2004/858/EC in order to transform the Executive Agency for the Public Health Programme into the Executive Agency for Health and Consumers[38],
– having regard to Commission Implementing Decision 2013/770/EU of 17 December 2013 establishing the Consumers, Health and Food Executive Agency and repealing Decision 2004/858/EC[39],
– having regard to Rule 76 of, and Annex VI to, its Rules of Procedure,
– having regard to the report of the Committee on Budgetary Control and the opinions of the other committees concerned (A7-0242/2014),
A. whereas, under Article 17(1) of the Treaty on European Union, the Commission is to execute the budget and manage programmes and is to do so pursuant to Article 317 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, in cooperation with the Member States, on its own responsibility, having regard to the principle of sound financial management;
1. Grants the Director of the Consumers, Health and Food Executive Agency (formerly the Executive Agency for Health and Consumers) discharge in respect of the implementation of the Agency’s budget for the financial year 2012;
2. Sets out its observations in the resolution forming an integral part of its decisions on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, Section III – Commission and executive agencies;
3. Instructs its President to forward this decision, the decision on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, Section III – Commission and the resolution forming an integral part of those Decisions, to the Director of the Consumers, Health and Food Executive Agency, the Council, the Commission, the Court of Justice of the European Union and the Court of Auditors, and to arrange for their publication in the Official Journal of the European Union (L series).
5. PROPOSAL FOR A EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT DECISION
on discharge in respect of the implementation of the budget of the European Research Council Executive Agency for the financial year 2012
(COM(2013)0570 – C7‑0273/2013 – 2013/2195(DEC))
The European Parliament,
– having regard to the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012[40],
– having regard to the consolidated annual accounts of the European Union for the financial year 2012 (COM(2013)0570 – C7-0273/2013)[41],
– having regard to the final annual accounts of the European Research Council Executive Agency for the financial year 2012,
– having regard to the Commission's report on the follow-up to the discharge for the 2011 financial year (COM(2013)0668), and to the Commission staff working documents accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0348 and SWD(2013)0349),
– having regard to the Commission's report on the evaluation of the Union's finances based on the results achieved (COM(2013)0461), and to the Commission staff working documents accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0228 and SWD(2013)0229),
– having regard to the Commission's annual report to the discharge authority on internal audits carried out in 2012 (COM(2013)0606), and to the Commission staff working document accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0314),
– having regard to the Court of Auditors’ report on the annual accounts of the European Research Council Executive Agency for the financial year 2012, together with the Agency’s replies[42],
– having regard to the statement of assurance[43] as to the reliability of the accounts and the legality and regularity of the underlying transactions provided by the Court of Auditors for the financial year 2012 pursuant to Article 287 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union,
– having regard to the Council's recommendation of 18 February 2014 on discharge to be granted to the executive agencies in respect of the implementation of the budget for the financial year 2012 (05850/2014 – C7-0049/2014),
– having regard to Articles 317, 318 and 319 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union and Article 106a of the Treaty establishing the European Atomic Energy Community,
– having regard to Council Regulation (EC, Euratom) No 1605/2002 of 25 June 2002 on the Financial Regulation applicable to the general budget of the European Communities[44], and in particular Articles 55, 145, 146 and 147 thereof,
– having regard to Regulation (EU, Euratom) No 966/2012 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 25 October 2012 on the financial rules applicable to the general budget of the Union and repealing Council Regulation (EC, Euratom) No 1605/2002[45], and in particular Articles 62, 164, 165 and 166 thereof,
– having regard to Council Regulation (EC) No 58/2003 of 19 December 2002 laying down the statute for executive agencies to be entrusted with certain tasks in the management of Community programmes[46], and in particular Article 14(3) thereof,
– having regard to Commission Regulation (EC) No 1653/2004 of 21 September 2004 on a standard financial regulation for the executive agencies pursuant to Council Regulation (EC) No 58/2003 laying down the statute for executive agencies to be entrusted with certain tasks in the management of Community programmes[47], and in particular the first and second paragraphs of Article 66 thereof,
– having regard to Commission Decision 2008/37/EC of 14 December 2007 setting up the European Research Council Executive Agency for the management of the specific Community programme Ideas in the field of frontier research in application of Council Regulation (EC) No 58/2003[48],
– having regard to Commission Implementing Decision 2013/779/EU of 17 December 2013 establishing the European Research Council Executive Agency and repealing Decision 2008/37/EC[49],
– having regard to Rule 76 of, and Annex VI to, its Rules of Procedure,
– having regard to the report of the Committee on Budgetary Control and the opinions of the other committees concerned (A7-0242/2014),
A. whereas, under Article 17(1) of the Treaty on European Union, the Commission is to execute the budget and manage the programmes and is to do so pursuant to Article 317 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, in cooperation with the Member States, on its own responsibility, having regard to the principle of sound financial management;
1. Grants the Director of the European Research Council Executive Agency discharge in respect of the implementation of the Agency’s budget for the financial year 2012;
2. Sets out its observations in the resolution forming an integral part of its decisions on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, Section III – Commission and executive agencies;
3. Instructs its President to forward this decision, the decision on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, Section III – Commission and the resolution forming an integral part of those Decisions, to the Director of the European Research Council Executive Agency, the Council, the Commission, the Court of Justice of the European Union and the Court of Auditors, and to arrange for their publication in the Official Journal of the European Union (L series).
6. PROPOSAL FOR A EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT DECISION
on discharge in respect of the implementation of the budget of the Research Executive Agency for the financial year 2012
(COM(2013)0570 – C7‑0273/2013 – 2013/2195(DEC))
The European Parliament,
– having regard to the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012[50],
– having regard to the consolidated annual accounts of the European Union for the financial year 2012 (COM(2013)0570 – C7-0273/2013)[51],
– having regard to the final annual accounts of the Research Executive Agency for the financial year 2012,
– having regard to the Commission’s report on the follow-up to the discharge for the 2011 financial year (COM(2013)0668), and to the Commission staff working documents accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0348 and SWD(2013)0349),
– having regard to the Commission's report on the evaluation of the Union's finances based on the results achieved (COM(2013)0461), and to the Commission staff working documents accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0228 and SWD(2013)0229),
– having regard to the Commission's annual report to the discharge authority on internal audits carried out in 2012 (COM(2013)0606), and to the Commission staff working document accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0314),
– having regard to the Court of Auditors’ report on the annual accounts of the Research Executive Agency for the financial year 2012, together with the Agency’s replies,
– having regard to the statement of assurance[52] as to the reliability of the accounts and the legality and regularity of the underlying transactions provided by the Court of Auditors for the financial year 2012 pursuant to Article 287 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union,
– having regard to the Council's recommendation of 18 February 2014 on discharge to be granted to the executive agencies in respect of the implementation of the budget for the financial year 2012 (05850/2014 – C7-0049/2014),
– having regard to Articles 317, 318 and 319 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union and Article 106a of the Treaty establishing the European Atomic Energy Community,
– having regard to Council Regulation (EC, Euratom) No 1605/2002 of 25 June 2002 on the Financial Regulation applicable to the general budget of the European Communities[53], and in particular Articles 55, 145, 146 and 147 thereof,
– having regard to Regulation (EU, Euratom) No 966/2012 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 25 October 2012 on the financial rules applicable to the general budget of the Union and repealing Council Regulation (EC, Euratom) No 1605/2002[54], and in particular Articles 62, 164, 165 and 166 thereof,
– having regard to Council Regulation (EC) No 58/2003 of 19 December 2002 laying down the statute for executive agencies to be entrusted with certain tasks in the management of Community programmes[55], and in particular Article 14(3) thereof,
– having regard to Commission Regulation (EC) No 1653/2004 of 21 September 2004 on a standard financial regulation for the executive agencies pursuant to Council Regulation (EC) No 58/2003 laying down the statute for executive agencies to be entrusted with certain tasks in the management of Community programmes[56], and in particular the first and second paragraphs of Article 66 thereof,
– having regard to Commission Decision 2008/46/EC of 14 December 2007 setting up the Research Executive Agency for the management of certain areas of the specific Community programmes People, Capacities and Cooperation in the field of research in application of Council Regulation (EC) No 58/2003[57] ,
– having regard to Commission Implementing Decision 2013/778/EU of 13 December 2013 establishing the Research Executive Agency and repealing Decision 2008/46/EC,
– having regard to Rule 76 of, and Annex VI to, its Rules of Procedure,
– having regard to the report of the Committee on Budgetary Control and the opinions of the other committees concerned (A7-0242/2014),
A. whereas, under Article 17(1) of the Treaty on European Union, the Commission is to execute the budget and manage the programmes and is to do so pursuant to Article 317 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, in cooperation with the Member States, on its own responsibility, having regard to the principle of sound financial management;
1. Grants the Director of the Research Executive Agency discharge in respect of the implementation of the Agency’s budget for the financial year 2012;
2. Sets out its observations in the resolution forming an integral part of its decisions on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, Section III – Commission and executive agencies;
3. Instructs its President to forward this decision, together with its decision on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, Section III – Commission and the resolution forming an integral part of those decisions, to the Director of the Research Executive Agency, the Council, the Commission, the Court of Justice of the European Union and the Court of Auditors, and to arrange for their publication in the Official Journal of the European Union (L series).
7. PROPOSAL FOR A EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT DECISION
on discharge in respect of the implementation of the budget of the Innovation and Networks Executive Agency (formerly the Trans-European Transport Network Executive Agency) for the financial year 2012
(COM(2013)0570 – C7‑0273/2013 – 2013/2195(DEC))
The European Parliament,
– having regard to the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012[58],
– having regard to the consolidated annual accounts of the European Union for the financial year 2012 (COM(2013)0570 – C7-0273/2013)[59],
– having regard to the final annual accounts of the Trans-European Transport Network Executive Agency for the financial year 2012,
– having regard to the Commission's report on the follow-up to the discharge for the 2011 financial year (COM(2013)0668), and to the Commission staff working documents accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0348 and SWD(2013)0349),
– having regard to the Commission’s report on the evaluation of the Union's finances based on the results achieved (COM(2013)0461), and to the Commission staff working documents accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0228 and SWD(2013)0229),
– having regard to the Commission’s annual report to the discharge authority on internal audits carried out in 2012 (COM(2013)0606), and to the Commission staff working document accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0314),
– having regard to the Court of Auditors’ report on the annual accounts of the Trans-European Transport Network Executive Agency for the financial year 2012, together with the Agency’s replies[60],
– having regard to the statement of assurance[61] as to the reliability of the accounts and the legality and regularity of the underlying transactions provided by the Court of Auditors for the financial year 2012 pursuant to Article 287 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union,
– having regard to the Council’s recommendation of 18 February 2014 on discharge to be granted to the executive agencies in respect of the implementation of the budget for the financial year 2012 (05850/2014 – C7-0049/2014),
– having regard to Articles 317, 318 and 319 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union and Article 106a of the Treaty establishing the European Atomic Energy Community,
– having regard to Council Regulation (EC, Euratom) No 1605/2002 of 25 June 2002 on the Financial Regulation applicable to the general budget of the European Communities[62], and in particular Articles 55, 145, 146 and 147 thereof,
– having regard to Regulation (EU, Euratom) No 966/2012 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 25 October 2012 on the financial rules applicable to the general budget of the Union and repealing Council Regulation (EC, Euratom) No 1605/2002[63], and in particular Articles 62, 164, 165 and 166 thereof,
– having regard to Council Regulation (EC) No 58/2003 of 19 December 2002 laying down the statute for executive agencies to be entrusted with certain tasks in the management of Community programmes[64], and in particular Article 14(3) thereof,
– having regard to Commission Regulation (EC) No 1653/2004 of 21 September 2004 on a standard financial regulation for the executive agencies pursuant to Council Regulation (EC) No 58/2003 laying down the statute for executive agencies to be entrusted with certain tasks in the management of Community programmes[65], and in particular the first and second paragraphs of Article 66 thereof,
– having regard to Commission Decision 2007/60/EC of 26 October 2006 establishing the Trans-European Transport Network Executive Agency pursuant to Council Regulation (EC) No 58/2003[66],
– having regard to Commission Implementing Decision 2013/801/EU of 23 December 2013 establishing the Innovation and Networks Executive Agency and repealing Decision 2007/60/EC as amended by Decision 2008/593/EC[67],
– having regard to Rule 76 of, and Annex VI to, its Rules of Procedure,
– having regard to the report of the Committee on Budgetary Control and the opinions of the other committees concerned (A7-0242/2014),
A. whereas, under Article 17(1) of the Treaty on European Union, the Commission is to execute the budget and manage the programmes and is to do so pursuant to Article 317 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, in cooperation with the Member States, on its own responsibility, having regard to the principle of sound financial management;
1. Grants the Director of the Innovation and Networks Executive Agency (formerly the Trans-European Transport Network Executive Agency) discharge in respect of the implementation of the Agency’s budget for the financial year 2012;
2. Sets out its observations in the resolution forming an integral part of its decisions on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, Section III – Commission and executive agencies;
3. Instructs its President to forward this decision, together with its decision on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, Section III – Commission and the resolution forming an integral part of those decisions, to the Director of the Innovation and Networks Executive Agency, the Council, the Commission, the Court of Justice of the European Union and the Court of Auditors, and to arrange for their publication in the Official Journal of the European Union (L series).
8. PROPOSAL FOR A EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT DECISION
on the closure of the accounts of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, Section III – Commission
(COM(2013)0570 – C7‑0273/2013 – 2013/2195(DEC))
The European Parliament,
– having regard to the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012[68],
– having regard to the consolidated annual accounts of the European Union for the financial year 2012 (COM(2013)0570 – C7-0273/2013)[69],
– having regard to the Commission’s report on the follow-up to the discharge for the 2011 financial year (COM(2013)0668), and to the Commission staff working documents accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0348 and SWD(2013)0349),
– having regard to the Commission communication of 5 June 2013 entitled ‘Synthesis of the Commission’s management achievements in 2012’ (COM(2013)0334),
– having regard to the Commission’s report on the evaluation of the Union's finances based on the results achieved (COM(2013)0461), and to the Commission staff working documents accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0228 and SWD(2013)0229),
– having regard to the Commission communication on the protection of the European Union budget to end 2012 (COM(2013)682),
– having regard to the Commission communication on the application of net financial corrections on Member States for Agriculture and Cohesion Policy (COM(2013)934),
– having regard to the Commission’s annual report to the discharge authority on internal audits carried out in 2012 (COM(2013)0606), and to the Commission staff working document accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0314),
– having regard to the Court of Auditors’ Annual Report on the implementation of the budget concerning the financial year 2012, together with the institutions’ replies[70], and to the Court of Auditors’ special reports,
– having regard to the statement of assurance[71] as to the reliability of the accounts and the legality and regularity of the underlying transactions provided by the Court of Auditors for the financial year 2012 pursuant to Article 287 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union,
– having regard to the Council’s recommendation of 18 February 2014 on discharge to be granted to the Commission in respect of the implementation of the budget for the financial year 2012 (05848/2014 – C7-0048/2014),
– having regard to the Council’s recommendation of 18 February 2014 on discharge to be granted to the executive agencies in respect of the implementation of the budget for the financial year 2012 (05850/2014 – C7-0049/2014),
– having regard to Articles 317, 318 and 319 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union and Article 106a of the Treaty establishing the European Atomic Energy Community,
– having regard to Council Regulation (EC, Euratom) No 1605/2002 of 25 June 2002 on the Financial Regulation applicable to the general budget of the European Communities[72], and in particular Articles 55, 145, 146 and 147 thereof,
– having regard to Regulation (EU, Euratom) No 966/2012 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 25 October 2012 on the financial rules applicable to the general budget of the Union and repealing Council Regulation (EC, Euratom) No 1605/2002[73], and in particular Articles 62, 164, 165 and 166 thereof,
– having regard to Council Regulation (EC) No 58/2003 of 19 December 2002 laying down the statute for executive agencies to be entrusted with certain tasks in the management of Community programmes[74], and in particular Article 14(2) and (3) thereof,
– having regard to Rule 76 of, and Annex VI to, its Rules of Procedure,
– having regard to the report of the Committee on Budgetary Control and the opinions of the other committees concerned (A7-0242/2014),
1. Approves the closure of the accounts of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012;
2. Sets out its observations in the resolution forming an integral part of its decisions on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, Section III – Commission and executive agencies, and in its resolution of ….. on the Court of Auditors' special reports in the context of the 2012 Commission discharge[75];
3. Instructs its President to forward this decision to the Council, the Commission, the Court of Justice of the European Union, the Court of Auditors and the European Investment Bank, and to arrange for its publication in the Official Journal of the European Union (L series).
9. MOTION FOR A EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT RESOLUTION
with observations forming an integral part of the decision on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, Section III – Commission and executive agencies
(COM(2013)0570 – C7‑0273/2013 – 2013/2195(DEC))
The European Parliament,
– having regard to the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012[76],
– having regard to the consolidated annual accounts of the European Union for the financial year 2012 (COM(2013)0570 – C7-0273/2013)[77],
– having regard to the Commission’s report on the follow-up to the discharge for the 2011 financial year (COM(2013)0668), and to the Commission staff working documents accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0348 and SWD(2013)0349),
– having regard to the Commission communication of 5 June 2013 entitled ‘Synthesis of the Commission’s management achievements in 2012’ (COM(2013)0334),
– having regard to the Commission’s report on the evaluation of the Union’s finances based on the results achieved (COM(2013)0461), and to the Commission staff working documents accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0228 and SWD(2013)0229),
– having regard to the Commission communication on the protection of the European Union budget to end 2012 (COM(2013)682),
– having regard to the Commission communication on the application of net financial corrections on Member States for Agriculture and Cohesion Policy (COM(2013)934),
– having regard to the Commission’s annual report to the discharge authority on internal audits carried out in 2012 (COM(2013)0606), and to the Commission staff working document accompanying that report (SWD(2013)0314),
– having regard to the Court of Auditors’ Annual Report on the implementation of the budget for the financial year 2012, together with the institutions' replies[78] (Annual Report), and to the Court of Auditors' special reports,
– having regard to the statement of assurance[79] as to the reliability of the accounts and the legality and regularity of the underlying transactions provided by the Court of Auditors for the financial year 2012 pursuant to Article 287 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union,
– having regard to the Council’s recommendation of 18 February 2014 on discharge to be granted to the Commission in respect of the implementation of the budget for the financial year 2012 (05848/2014 – C7-0048/2014),
– having regard to the Council’s recommendation of 18 February 2014 on discharge to be granted to the executive agencies in respect of the implementation of the budget for the financial year 2012 (05850/2014 – C7-0049/2014),
– having regard to Articles 317, 318 and 319 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union and Article 106a of the Treaty establishing the European Atomic Energy Community,
– having regard to Council Regulation (EC, Euratom) No 1605/2002 of 25 June 2002 on the Financial Regulation applicable to the general budget of the European Communities[80], and in particular Articles 55, 145, 146 and 147 thereof,
– having regard to Regulation (EU, Euratom) No 966/2012 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 25 October 2012 on the financial rules applicable to the general budget of the Union and repealing Council Regulation (EC, Euratom) No 1605/2002[81], and in particular Articles 62, 164, 165 and 166 thereof,
– having regard to Council Regulation (EC) No 58/2003 of 19 December 2002 laying down the statute for executive agencies to be entrusted with certain tasks in the management of Community programmes[82], and in particular Article 14(2) and (3) thereof,
– having regard to its previous discharge decisions and resolutions;
– having regard to Regulation (EU) No 1303/2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 17 December 2013 laying down common provisions on the European Regional Development Fund, the European Social Fund, the Cohesion Fund, the European Agricultural Fund for Rural Development and the European Maritime and Fisheries Fund and laying down general provisions on the European Regional Development Fund, the European Social Fund, the Cohesion Fund and the European Maritime and Fisheries Fund and repealing Council Regulation (EC) No 1083/2006[83];
– having regard to Rule 76 of, and Annex VI to, its Rules of Procedure,
– having regard to the report of the Committee on Budgetary Control and the opinions of the other committees concerned (A7-0242/2014),
A. whereas, for the 19th time in succession, the Court of Auditors was unable to grant a positive statement of assurance regarding the legality and regularity of the payments underlying the accounts;
B. whereas the continued absence of a positive statement of assurance risks eroding the legitimacy of Union spending and policies;
C. whereas, in a situation in which resources are scarce on account of the economic and financial crisis, greater importance attaches to the need to observe budgetary discipline and to use funds economically;
D. whereas the Union has entered a new Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF) 2014-2020[84];
E. whereas, according to the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU), the Commission bears the ultimate responsibility for the implementation of the Union budget, while Member States are required to sincerely cooperate with the Commission to ensure that the appropriations are used in accordance with the principles of sound financial management;
F. whereas Article 287 TFEU provides: ‘The Court of Auditors shall provide the European Parliament and the Council with a statement of assurance as to the reliability of the accounts and the legality and regularity of the underlying transactions (...)’;
G. whereas performance audits measuring the extent to which spending has achieved the objectives pursued are becoming ever more important;
H. whereas the Commission's management should be presented fairly, along with that of the Member States responsible under shared management of funds, with a view to reinforcing public trust in the Institutions;
I. whereas the evaluation report (Article 318 TFEU) on the finances of the Union, which is based on the results achieved, in particular, with reference to the requirements, provides the opportunity to propose a new performance culture within the Commission;
J. whereas the Committee on Budgetary Control should be even more closely involved in monitoring Commission spending in future; looking forward to closer cooperation with the Court of Auditors in order to produce wide-ranging proposals on improving efficiency in audit procedures;
Agricultural and Regional Policy: Deficiencies in the Commission’s and Member States’ management
Letter of 5 November 2013 from the rapporteur and the shadow rapporteurs to the President of the Commission and the latter’s reply
1. Calls on the Commission, in light of repeated error concentration in a few Member States, to assume greater and more substantial responsibility for safeguarding the Union budget against financial losses;
2. Observes that in the 2012 financial year the error rate rose for the third time in succession;
3. Calls, therefore, on the Commission to apply Article 32(5) of the Financial Regulation (EU, Euratom) No 966/2012 more strictly in case of a persistently high level of error, and consequently to identify the weaknesses in the control systems and take or propose appropriate action in terms of the possible simplification, the further strengthening of control systems and the redesign of programmes or delivery systems;
4. Is of the view that the risk of error of Union policy areas, in particular in the area of shared management, is higher if the related policies are particularly complex and Member States are reluctant to implement adequate control and reporting systems; urges all relevant actors involved in Union decision-making to simplify further, notably by drafting eligibility rules that are simple and verifiable, cutting red tape and devising appropriate and effective controls;
5. Notes that, according to the Communication from the Commission on protection of the European Union budget[85], eight Member States are responsible for 90 % of the financial corrections in the fields under shared management; urges the Commission therefore to direct its particular attention to those countries;
6. Notes that the rapporteur and shadow rapporteurs for the discharge to the Commission for the financial year 2012 called for more stringent financial corrections to be imposed on those Member States whose management and monitoring systems display persistent and systematic weaknesses;
7. Notes that, in his reply, the President of the Commission undertook to:
(a) step up supervision and control in those Member States with the biggest risk profile in terms of management and control of Union programmes,
(b) continue to suspend payments and halt programmes, if legally possible, in cases where serious shortcomings have occurred,
(c) continue to supply necessary financial data, which facilitates a thorough analysis of Member States;
8. Welcomes the Commission communication on the protection of the Union budget, which for the first time gives an overview of the situation regarding financial adjustments in the individual Member States, while calling for a more detailed annual assessment of the situation in each of them, indicating how much money could actually be channelled back into the Union budget;
Commission communication on the application of net financial corrections on Member States for Agriculture and Cohesion Policy[86]
9. Welcomes the fact that, in response to the letter from Members of Parliament, the Commission published this communication as early as December 2013;
10. Welcomes the new rules for the 2014-2020 programming period, decided through the ordinary legislative procedure, including measures such as the designations of audit and certifying authorities, accreditations of audit authorities, audit examination and acceptance of accounts, financial corrections and net financial corrections, proportional control, ex ante conditionalities that aim to further contribute to the reduction of the level of error; supports in this respect the growing results orientation and the thematic concentration of cohesion policy that should ensure high added-value of the co-financed operations; welcomes also the definition of serious deficiency and the anticipated increased level of corrections for repeated deficiencies;
11. Welcomes the fact that, in the new programming period 2014-2020, net financial corrections can and must be imposed in the event of serious deficiencies in the implementation of cohesion policy and will remain the standard in the area of agriculture;
12. Considers swiftly and correctly applied net financial corrections an effective tool for protecting the Union budget and is of the view that recoveries and financial corrections have to be taken into account in any comprehensive assessment of the overall system of internal control; therefore asks the Court of Auditors to come to an agreement with the Commission on how to incorporate the impact of these corrective measures on the protection of the Union budget;
Assessment of the Communication
a. Agriculture and Natural Resources
13. Notes that all financial corrections in the field of agriculture are net corrections; stresses that the application of net financial corrections in the field of agriculture does not yet constitute the anticipated progress, as
(a) the Commission's existing internal indicative benchmarks already stipulate that the duration of conformity procedures must not exceed two years; and
(b) the so-called 'new' criteria and methodology for determining the proportionality of the financial corrections to be applied, as mentioned in Annex I to the Communication refer explicitly to guidelines that will be based on the existing ones adopted by the Commission as long ago as 23 December 1997; is surprised that for almost 20 years the Commission has not been able to bring the duration of the clearance procedures below the self-inflicted benchmarks; considers it necessary, however, for the conformity procedure to have its full effect to accelerate the procedure and to further improve the criteria and methods for the application of financial corrections beyond the new guidelines foreseen, and
(c) Member States fail to provide, quickly, simply and effectively, proof that the net financial correction envisaged by the Commission is not justified, the result being frequent delays in dealing with cases involving corrections;
b. Cohesion Policy
14. Notes that it depends on many factors whether the new instrument will lead to more net corrections and hence to a lower error rate in cohesion policy; considers it problematic, moreover, that there are ways in which Member States can avoid net financial corrections (no limit on the replacement of projects until 15 February of year ‘n+1’, no time limit on notification by Member States of their own past errors, protracted objection procedures);
15. Asks the Commission to submit without delay a proposal on limiting if not banning replacement projects all together;
16. Considers that the effectiveness of this instrument for cohesion policy cannot yet be assessed because its application depends on the detail adopted in a delegated act expected in April 2014;
17. Notes furthermore that some audit reports of several Member States, which constitute one of the elements feeding into the Commission’s declaration of assurance, are themselves often faulty, underestimate the level of risk and error and are therefore partially unreliable[87]; notes furthermore that the Court of Auditors only recently confirmed that ‘(…) the European Commission cannot unquestioningly rely on the results of audits performed by the Member States in relation to Union regional funding appropriations’[88];
Commission’s Reservations, reasons for binding commitments
18. Recalls that, when it took office in 2005, the Barroso Commission made it one of its objectives to enhance accountability ‘by striving for a positive declaration of assurance from the European Court of Auditors’[89];
19. Recalls that good cooperation is vital, especially in the area of shared management; therefore, urges all relevant actors involved in Union decision making to increase efficiency , notably by drafting eligibility rules that are simple and verifiable, by establishing clear rules and procedures for accessing the Union funds, by cutting red tape and by devising appropriate and cost effective controls;
20. Expresses concern that in the 2012 financial year the error rate rose for the third time in succession even taking into account the new methodology of the Courts of Auditors;
21. Remains very concerned that for years the majority of the errors identified by the Court of Auditors ought to be have been identified by the Member States themselves; considers, therefore, that in some Member States the control statistics, audit results and procedures constitute an inadequate basis for assessments and financial corrections by the Commission, and expects significant improvements in this regard in the funding period 2014-2020;
22. Calls, therefore, pursuant to Article 287(3) TFEU, for cooperation between national audit institutions and the Court of Auditors as regards shared-management controls to be stepped up;
23. Acknowledges, as the Commission over and over indicates, that around 80% of the funds are being spend under shared management; nevertheless recalls that Article 317 TFEU stipulates that the Commission bears the ultimate responsibility for the implementation of the budget;
24. Regards mandatory reporting and improvement as an effective and appropriate budget discharge instrument designed to have tangible effects on error rates;
25. Underlines that Parliament only issues reservation in areas for which it has not received adequate assurance from the Commission and/or the Court of Auditors to refute its concerns, deems it a priority that the Commission proves to Parliament in the case of reservations in which way convincing remedial measures have been taken to overcome the latter's concerns;
26. Regards reservations as a new and effective budgetary control instrument, being a commitment by Parliament to monitor closely the measures taken by the Commission and Member States to eliminate these problems, so as to justify in the eyes of the public in particular the decision to grant discharge;
. . .in the field of agriculture
27. Observes that the error rate in the field of rural development, environment, fisheries and health is 7,9 %; regrets that due to the delay between payment claims, payments, controls and reported statistics, no significant impact on the error rate can be expected before 2014 at the earliest, although an action plan was adopted in 2012;
28. Notes that the Internal Audit Service of the Commission (IAS) found that the audit strategy of DG AGRI was not sufficiently formalised, namely that there were gaps in the definition of the audit universe, the setting up of quantitative and measurable objectives (e.g. audit coverage), and the related capacity analysis; is worried about the IAS's finding that audit plans were not sufficiently supported by risk assessments and that there was a significant audit backlog (13 % of engagements of 2007-2010 still open), despite DG AGRI's efforts to reduce it;
29. Notes that the Commission reports the errors in the Land Parcel Identification System (LPIS) in France and Portugal since 2006; notes that before 2010 no own initiative action plan had been initiated in these countries; criticises the fact that "action plans" instigated by the Commission have only started in 2010 for Portugal and as late as in 2013 for France; considers that, although the way in which the Commission addresses the deficiencies detected in the LPIS systems in order to calculate the financial corrections gives rise to lengthy conformity procedures, delays in the adoption of action plans and reservations in the annual activity reports it makes for real financial corrections, as called for by Parliament and the Court of Auditors, rather than flat-rate corrections which are open to challenge by the Member States and recipients; supports the Commission in its approach, and calls for the systems to be improved in any way possible, including the provision of training to staff, in order to enhance their effectiveness and rapidity;
30. Would like to be informed on the total amount of the Union's subsidies, grants and other financial instruments that were spent in setting up and improving the LPIS system since the decision was taken, if possible divided by Member-State;
31. Points out in particular that, despite decisions on flat-rate corrections by the Member States, the errors detected in 2006 by the Court of Auditors in France and Portugal and confirmed by the Commission in 2008 were still not fully remedied in 2012; stresses that from 2006 to 2013 direct payments were made whose legality and regularity were not fully guaranteed ; is concerned about the Union budget because of the failure to make the financial corrections in respect of mistakenly disbursed amounts in the years from 2008 to 2013 in France and from 2010 to 2013 in Portugal arising from continuing errors in the LPIS, which were discovered in 2006; notes, however, that the Commission applied net financial corrections as early as 2008 in France and 2010 in Portugal; calls on the Commission to offset the entire financial risk of such errors in the Union budget through net corrections;
32. Observes that the conformity clearance procedures take far too long to protect the Union budget effectively; regrets the administrative capacities that have been frozen for years and the loss in revenue and interest to the EU budget;
33. Notes that the Director-General of DG AGRI has maintained a reputational reservation concerning deficiencies in the supervision and control of certified organic products; expects remedial action of the Commission to ensure that the absence of sufficient controls does not lead to unfair distortion of competition between organic and conventional farmers;
34. Endorses the reservations issued by the Director-General of DG AGRI:
– a reservation with regard to serious deficiencies in the direct payment systems in Bulgaria, France and Portugal;
– a reservation with regard to all rural development expenditure;
– a reservation with regard to deficiencies in the supervisory and control systems for organic production;
....in the field of regional policy, energy and transport
35. Notes that the error rate in regional policy is 6,8 %;
36. Observes that according to the audits of both the Court of Auditors and the Commission, some audit authorities of Member States are not carrying out their audits with the requisite thoroughness and that it is not sufficiently apparent whether and in what respect they are permanently improving their supervisory and control systems;
37. Notes that Member States' authorities have interpreted guidance in different ways, in particularly as regards statistical sampling and coverage of the audit universe; is deeply worried since the IAS found significant variations in the extent and depth of on-the-spot tests;
38. Observes that the Commission does not conduct enough random sample audits of its own at national management authorities and final beneficiaries;
39 Endorses the reservation issued by the Director-General of DG REGIO concerning ERDF/Cohesion Fund/IPA management and control systems for the 2007-2013 programming period in 17 Member States (72 programmes) and 12 European Territorial Cooperation programmes; endorses furthermore the reservation concerning ERDF/Cohesion Fund/IPA management and control systems for the 2000-2006 programming period in 5 Member States (11 programmes) on programmes; in this context points out in particular:
– audit authorities of all Member States must take their auditing task more seriously in order to bring about lasting improvements to management, supervisory and control systems;
– the Commission must perform more audits of final beneficiaries and authorising authorities in year ‘n’ in Member States where shortcomings have been found in administrative and audit systems in year ‘n-1’;
– the Commission must commit itself to audit all operational programmes at least once in the course of the programming period;
– the Commission must report in time for the 2013 discharge procedure on the operational applicability of the term “serious deficiencies” in the delegated act and on the net financial corrections it generated;
While not calling into question its decision to grant discharge, stresses its reservations as referred to in paragraphs 34 and39 leading to the following binding commitments to be made
40. Calls on the Commission, in the area of agricultural policy, for conformity clearance procedures in standard cases to be completed in less than two years, as foreseen in the Commission’s internal benchmarking adopted more than 15 years ago.
41. Calls on the Commission, in the field of agriculture, to resolve without delay the problems occurring in Paying Agencies whose residual risk of error lies above the materiality threshold of 2 % as identified by the Commission; suggests to focus its efforts especially on the Paying Agencies in France, Bulgaria, Romania, Portugal and Latvia;
42 Calls, in order to remedy shortcomings in LPIS systems, for action plans to be implemented promptly; calls, in the event of failure to comply with the deadlines set in the action plans for proportional net financial corrections as part of the conformity clearance procedure; notes that adversarial procedures should be completed in general in two years;
43. Calls on the Commission to report on the state of play of the implementation of the action plans for France and Portugal, before the deadline for amendments for the vote on the discharge in April 2014;
44. Takes the view that recurrent land parcel identification shortcomings must be met by progressively increasing corrective penalties well beyond existing net and flat-rate corrections; calls for a Commission proposal along these lines;
45. Calls on DG AGRI to develop and formalise its control strategy, re-engineer its risk assessments according to the targets established, and ensure proper monitoring through better quantitative and qualitative key performance indicators whose disclosure in the Annual Activity Report should be improved;
46. Calls, in the field of regional policy, following the Commission's and the Court of Auditors' recommendations, for the Member States to drastically step up their first-level checks and render them more stringent;
47. Calls on the Commission, in the activity reports of the directorates-general, to report the extent to which Member States' control statistics or audit reports have been examined, verified and validated and the depth in which this has been done;
48. Calls on the Commission, in its annual activity reports, to indicate how its own risk analyses have influenced the use of its own audit capacities, which countries were concerned and whether the shortcomings were remedied; calls for more direct audits of random samples taken from national granting authorities and final beneficiaries; notes that this could be made possible by redeploying staff and/or by reducing the number of audits in Member States with low error rates;
49. Stresses that the guidelines for audits by the Commission itself ought to constitute a self-imposed obligation on the Commission; calls on the Commission already to present them as part of the 2013 discharge procedure; calls for clear indications, to this end, of the extent to which Member States and programmes which have attracted attention in the past have been subjected to a special audit approach and the extent to which net financial corrections can be accelerated; stresses that this approach should already be adopted in the impending delegated acts and implementing acts (February 2014);
50. expects that the Commission improves its own checks on the audit authorities' annual control reports, to ensure that auditors are able to reach conclusions on the impact of the reliability of error rates from Member States' audits and to strengthen its assurance process; is of the opinion that these inconsistencies need to be addressed as soon as possible to minimise the risk of non-detection of system weaknesses and/or errors and irregularities;
51. Is aware that forthcoming net financial corrections cannot entail automatic penalties, as this would be contrary to the rule of law; calls, therefore, on the Commission to do everything in its power to shorten the adversarial procedures preceding the imposition of net corrections or interruptions of payments; calls on the Commission to submit a report and a proposal on the subject; undertakes as of now that Parliament will support the Commission in this matter if Member States raise objections;
52. Calls on the Commission to insert in the annual report on the protection of the Union budget a chapter on net financial corrections per Member State;
53. Calls on the Commission to identify in the Communication on shared fund management the three Member States with the highest error rates and financial corrections, which will subsequently receive a hearing from the discharge authority as part of the discharge procedure;
54. Calls on the legislative authority at the first opportunity to limit in time and in financial terms the option of replacing projects affected by errors with new projects before 15 February of year ‘n+1’;
55. Calls on the Court of Auditors to make more use of performance audits to compare expenditure programmes in a number of countries; calls once again for special country reports from the Court of Auditors for Member States which are particularly prone to error (with federal administrative structures) and which have attracted particular attention (through high error rates);
56. Asks for the following:
– the DGs concerned should build up a new and reinforced audit strategy to counter weaknesses found in in some Member States as referred to in paragraphs 47, 48 and 49;
– Intensification of quality checks on Member-States audit and control reports as referred to in paragraphs 47 and 48;
– increase in the random sampling based audits by the Commission in the spot and the more systematic use of net financial corrections as referred to in paragraph 13;
– detailed rules in the CPR delegated act to provide for definition of serious deficiencies and assessment of key requirements for management and control systems as referred to in paragraph 216;
– application of progressively increasing payme063nt reductions and administrative sanctions where eligibility criteria have not been respected by the final beneficiary receiving direct payments or rural development support and recurrent LPIS shortcomings;
– suspension mechanism to be used as an ex ante instrument for protection of the Union budget as referred to in paragraph 42;
– the use of interruptions, suspensions, financial corrections, and recoveries will be detailed in the next annual report on the protection of the Union budget, and specifically for structural and cohesion funds in the reports for 2016 onwards as referred to in paragraph 52;
– Annual Activity Reports (AARs) from the DGs should include information on reservations regarding risk to the Union budget and such reservations should only be lifted when the weaknesses have been addressed through Member State action and correction of irregular expenditure, and AARs also to error rate and residual risk estimates particularly when Member States have carried out corrective actions;
– a new horizontal report should be prepared on how new preventive and corrective tools are implemented under the 2014-2020 MFF, and assessing any risk from the gap between the final legislation compared to the Commission proposals;
– contradictory and conciliation procedures should be streamlined so that the whole conformity procedure will be shortened to two years in all standard cases as referred to in paragraph 40;
– for France and Portugal, comprehensive action plans should be established in the field of agriculture in among other the updating of their LPIS systems as requested in paragraph 44;
– the introduction of a template and recommendations for national management declarations;
– limit the option of replacing projects affected by error with new projects before 15 February n+ 1;
– making better use of RAL and limiting the period covered by pre-financing ;
– the Commission should reach binding bilateral agreements with Member States which have attracted particular attention, along the lines of the European Semester;
57. Calls for the above commitments to be sent, by the newly elected President of Parliament, to the President of the Commission calling for binding commitments for the delivery of the above following the 2014 European parliament elections; asks furthermore the new Parliament to include the above commitments in the written procedure at the hearings of the designated members of the new Commission and to demand appropriate pledges in order to improve protection of the Union budget;
58. Calls on the Commission to establish a registry for all Union funds going to media in the Member States from the structural funds or agricultural funds including rural development;
59. calls on the Commission to concentrate on those Member States which are vulnerable or conspicuous in this respect;
60. Calls on the Member States which did not already introduce a voluntary Member State Declaration to do so on the basis of the management declaration as foreseen by Article 59 of the Financial Regulation (EU, Euratom) No 966/2012; urges the Commission to establish the template for the management declaration as soon as possible; reiterates in this respect the on-going work of the interinstitutional working group on Member State Declarations which for its result is very dependent on the new content of the management declarations;
61. Calls on the Commission to monitor the certification process of the national audit authorities in the Member States dealing with repeatedly high error rates more frequently; encourages the Commission to present a communication and legislative proposal to this end;
62. Calls on the Commission to apply Article 32(5) of the Financial Regulation (EU, Euratom) No 966/2012 if the level of error is persistently high, and consequently to identify the weaknesses in the control systems, analyse the costs and benefits of possible corrective measures and take or propose appropriate action in terms of simplification, improvement of control systems and redesign of programmes or delivery systems;
63. Calls for significant reductions in those reporting requirements and control densities for Member States that operate permanently with very low error rates; encourages the Commission to present a communication and legislative proposal to this end;
64. Urges the Commission to tackle the problem of 'frontmen' being used for the purpose of obtaining public contracts and calls for every stage of public procurement procedures to be published on Internet, ensuring maximum transparency, and identifying subcontractors also;
65. Calls on the Commission to examine its internal shared management arrangements and make recommendations to the European Parliament regarding the appointment of Union officials at the head of national payment, management and audit authorities in the Member States with responsibility for the disbursement of Union funds;
66. Recommends that the newly elected Parliament ensures through the relevant committees that the respective Commissioners commit themselves formally, during the hearings, to take remedial action within the defined timeframe; these commitments, together with the reports (see previous paragraph) from the Commission and the Council will allow Parliament to take an informed decision during the discharge procedure 2013;
67. Calls on the newly elected Parliament, in the spirit of the above, to probe all legal means of achieving further legislative improvements, if appropriate, in the context of the mid-term review of the Multiannual Financial Framework;
The Court of Auditors' Statement of Assurance
Accounts – clean opinion
68. Welcomes the fact that the annual accounts of the Union for the financial year 2012 present fairly, and in all material respects, the position of the Union as at 31 December 2012 and the results of its operations, its cash flows and the changes in net assets for the then completed year;
69. Points out that in addition to delivering one opinion on the reliability of the accounts, the Court of Auditors delivers three on the legality and regularity of the underlying operations; takes the view that this plethora of opinions makes it more difficult for Members of Parliament to assess the Commission's implementation of the budget;
70. Regards it as abnormal that the annual accounts should show net assets of -EUR 40,4 million, and wonders whether the amounts to be called from Member States for staff pensions, which are estimated at EUR 42,5 billion, should not be entered as assets, given that this clearly constitutes a commitment; notes the Commission accounting officer’s explanations to the effect that international public-sector accounting standards have been applied; calls for the Court of Auditors to state clearly its position on this matter; calls for a figure to be put on the risk of the above amount not being made available, in the light of the Member States’ financial positions; proposes that consideration should be given to setting up a Community pension fund in order to get these financial commitments vis-à-vis staff off the balance sheet;
Legality and regularity of revenue – clean opinion
71. Notes with satisfaction that revenue underlying the accounts for the year ended 31 December 2012 is legal and regular in all material respects;
Legality and regularity of commitments – clean opinion
72. Notes with satisfaction that commitments underlying the accounts for the year ended 31 December 2012 are legal and regular in all material respects;
Legality and regularity of payments – adverse opinion
73. Deeply regrets that payments remain materially affected by error; reminds the Commission that Parliament has a zero-tolerance approach to errors;
74. Urges the Court of Auditors to assess the pertinence of an analysis based on the simple error rate and, in keeping with its independent status, to consider the materiality threshold[90];
75. Points out that, in accordance with international audit standards, the external auditor should set the materiality threshold for errors independently;
76. Respects the Court of Auditors’ method of taking the random sample with different priority countries and programmes each year for the ‘representative cross-section’; calls, however, in addition, for risk-based and programme-specific country reports starting with the annual report for 2014;
77. Understands that the basis for the adverse opinion of the Court of Auditors is the observation that the supervisory and control systems are only partially effective and that, as a result, payments are affected by a most likely error rate of 4,8 %;
78. Notes with concern that all policy groups covering operational expenditure are materially affected by error;
79. Emphasises that a distinction must be drawn between errors and fraud, and considers that, in the vast majority of cases, errors stem from administrative mistakes, many of which are linked to the complexity of Union and national rules, which can be corrected;
80. Recalls that the most likely error rate for payments in the financial year 2011 was estimated at 3,9 %, in the financial year 2010 at 3.7 % and in the financial year 2009 at 3.3 %; deplores this increase because it reverses the positive trend observed in the years 2007, 2008 and 2009; acknowledges, however, that the increased number of payments during the closing phase of programmes could be one reason for a rise in error rates;
81. Deeply regrets that the commitment given by the Commission chaired by Mr Barroso to reach a fully positive DAS has not been honoured[91];
82. Notes with concern that all areas of operational expenditure contributed to this increase, with the rural development, environment, fisheries and health remaining the most error-prone policy group with an estimated error rate of 7,9 %, followed by regional policy, energy and transport with an estimated error rate of 6,8 %;
83. Points out that the increases in the estimated error rate were greatest for the spending areas employment and social affairs, agriculture: rural development, market measures and direct support and regional policy energy and transport;
84. Stresses that the increase in the estimated error rate is partly due to the change of the Court of Auditors’ sampling approach, the sample of transactions including now only interim payments, final payments and clearing of advances;
85. Notes that the change in the most likely error rate attributable to the modification of the Court of Auditors’ sampling approach does not exceed 0.3 percentage points and that this change is the main reason for the increase in the estimated error rate for external relations, aid and enlargement, research and other internal policies;
86. Welcomes the fact that the Court of Auditors decided in 2012 to treat serious procurement errors made by all Union institutions and bodies as quantifiable, as it already did for the Member States and international organisations; notes that the Court of Auditors has not backdated its approach to cover procurement activities by the Union institutions and bodies which took place before 2011;
87. Urges the Court of Auditors, together with the Commission, to adopt a jointly agreed method of counting errors, given that a divergent approach simply obscures the real impact of an error on the success of a project and hampers any realistic assessment thereof;
88. Notes with satisfaction that this change of approach makes it possible to compare the estimated error rate on shared management expenditure (amounting to 5,3 %) with all other forms of operational expenditures (amounting to 4,3 %);
89. Welcomes the fact that the Court of Auditors' estimated error rate on administrative expenditure managed directly by the Union institutions is 0 %;
90. Stresses that eligibility errors account for more than two thirds of the overall estimated error rate, including serious failures to respect public procurement rules (1,4 percentage points), wholly ineligible projects/activities or beneficiaries (1,1 percentage points), ineligible costs included in cost claims (1,0 percentage point) and incorrect declarations in the field of agriculture (0,8 percentage points);
91. Refers to the Commission's EU anti-corruption report (COM (2014)0038), which identifies public procurement as being particularly exposed to corruption; endorses, in this connection, calls for higher standards of integrity and improved control mechanisms in a number of Member States;
92. Notes that the financial corrections reported as implemented in 2012 amounted to EUR 3,7 billion, more than three times the figure for 2011 (EUR 1,1 billion) while recoveries remained essentially constant at EUR 678 million (EUR 733 million in 2011) and that most corrections in 2012 refer to the 2000-2006 programming period;
93. Welcomes the fact that the Commission succeeded in rapidly imposing a significant number of financial corrections in 2012 whilst many financial corrections are in general made many years after initial disbursement of funds; is critical of the fact that the Union budget incurs additional administrative costs and losses of revenue and interest due to excessively protracted procedures, thereby blocking budget resources; considers effective ex ante controls a better way of protecting the Union budget than ex post financial corrections;
94. Welcomes the country-specific statements in the Communication from the Commission to the European Parliament on the protection of the European Union budget to end 2012[92]; is critical, however, of the fact that it does not yet provide reliable information on withdrawals, recoveries and pending recoveries of structural funds for the individual Member States, and calls on the Commission to supply country-specific information in the appropriate depth and on the basis of meaningful time series;
95. Takes note that, in financial terms, the total amount of financial corrections and recoveries implemented in 2012 represented 3,2 % of all 2012 budget payments and that the average amount of financial corrections and recoveries implemented per year by the Commission during the period 2009-2012 was EUR 2,6 billion or 2 % of the average amount of payments from the Union budget[93];
96. Considers that these measures have still had too little impact on the Union budget and asks the Commission to provide Parliament and the Council with precise amounts and the use made thereof in this regard in the next communication on the protection of the Union budget for the financial year 2013;
97. Notes that the 2012 accounts record a EUR 1,8 billion financial correction on the 2000-2006 use of cohesion policy funds in Spain, which corresponds to 49 % of the total corrections in 2012; regrets that in accordance with current rules, authorities in Spain were entitled to further funding amounting to EUR 1 390 million;
98. Welcomes the fact that the Court of Auditors excludes from the estimation of the error rate only the financial corrections incorporating detailed corrections at project level, but recognises that flat-rate corrections decided by the Commission could be an efficient tool to protect the Union budget;
99. Notes that only approximately 1 % of the financial corrections implemented in 2012 involved a net reduction of Union funding to the programme and the Member State concerned in cohesion policy;
100. Encourages the Commission to present information reconciling as far as possible the year in which payment is made, the year in which the related error is detected and the year in which recoveries or financial corrections are disclosed in the notes to the accounts;
The Synthesis Report and the annual activity reports
101. Takes note that 12 directors-general and two directors of executive agencies made a total of 23 quantified reservations related to the expenditure and that the Director-General of DG Budget qualified his declaration on revenue;
102. Deplores the fact that the term ‘amounts at risk’ is not defined within the ‘Synthesis of the Commission’s management achievements in 2012’ (Synthesis Report) adopted by the Commission on 5 June 2013 and that such amounts are not calculated on a consistent basis by the various directorates-general; calls on the Commission to develop a joint approach among the directorates-general with regard to establishing amounts at risk;
103. Points out that, as the Commission quantifies the amount at risk at between 1,9 % (EUR 2,6 billion) and 2,6 % (EUR 3,5 billion) of total payments for the year, it acknowledges that the level of error in expenditure is likely to be material, especially since the Commission itself states that amounts at risk in a number of areas, in particular rural development, are likely to be underestimated; emphasises, however, that these amounts do not include the potential future financial corrections, which substantially reduce the final risk; urges the Commission to adequately protect the Union budget and finds the average level of past financial corrections and recoveries encouraging ;
104. Considers that the comparison made by the Commission’s Synthesis Report of the total for ‘amounts at risk’ with the average level of financial corrections over the last years should be put into context (timing and impact of the financial corrections on Member States and beneficiaries, likely underestimation of the amounts at risk and re-use of the funds);
105. Regrets that the Commission continues to ignore Parliament's long standing request to add the individual Commissioner's signature to the annual activity reports of his/her related Directorate-General for which he/she is responsible; notes that the synthesis report is adopted by the College of Commissioners, but deems this unsatisfactory in the light of democratic accountability principles;
Pressure on the budget
106. Notes the cuts in payments brought by the Council, which have resulted in decreases in payment appropriations as compared to the adopted budgets; underlines that Council keeps following its strategy to artificially cut the level of payments, without taking into consideration real needs, and notes with concern that the substantial gap between appropriations for commitment and payment, coupled with a large amount of underspending at the start of the 2007-2013 programming period, has caused a build-up equivalent to two years and three months' worth of unused commitments;
107. Stresses that the recurrent shortages of payment appropriations have been the main cause of the unprecedentedly high level of RALs especially in the last years of the 2007 -2013 MFF; notes with deep concern that the Commission is finding it increasingly difficult to meet all requests for payments in the year within the budget appropriations for payment and that the cumulative total of commitment appropriations available for payments over the period 2007-2013 has exceeded the cumulative total of payment appropriations available over the same period by EUR 114 billon; notes that this is EUR 64 billion more than the difference of EUR 50 billion between the total of commitment appropriations and payment appropriations envisaged in the financial framework;
108. Expresses concern over the fact that the Commission's outstanding budgetary commitments for which payments and/or decommitments have not yet been made increased by EUR 10 billion to EUR 217 billion and that EUR 16.2 billion of claims for payment were outstanding at the end of 2012 (EUR 10.7 billion at the end of 2011 and EUR 6.4 billion at the end of 2010); is further concerned that 52 % of the payment appropriations requested in the draft budget 2014 are devoted to the completion of 2007 - 2013 MFF programmes;
109. Deplores that the Commission's DG for Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection was unable to honour EUR 60 million of its payment obligations in a timely way in 2012 (and EUR 160 million in 2013) with grave consequences for both vulnerable people and those NGOs trying to support them; given the urgent lifesaving nature, rapid project cycle and modest budget (EUR 2 per citizen per year) involved in the Union emergency response, calls on the Commission and the budgetary authority to recognise the exceptional nature and specificity of these actions by ensuring matching levels of commitment and payment appropriations for humanitarian aid in the annual budgetary cycle;
110. Points out that as of 30 June 2013 gross pre-financing amounted to EUR 81 billion of which 75 % (approximately EUR 61 billion) existed already more than 18 months ago and 20 % (EUR 16 billion) existed more than six years ago; notes that unnecessary extended periods of pre-financing can lead to an increased risk of error or loss, is of the opinion that pre-financing can and should not exceed EUR 50 billion; notes that under shared management pre-financing payments are not conditioned by the existence of a guarantee; suggests therefore that the Commission should provide in the reports of the accounting officer a breakdown of pre-financing payments by year of their accrual and by Member State;
111. Is worried since EUR 4,8 billion from the previous programming period 2000-2006 was paid from the Union budget as pre-financing to projects in the structural domain as of 31 June 2013, which neither have been cleared nor had the amounts been recovered by the Commission or the Member States; demands information on the state of play of those projects and information about the schedule for recovery or clearance of those funds;
112. Demands a detailed breakdown and a detailed explanation of the EUR 2,3 billion of pre-financing that: (a) had been adjusted due to technical corrections made to the opening balance when accruals-based accounts were first prepared or (b) had been transferred from the Commissions balance sheet to other Union bodies (agencies and joint undertakings) at the time of their creation;
113. Is worried that the Commission received in the development and cooperation area only guarantees for a total of EUR 700 million while an amount of EUR 10,1 billion in pre-financing has already been paid; expects the Commission to undertake the necessary steps to minimise the credit risk; is convinced that NGOs, international organisations and other beneficiaries of grants or contracting parties should be subject to guarantee requirements for pre-financed amounts;
114. Urges the Commission to prepare and publish a ‘long-range cash flow forecast’, projecting future payment requirements to ensure that necessary payments can be met from approved annual budgets;
115. Recalls the Parliament's proposal for a full-time Commissioner for Budgetary Control;
Responsibilities of the Commission and Member States in shared management
116. Stresses that the authorities of the Member States for the majority of transactions affected by error in shared management areas (e.g. agriculture and cohesion) had sufficient information to detect and correct the errors; therefore, once again requests the Member States to urgently reinforce the primary controls to address this unacceptably high level of mismanagement; moreover, calls on the Commission to shield the Union budget from the resulting risk of irregular payment by applying financial corrections in the event that such weaknesses in Member States' management and control systems are found; calls, therefore, on the Member States and the Commission once again to urgently reinforce first-level checks to address this unacceptably high level of mismanagement;
117. Calls on the Court of Auditors, pursuant to the second subparagraph of Article 287(4) TFEU, to deliver an opinion on the independence of the national audit authorities with regard to shared management;
118. Notes that the lack of reliability of the first-level checks performed by some Member States undermines the credibility of the annual activity reports drafted by the Commission services and the Synthesis Report adopted by the Commission, as they are partially based on the results of the checks performed by the national authorities; reiterates, consequently, its previous demand that the Commission establish reliable and objective annual activity reports;
119. Proposes that consideration be given to the possibility for national audit institutions, in their capacity as independent external auditors, and with due regard for international audit standards, to issue national audit certificates for the management of Union funds, which would be submitted to Member State governments with a view to being produced during the discharge process in accordance with an appropriate interinstitutional procedure to be introduced;
120. Emphasises the fact that, in accordance with TFEU Article 317, the Commission is ultimately responsible for the implementation of the Union's budget; points out that, where the Commission implements the budget under shared management, implementation tasks are delegated to Member States pursuant to Article 59 of the Financial Regulation (EU, Euratom) No 966/2012;
121. Welcomes the fact that, in accordance with Article 59(3), (4) and (5) of the Financial Regulation (EU, Euratom) No 966/2012, Member States’ management authorities are to be required annually to provide the Commission with their accounts accompanied by a management declaration, an annual summary of their final audit report and of controls and an opinion from an independent audit body, and notes that, in addition, Member States may provide voluntary national management declarations signed at the appropriate level based on the sections of the Financial Regulation referred to above;
122. Requests the Commission to forward each year to Parliament the annual summaries of the final audit reports and of the controls carried out by the Member States pursuant to Article 59(5)(b) of Regulation (EU, Euratom) No 966/2012 at the latest two months after their receipt by the Commission under the necessary safeguards laid down in the Interinstitutional Agreement of 2 December 2013 between Parliament and the Commission on budgetary discipline, cooperation in budgetary matters and sound financial management[94]; notes that Parliament's competent committee received those annual summaries for the financial year 2012 only on 19 February 2014;
123. Welcomes the fact that the Commission, within the context of that Interinstitutional Agreement accompanying the multiannual financial framework for 2014-2020, set up a working group composed of representatives of Parliament, the Council and the Commission in order to establish a template for such a declaration and to make the national declarations useful for the Commission’s own assurance process;
124. Requests the Commission, after the establishment of the template, to actively and constantly encourage the Member States to use that template in order to receive useful and reliable national declarations from all Member States;
The Council discharge recommendations
125. Calls for the Council to adopt a more critical position on the discharge and the ultimate use made of Union tax revenue in the Member States, and welcomes in this connection the critical stance taken by Sweden, the United Kingdom and the Netherlands on the discharge for 2012; endorses the calls for voluntary national management declarations;
126. Requests that the Council report on the implementation of the remedial measures falling under the Member States' responsibility, at the same time it adopts its next discharge recommendation by the end of October 2014;
Revenue
127. Notes that the Court of Auditors’ audit did not find any substantial error in the Commission’s calculation of Member States’ contributions and their payment, most of which are based on forecast Gross National Income (GNI) data for 2012;
128. Notes that the Court of Auditors was unable to demonstrate the correctness of EUR 8 million of the EFTA contribution (EUR 240 million); calls on the Court of Auditors and the Commission to investigate this finding and report on the correctness of the EFTA contribution in the follow-up to the discharge for 2012;
129. Calls on the Commission to inform the Committee on Budgetary Control during the follow-up to the 2012 discharge procedure what efforts have been made to remove reservations regarding the communication of data from the GNI field;
130. Is astonished that GNI figures can only be regarded as final four years after they have been communicated; regards this period of time as disproportionate;
131. Expresses its concern about the weaknesses of the Value Added Tax (VAT) systems of the Member States; refers in this connection to the findings of a study[95] which estimated losses of VAT revenue in 2011 due to infringements or failure to collect the tax at EUR 193 billion for public finances in the Member States; notes that this is equivalent to 18 % of the theoretical VAT revenue or 1,5 % of GDP (0,5 % more than the present Union budget for 2014-2020); wishes therefore to be informed what measures the Commission has taken to remove existing reservations relating to the national VAT system of the Member States, which may date from as long ago as the 1990s;
132. Takes note that the above mentioned study shows that Italy (EUR 36 billion), France (EUR 32 billion), Germany (EUR 26,9 billion) and the United Kingdom (EUR 19 billion) contributed over half of the total VAT gap in quantitative terms, mainly because they are the largest Union economies; also notes that, in terms of ratio to their own GDP, Romania (EUR 10 billion), Greece (EUR 9,7 billion) Lithuania (EUR 4,4 billion) and Latvia (EUR 0,9 billion) were the Member States with the largest VAT gap in 2001; takes note that the study also shows a marked upward trend in the VAT gap in many Member States since 2008, as a result of the economic crisis (this was especially the case in Spain, Greece, Latvia, Ireland, Portugal and Slovakia); notes that on average across the Union, the VAT gap increased by 5 percentage points once the economic crisis hit;
133. Notes in this connection the Commission’s answer that 21 of the current 108 existing reservations were imposed by Member States themselves; observes that 27 further reservations are based on the fact that national legislation does not accord with Council Directive 2006/112/EC on the common system of value added tax[96]; welcomes the fact that it has proved possible to remove 12 of the 16 longstanding reservations;
134. Regrets that Belgium, Finland and Poland, which the Court of Auditors visited in 2012 in the course of its audits, are characterised by shortcomings in customs surveillance at national level in connection with retrospective audits and risk analysis; calls on the Commission to investigate these shortcomings;
135. Concludes from the above audits and from the Commission’s audits in 2010 and 2011 that similar shortcomings could also exist in other countries, and therefore calls on Member States and the Commission to step up their customs surveillance, especially in the major ports; calls on the Commission to report on the matter during the preparation of the discharge for 2013;
136. Expresses its concern that EUR 200 million in fines which have been imposed but not yet paid have no cover of any kind;
137. Notes on the basis of the letter of 12 April 2013[97] from Commissioner Šemeta that at present it is impossible for technical reasons to introduce the modernised Customs Code;
138. Notes the Communication from the Commission ‘action plan on fighting tax fraud and tax evasion’ of 6 December 2012 (COM(2012)0722) and the Commission’s answers of 26 September 2013 (COM(2013)0349);
139. Welcomes the announcement by Commissioner Šemeta that he will forward to Parliament by 1 May 2014 an overview of the measures to combat tax evasion and avoidance;
140. Considers that VAT fraud, and in particular the so-called carousel or missing trader fraud, distorts competition, and deprives national budgets from significant resources and is detrimental to the Union budget; calls on the Commission to use all means to enforce the obligation of Member States to provide information in a timely manner to the Commission; welcomes in this regard the promise of the Commissioner to provide Parliament until 1 May 2014 with an overview of the developments of the initiatives taken to tackle tax evasion and avoidance taking place within the Union and in relation to third countries;
Agriculture
Market and direct support
141. Regrets that the European Agriculture Guarantee Fund (EAGF) payments are not free from material error in 2012, that the supervisory and control systems examined for expensed payments were partially effective and deplores the increase of the most likely error rate to 3,8 %, (2,9% in 2011);
142. Notes that for a significant number of transactions affected by error, the Court of Auditors considers that the national authorities had enough information to detect and correct the errors concerned; asks the Court of Auditors to give precise information in this regard;
143. Is deeply concerned about the fact that the critical observations made in the annual report of the Court of Auditors for the financial year 2012 and the systematic weaknesses detected by the latter have already been reported by the Court of Auditors in its previous reports, and in particular, as regards the eligibility of permanent pasture, since 2007; notes the Commission’s explanations and calls on the Commission and the Court of Auditors, in the context of the adversarial procedure, to reach agreement on the eligibility criteria for permanent pasture;
144. Points out, in particular, that the most frequent accuracy errors relate to overstated area declarations and administrative errors, and that the bigger accuracy errors relate mostly to excessive payments for permanent grassland; regrets that overdeclarations in the cross-checks of declared parcels on the basis of the LPIS in certain Member States have not been discovered since the LPIS database is only partially reliable;
145. Points out that the audit by the Court of Auditors covered cross-compliance requirements and that cases where cross-compliance obligations were not met were treated as error where it was established that the infringement existed in the year in which the farmer applied for aid;
146. Points out that the Court of Auditors includes deficiencies in the area of the cross-compliance in their calculation of the error rate while noting that, in the view of the Commission, cross-compliance does not concern the eligibility to payments but only triggers administrative penalties[98] ;
147. Recalls that ‘the error rate must be used with great care and not be treated as an overall assessment of the respect of the cross-compliance obligations by farmers’ because the Court of Auditors has restricted its audit only to certain cross-compliance requirements[99];
148. Is deeply concerned about the fact that the Court of Auditors’ audits show once again that the effectiveness of the Internal Management and Control System (IACS) is adversely affected mainly by inaccurate databases used for cross-checks; in particular points out that significant deficiencies were found in the LPIS audited in England and Northern Ireland;
149. Regrets also that with regard to the accuracy of payments, but also to the quality of the on-the-spot measurements, the Court of Auditors found deficiencies in the three paying agencies audited in England, Northern Ireland and Luxembourg;
150. Shares the concern of the Court of Auditors as regards the change in the approach used by DG AGRI to calculate the residual error rate for decoupled area aid in 2012, as it takes into account the fact that the inspection statistics can be affected by deficiencies impacting their reliability and that they do not cover all components of the residual error rate;
151. Deplores the fact that the results of this new approach confirm that only limited assurance can be gained from certain Member States' inspection statistics, from the declarations of the directors of paying agencies and from the work carried out by the certification bodies; calls for this new approach to extend to all CAP expenditure in DG AGRI's next Annual Activity Report;
152. Regrets that out of seven recommendations issued by the Court of Auditors in its annual reports for the financial years 2009 and 2010, only two were implemented in most respects and four in some respects by the Commission;
153. Endorses the recommendation made by the Court of Auditors that the eligibility of land and in particular permanent pasture be properly recorded in LPIS (see paragraphs 3.13, 3.25 and box 3.3. of the Annual Report for 2012);); urges the Commission, in cooperation with the Member States, to address the problems with regard to permanent pasture and ensure that it is correctly recorded in the LPIS; urges the Commission to inform Parliament on a six months basis on progress made;
154. Asks the Commission and the Member States to take immediate remedial action when administrative and control systems, and/or IACS databases, are found to be deficient or out of date;
155. Deplores in this regard that deficiencies were detected by the Court of Auditors and the Commission in the LPIS systems in Portugal and in France in the course of the 2006/2007 audits, whilst the Director-General of DG AGRI only entered a reservation accompanied by an action plan on these grounds as regards Portugal in his DG’s annual activity report of 2011 and as regards France in 2012;
156. Considers that the adverse effects on effective Union budget protection can result from any delay in making the reservation to be accompanied by a request for an action plan and points out that the Commission bears particular responsibility in this regard;
157. States with deep concern that the Court of Auditors found systemic deficiencies in the LPIS audited in Italy and Spain in 2008, 2009 and 2010 and that since 2007 deficiencies were found in the LPIS of 12 Member States[100]; notes the reply by the Commission and the Spanish authorities to the effect that, despite the limited extent of the deficiencies, an error correction system is being applied, involving the incorporation of an eligibility coefficient into regulation of the next period;
158. Shares the concern voiced by the Court of Auditors as regards the slowness of conformity procedures resulting in financial corrections (point 4.31 of the Annual Report for 2012) and regrets that a sample of conformity procedures showed that in 2012 the actual duration (more than four years) was twice as long as the Commission's internal benchmark, which therefore ultimately led to a considerable backlog; takes note of the fact that the contradictory procedure, the conciliation mechanism and the calculation of corrections makes it difficult to close conformity clearance procedures in time; expects the Commission to make all efforts to reduce the duration of the conformity procedure in standard cases to maximum two years[101];
159. Urges the Commission and the Member States to ensure that payments are based on inspection results and that on-the-spot inspections are of the quality necessary to determine eligible area in a reliable manner;
160. Urges the Commission to ensure that the design and quality of the work performed by the directors of paying agencies and the certification bodies provide a reliable basis for the assessment of the legality and regularity of underlying transactions;
Rural development, environment, fisheries and health
161. Regrets that the payments in rural development, environment, fisheries and health are not free from material error in 2012, that the supervisory and control systems examined for expensed payments were partially effective or - in one case - not effective, and deplores the increase in the most likely error rate to 7,9 % (7,7 % in 2011);
162. Notes that, for a significant number of transactions affected by error, the Court of Auditors considers that the national authorities had enough information to detect and correct the errors concerned; asks the Court of Auditors to give precise information in this regard;
163. Points out that, as in 2011, the major component (65 %) of the most likely error rate reported by the Court of Auditors concerns non-area-related measures, and stresses that the reason for most quantifiable errors was that the beneficiaries did not respect the eligibility requirements, in particular those concerning agri-environment commitments, special requirements for investment projects and public procurement rules;
164. Is deeply concerned about the fact that once again the Court of Auditors identifies significant problems concerning the implementation of cross-compliance requirements for the identification and registration of animals; calls on the Member States to improve the quality of checks throughout the year without imposing an additional administrative load on the beneficiaries;
165. Reiterates its regret that in 2012 the Commission applied different methodologies to quantify public procurement errors in the policy areas of agriculture and cohesion, both of which furthermore are not in line with the Court of Auditors’ methodology, and calls on the Commission and the Court of Auditors to harmonise the treatment of public procurement errors in shared management without delay and to report to the discharge authority on the changes;
166. Reiterates its concern about the fact that many errors were detected when beneficiaries were public bodies and that those errors concerned issues such as declaring ineligible VAT or not complying with public procurement rules; calls, therefore, on the Commission and the Member States to ensure that the existing rules are better enforced;
167. Regrets that the Court of Auditors identified weaknesses[102] in the supervisory and control systems of France, Sweden, Germany, Poland, Bulgaria and Romania for rural development and that the three elements audited were affected by deficiencies: i.e. the administrative and control systems to ensure correct payment, the control systems based on physical on-the-spot checks, and systems to ensure implementation and control of cross-compliance;
168. Notes with concern that the weaknesses detected in 2012 in the above-mentioned Member States were very similar to those found and reported in the six different Member States which were audited in 2011 (Denmark, Spain, Italy, Hungary, Austria and Finland);
169. Is concerned that ultimately similar errors might exist in all Member States;
170. Notes with concern that the most important weakness detected by the Court of Auditors this year concerned ineffective checks of compliance with procurement rules which were apparent in Sweden, Germany (Brandenburg and Berlin), Poland, Bulgaria and Romania, and that overall the audit detected more than EUR 9 million of ineligible expenditure resulting from the non-respect of the procurement rules;
171. Regrets that, on account of differences in approach between the Court of Auditors and the Commission on the issue of financial clearance, Parliament cannot assess with accuracy its impact on the legality and regularity of the underlying operations; notes that, according to the Court of Auditors, the results of the conformity audits were not sufficiently taken into account for the financial clearance decision; calls on the Commission and the Court of Auditors, in the context of the adversarial procedure, to reach agreement on the financial clearance procedure;
172. Shares the concerns voiced by the Court of Auditors concerning the weaknesses detected in the conformity audit work as regards quality control, audit documentation and the manner of evaluating evidence and forming conclusions;
173. Welcomes the fact that the Commission has increased the total amount of financial corrections in recent years whilst reducing the proportion of flat-rate corrections significantly in 2012; recognises at the same time that flat-rate corrections, under certain circumstances, can also be an appropriate means to protect the Union budget
174. Shares nevertheless the concern expressed by the Court of Auditors that the use of flat-rate corrections does not sufficiently take into account the nature and gravity of the infringement and that the length of the procedure is a persistent problem with conformity decisions; deems flat-rate corrections however a necessary tool for situations where a more precise calculation is not feasible; therefore requests that the Commission set out criteria for the calculation of flat rate corrections that will ensure that the nature and gravity of the deficiency is adequately taken into account;
175. Is disappointed by the fact that the Court of Auditors found serious deficiencies in the implementation of the reinforcement-of-assurance procedure in 4 of the 5 Member States which applied this new procedure: Bulgaria and Romania for European Agricultural Fund for Rural Development (EAFRD) and Luxembourg and the United Kingdom (Northern Ireland) for European Agricultural Guarantee Fund (EAGF);
176. Notes that DG AGRI's annual activity report contains a reservation for the total EAFRD expenditure for 2012 and that this reservation is due to concerns about the quality of controls in some Member States as well as the error rate reported by the Court of Auditors;
177. Regrets however that DG AGRI's reservation for EAFRD suffers from two deficiencies: DG AGRI was unable to provide its own quantified estimate of the residual error rate or to make an assessment for each paying agency on whether or not to apply a higher error rate on the basis on information from its own audits;
178. Calls on the Member States to carry out their existing administrative checks in an efficient way by using all relevant information available to the paying agencies, as this has the potential to detect and correct the majority of the errors;
179. Calls on the Commission to continue to provide guidance and assistance to Member States by means of best practice, through systematic interruptions of payments, financial corrections according to the severity of the error and also, in addition, by drawing up short term and ad hoc action plans;
180. Calls on the Commission to ensure in the area of rural development that uniform standards and procedures are being equally applied and observed both by its approving and auditing bodies; stresses that the application of different standards between approving and auditing bodies has consequently led to confusion at the level of national paying agencies and project applicants in the past, resulting in delays and restrictions in project applications; stresses that any changes in the application and approval procedure for an EAFRD contribution may only be binding for the future and thus shall not apply to any previously approved projects;
181. Calls on the Commission to ensure that any future guidelines on eligibility conditions and selection criteria for the new programming period 2014-2020 of EAFRD are being equally set as a common standard not only for national competent bodies and paying agencies but also for its approving and auditing bodies; stresses that those guidelines should be constructed in a way that practicable implementation on the ground is possible;
182. Notes with disappointment that the Director-General of DG AGRI himself announced in the DG’s annual activity report for 2012 that despite the fact that the Commission set up a comprehensive action plan to address the increase of the error rate in rural development ‘it is to be noted that it will not be feasible to produce a significant impact on the error rate before 2014 at the earliest’; points out that the Court of Auditors agreed with this latter assessment in its Annual Report for the financial year 2012;
183. Stresses that this assertion justifies that the discharge authority requires formal commitments with binding requirements and deadlines for the Commission and certain Member States to implement in full all remedial measures referred to under paragraphs 40 to 67 of this resolution, leading to a reduction of the error rates in the future;
184. Notes that the amounts declared irrecoverable from the EAGF due to insolvency of the beneficiary amount to EUR 351,6 million since 2007 as reported by the Commission; notes also that a further EUR 6 million have not been recovered since 2007 for the reason that the costs exceeded the benefits of the recovery; expects the Commission to provide those amounts each year in its Annual Activity report and elaborate ways how Member States can diminish the risk of funding beneficiaries at the brink to insolvency;
185. Notes that in accordance with Article 33(7) (EAFRD) of Regulation (EC) No 1290/2005[103] a Member State may decide to halt the recovery procedure subject to the conditions laid down in Article 32(6) of that Regulation, only after closure of the programme; notes that all amounts in relation to EAFRD debts declared irrecoverable in the financial years 2007-2012, i.e. EUR 0,9 million of debts, do not have any valid justification; asks the Commission to explain what it is planning to do in this regard;
186. Observes that some Member States ran multiannual programs in the MFF 2007-2013 and some paying agencies were obliged to undertake recoveries from beneficiaries even when small amounts of no more than some cents were concerned (since Article 33 (7) in connection with Article 32 (6) of Regulation (EC) No 1290/2005 was only applicable after closure of a rural development program); is worried since for these small amounts costs for the recovery clearly exceeded the amounts to be recovered; notes that for the financial year 2013 and 2014 no changes are in sight for the Member States concerned; notes that the Commission was informed about the problem early on; is surprised that the Commission has not reacted faster to remedy the embarrassing situation for the Union; calls on the Commission to take a more pro-active approach in solving such nuisances in the coming MFF when they come to the Commission's attention;
Recommendations as regards direct payments and rural development
187. Endorses the following recommendations of the Court of Auditors: the Commission should address all the weaknesses identified in its conformity audits and the persistent problem of long delays in the conformity procedure as a whole; the Commission should further improve its method of determining financial corrections so as to take better account of the nature and gravity of the infringements detected; the Commission should address the weaknesses identified in systems for procurement and grant agreements;
188. Supports the recommendations and good practices to reduce errors by addressing gold-plating as suggested in the Parliament's study on "Gold-Plating in the EAFRD: To what extent do national rules unnecessarily add to complexity and, as a result, increase the risk of errors?"; notes that there are forms of gold-plating where benefits outweigh the costs and where regulation is justified ('good' gold-plating practices), whereas numerous other practices of gold-plating appear to be disproportionate and costs outweigh the benefits ('bad' gold-plating practices); demands that the latter gold-plating forms be addressed;
189. Requests in this respect the immediate implementation of the so-called "quick wins" to assess potential costs together with expected policy benefits when introducing ambitious requirements and commitments, to tackle problematic administrative and procedural requirements, as well as to avoid ambiguous and unclear requirements;
190. Asks also for structural changes leading to long-term solutions such as a permanent knowledge-sharing platform among managing authorities and paying agencies across the Union so that EAFRD specific bodies can learn by examples and best practices when discussing areas of ambiguity as well as overly complex requirements and controls; demands in this respect the accessibility to this platform in all Member States;
Conclusions as regards the common agricultural policy
191. Considers that the way in which the Commission addresses the deficiencies detected in the LPIS system (excessively long conformity procedures leading to the flat-rate corrections with delayed inclusion of action plans and reservations in the annual activity reports) creates a financial risk to the budget of the Union; calls, in order to remedy shortcomings in LPIS systems, for action plans to be implemented promptly; calls, in the event of failure to comply with the deadlines, for proportionate reduction and suspension of monthly or intermediate payments to the Member States concerned in order to avoid creating a financial risk to the budget of the Union.
192. Points out in particular that despite decisions on flat rate corrections the errors detected by the Court of Auditors in 2006 in France and Portugal and confirmed by the Commission in 2008 were still not fully remedied by the Member States in 2012; stresses that from 2006 to 2013 direct payments were made whose legality and regularity were not fully guaranteed; is concerned about the Union budget, since financial corrections have not yet been made for wrongly paid appropriations between 2008 and 2013 in France and between 2010 and 2013 in Portugal, as a result of persistent errors in the LPIS that were detected in 2006; notes, however, that the Commission applied net financial corrections for the financial years prior to 2008 in France and prior to 2010 in Portugal; calls on the Commission to offset the entire financial risk of such errors in the Union budget through net corrections;
193. Welcomes the Communication from the Commission to the European Parliament and the Council on the application of net financial corrections on Member States for Agriculture and Cohesion policy (COM (2013)0994), because the Commission committed itself not only to ‘speed up the conformity procedure so that in standard cases the financial corrections can be decided two years after the initial audit took place’ but also to align the interruption and suspension for the common agricultural policy with cohesion policy funds; notes that both commitments have been called for by Parliament for many years, particularly in its resolution on the discharge for the financial year 2011[104];
194. Notes that all financial corrections in the field of agriculture are net financial corrections; considers it necessary, however, for the conformity procedure to have its full effect to accelerate the procedure and to further improve the criteria and methods for the application of net financial corrections beyond the new guidelines foreseen that will be based on the existing guidelines as decided on by the Commission already on 23 December 1997[105],
195. Stresses in particular that the shortening of the conformity procedure leading to financial corrections announced by the Commission cannot be evaluated before mid-2016, which means that Parliament will engage with the matter only as soon as in the course of the discharge procedure in the years 2017 and 2018;
196. Endorses the reservations issued by the Director-General of DG AGRI:
– a reservation with regard to serious deficiencies in the direct payment systems in Bulgaria, France and Portugal;
– a reservation with regard to all rural development expenditure;
– a reservation with regard to deficiencies in the supervisory and control systems for organic production;
calls on the newly elected Parliament to demand a firm undertaking from the new Commissioner to remedy the situation including preparing specific arrangements with the most exposed Member States in order to reinforce the protection of the Union budget;
Regional policy, energy and transport
197. Stresses that regional policy, which is implemented primarily through the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) and the Cohesion Fund (CF), accounts for 96 % of expenditure in this field of policy, and that, in 2012, 97 % of regional policy expenditure was implemented through the ERDF (with payments of EUR 27,5 billion) and the CF (with payments of EUR 9,6 billion);
198. Observes that, of the 180 transactions audited by the Court of Auditors, 88 (49 %) were affected by errors; observes furthermore that, on the basis of the errors quantified by the Court, it estimates the most likely error rate to be 6.8 %, which means an increase of 0,8 percentage points in comparison with the previous year; notes that the Commission observes that the error rates would have remained unaltered if the Court of Auditors had taken account of flat-rate corrections;
199. Stresses that the findings of the Court of Auditors’ audit indicate weaknesses in the ‘first-level checks’ on expenditure; observes that, for 56 % of the regional policy transactions affected by error (quantifiable and/or non-quantifiable), the Court of Auditors considers that sufficient information was available for the Member State authorities to have detected and corrected one or more of the errors before certifying the expenditure to the Commission; observes furthermore that the main source of error is the financing of projects which do not accord with Union and/or national public procurement rules or do not meet the conditions for financial support, and payment of ineligible costs;
200. Draws attention to the multiannuality of the cohesion policy management system and underlines that the final evaluation of irregularities related to the policy implementation will be possible only at the closure of the programming period;
201. Considers it unacceptable that, for years, errors of the same kind continue to be identified, often in the same Member States; acknowledges that suspension and interruptions of payments by the Commission ensures that corrective actions are carried out in cases where deficiencies were identified; calls on the Commission to step up monitoring of national and regional management and control systems in the light of this finding, and to ease monitoring in countries where management and control systems have proved reliable;
202. Agrees with the Court of Auditors that Member States have a duty to prevent or detect and correct irregular expenditure and reporting on this subject to the Commission; observes that the administrative and certification authorities in the Member States therefore have a key role to play in ensuring the regularity of the expenditure reimbursed by the Commission (point 5.12 of the Annual Report for 2012);
203. Observes that the Court of Auditors audited the supervisory and control systems of four audit authorities in four countries, finding the systems in Belgium (Wallonia), Malta and the United Kingdom (England, in the case of the European Social Fund (ESF)) to be only partially effective, while it found the systems in Slovakia to be effective;
204. Welcomes that, since 2009, 62 of the 112 audit authorities have been checked by the Directorate-General for Regional and Urban Policy and the Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion; observes that these audit authorities are responsible for 257 of the 317 ERDF/CF operational programmes and 48 of the 117 ESF operational programmes; observes, furthermore, that the audit authorities examined during the four-year period were responsible for 95 % of the ERDF/CF appropriations for the 2007-2013 programming period;
205. Notes with concern that the Court of Auditors audited the reports by national audit authorities on 138 ERDF/CF and ESF operational programmes and in many cases found shortcomings in them; notes that the Commission stresses in this connection that in cases in which the Commission judged the reported error rate to be unreliable, flat-rate corrections were made where appropriate;
206. Is concerned that the Commission takes the opinions, the annual audit reports and the management declarations which it receives up to 15 February of year ‘n+1’ as a basis for its risk analysis and for its own audits, although the documents frequently contain inaccuracies; observes that they therefore do not permit a definite risk analysis;
207. Calls on the Commission, therefore, on the basis of an independent audit procedure (using risk analyses of its own, reports by the Court of Auditors and other sources) to perform audits of final beneficiaries and granting authorities in year ‘n+1’ in those Member States which have attracted attention because of shortcomings in administrative and audit systems in year ‘n-1’; calls therefore for a comprehensible automatic system;
208. Calls on the Commission, during the 2014-2020 programming period, itself to audit, by means of random samples taken by itself, all operational programmes which have attracted attention because of the level of funding, the frequency of errors or shortcomings in supervisory and control systems;
209. Would consider it right for the guidelines for audits by the Commission itself to be laid down in the form of an obligation imposed on itself by the Commission; calls on the Commission already to present them in the run-up to the 2013 budget discharge procedure; calls for clear indications, to this end, of the extent to which Member States and programmes which have attracted attention in the past are being subjected to a special audit approach and the extent to which net financial corrections can be accelerated; considers that this approach should also be reflected in forthcoming delegated acts;
210. Is aware that automatic penalties cannot be imposed, as this would be contrary to the rule of law; calls, therefore, on the Commission to do everything in its power to shorten the adversarial procedures preceding the imposition of net corrections or interruptions of payments; calls on the Commission, before the 2013 discharge procedure, to report on the progress made;
211. Welcomes further that between mid-2010 and November 2013 the Commission performed additional checks on audit authorities, intermediate bodies and beneficiaries (77 audits on more than 70 operational programmes in 16 Member States) to verify the quality of administrative audits;
212. Stresses that, according to statistics from the 2012 activity report of DG REGIO, risk-affected payments ranged between EUR 755,8 million (minimum) and 1 706,8 million (maximum); observes that, in this context, the Commission expressed 61 reservations for programmes or parts thereof and 25 reputation reservations, primarily concerning Spain, Sweden, European territorial cooperation and the Czech Republic; impresses on the Commission that it needs to continue to pursue the greatest possible simplification in order to avoid to the maximum any possibility of error;
213. Welcomes the fact that the new Common Provisions Regulation (EU) No 1303/2013[106] introduces a series of improvements: payment of the first instalment only after adoption of the operational programme; decommitment three years after expiry of the programme (‘n+3’); reduction of advance payments; 10 % of the calculated amount of invoices is withheld from payments until the final statement has been approved; country-specific recommendations may be included in partnership agreements;
214. Welcomes the new rules for the 2014-2020 programming period, decided through the ordinary legislative procedure, including measures such as the designations of audit and certifying authorities, accreditations of audit authorities, audit examination and acceptance of accounts, financial corrections and net financial corrections, proportional control, ex ante conditionalities that aim to further contribute to the reduction of the level of error; supports in this respect the growing results orientation and the thematic concentration of cohesion policy that should assure high added-value of the co-financed operations; welcomes also the definition of serious deficiency and the anticipated increased level of corrections for repeated deficiencies;
215. Regrets, however, that under the new ERDF Regulation (EU) No 1301/2013[107] too, Member States may replace projects affected by errors which were identified in year ‘n’ with new projects, eliminating an essential incentive for the careful use of appropriations; considers that this arrangement should be restricted at the earliest opportunity and fundamentally re-regulated by 2020 at the latest;
216. Regrets furthermore that the criteria for assessing the systems ("serious deficiencies") and for establishing the level of flat rate financial corrections were not conclusively defined in the Regulation (EU) No 1301/2013; expects the detailed and operational criteria that will allow the Commission to apply the notion of ‘serious deficiency’ to be laid down in a delegated act;
217. Recognises that in the course of the discharge procedure a number of bilateral meetings have taken place between the rapporteur and the Commission on horizontal issues of the delegated act specifying further how "serious deficiencies" could be more clearly defined and on how financial corrections could be tightened in case of persisting serious deficiencies; regrets that the proposals of the Committee on Budgetary Control on the level of financial corrections (adding a 50 % and a 75 % rate) were not taken into consideration; deplores that in the latest draft delegated act (of 4 February 2014) the initial automatism for inflicting financial corrections at a higher level, if the same serious deficiency is identified in a subsequent accounting year, has become optional and, as a consequence, the requirement for Member States to put in place supervisory and control systems guaranteeing sound financial management has been weakened;
218. Welcomes the communication from the Commission concerning net financial corrections on Member States (COM(2013)0934); has doubts, however, as to whether the documents submitted by Member States by 15 February of year ‘n+1’ provide a sound basis for a risk analysis; observes furthermore that the adversarial procedure which may lead to the imposition of net corrections takes four months, which is too long;
219. Calls, in light of the high levels of public procurement errors in cohesion policy and with regard to the Court of Auditor's seminar on EU public procurement in January 2014, for a stronger and immediate implementation of existing rules in this area in the Member States; calls furthermore for a better coordination of public procurement rules at the level of all stakeholders and a simplification and harmonisation of rules and financial corrections;
220. Welcomes the possible introduction of voluntary national declarations on the administration of appropriations by the Member States in shared management fields;
221. Demands the Commission to annually involve Parliament in due time into TEN-T/CEF co-financing, with information on the choice of transport infrastructure projects and amounts; asks the Commission to provide Parliament annually with lists of transport projects and amounts of co-financing through the regional and cohesion funds;
222. Calls on the Commission to define and take rapid action to address the weaknesses of the audit system in the policy areas of cohesion;
223. Endorses the reservation issued by the Director-General of DG REGIO concerning ERDF/Cohesion Fund/IPA management and control systems for the 2007-2013 programming period in 17 Member States (72 programmes) and 12 European Territorial Cooperation programmes; endorses furthermore the reservation concerning ERDF/Cohesion Fund/IPA management and control systems for the 2000-2006 programming period in 5 Member States (11 programmes) on programmes; in this context points out in particular:
– audit authorities of all Member States must take their auditing task more seriously in order to bring about lasting improvements to management, supervisory and control systems;
– the Commission must perform more audits of final beneficiaries and authorising authorities in year ‘n’ in Member States where shortcomings have been found in administrative and audit systems in year ‘n-1’; systems;
– the Commission must commit itself to audit all operational programmes at least once in the course of the programming period;
– the Commission must report in time for the 2013 discharge procedure on the operational applicability of the term “serious deficiencies” in the delegated act and on the net financial corrections it generated;
calls on the newly elected Parliament to demand a firm undertaking from the new Commissioner to remedy the situation including preparing specific arrangements with the most exposed Member States in order to reinforce the protection of the Union budget;
224. Calls on the newly elected Parliament to establish action to remedy the weaknesses detected in the fields of agriculture and regional policy as urgent tasks in the new European Commission's work programme;
225. Calls on the newly elected Parliament to raise the issue of the weaknesses in the fields of agricultural and regional policy indicated here at the hearings of the designated members of the new Commission and to demand appropriate pledges in order to improve protection of the Union budget;
226. Calls on the newly elected Parliament, in the spirit of the above, to probe all legal means of achieving further legislative improvements, if appropriate, in the context of the mid-term review of the Multiannual Financial Framework;
Commission Task Force for Greece
227. Appreciates the work of the Task Force for Greece; notes that of the 181 priority projects identified by the Group the following projects amounting to EUR 415,7 million are at risk:
– new port of Igoumenitsa, phase C with an approved volume of EUR 81,25 million;
– suburban train section Piraeus-3 Gefyres with a co-financed budget of EUR 70 million;
– construction of pier in Symi port with an approved volume of EUR 4,1 million;
– national registry with an approved volume of EUR 41,9 million;
– cadastre with a co-financed budget of EUR 130 million;
– e-ticket with an approved volume of EUR 34,76 million;
– rehabilitation of Karla lake with an approved volume of EUR 41 million;
– improvement of the access road to the landfill of the 2nd geographical unit of the Prefecture of Aitolo Akarnania with an approved volume of EUR 11,4 million;
– improvement - widening of Provincial Road Velo - Stimagka - Koutsi – Nemea with an approved volume of EUR 7,1 million;
– replacement of the central water mains of Zakynthos with an approved volume of EUR 9,6 million;
requests the Commission to inform Parliament in detail about the problems encountered with those projects;
228. Requests that the Commission evaluate the possibility to establish a Task Force for all Member States that struggle with the implementation of Union funds;
Employment and social affairs
229. Underlines that employment and social policy is implemented primarily by means of the European Social Fund (ESF), and that some EUR 11 782 million – 97 % of the appropriations – is made available via the ESF;
230. Observes that, of the 180 transactions audited by the Court of Auditors, 63 (35 %) were affected by errors; observes that, on the basis of the errors quantified by the Court of Auditors in 31 transactions, it estimates the likely error rate to be 3.2 %, which means an increase of 1 % in comparison with the previous year; notes that the Commission observes that the error rates would have remained unaltered – i.e. close to the materiality threshold – if the Court had taken account of flat-rate corrections implemented in 2012, and which were especially high (a 25 % flat rate) in one Member State;
231. Stresses that the findings of the Court of Auditors’ audit indicate weaknesses in the ‘first-level checks’ on expenditure; notes that, as in previous years, the Court of Auditors considers that for 67 % of the transactions affected by error (both quantifiable and non-quantifiable) sufficient information was available for the Member State authorities to have detected and corrected at least one or more of the errors prior to certifying the expenditure to the Commission; observes furthermore that the main source of error is payment of ineligible costs and breaches of public procurement rules;
232. Supports the Commission in its objective of introducing across the board in accounts the 'simplified cost option', which has existed since 2007, and calls on Member States to apply simplified costs wherever possible as projects will be less prone to error as a result, as the Court of Auditors confirms;
233. Welcomes the fact that the new ESF Regulation[108] extends the scope for applying the simplified cost option; as from 2014, this will permit flat-rate amounts of up to EUR 100 000 to be settled, and the application of the simplified cost option will be compulsory for projects receiving less than EUR 50 000 in public funds;
234. Considers that the Commission's plan to use the simplified cost option for 50 % of ESF transactions by 2017 should be regarded as a minimum and calls on all Member States to ensure that the figure is exceeded by implementing simplified costs; calls on the Commission to report on progress in implementation of the simplified cost option by Member States in the run-up to the 2013 discharge procedure;
235. Observes that the Court of Auditors audited the supervisory and control systems of four audit authorities in four countries, finding the systems in Belgium (Wallonia), Malta and the United Kingdom (England) to be only partially effective, while it found the systems in Slovakia to be effective;
236. Welcomes the submission of the ‘Overview Report on the Results of the Thematic Audit on Management Verifications Conducted by Member States’; observes that the report indicates that the audit authorities display substantial deficiencies: that the reporting lines of the administrative authorities and intermediate bodies display weaknesses, that audits are often purely formal, that public procurement rules are being breached, that the assignment of tasks is not accompanied by training and supervision and that administrative capacities and guidance are lacking, and welcomes the recommendations therein, including simplified cost implementation with simplification seminars in all Member States, enhanced management through dedicated cost verification teams, more on-the-spot controls of beneficiaries, better supervision of delegated bodies and management bodies limiting approvals to what can actually be managed, and action plans whenever deficiencies are found;
237. Is very concerned that DG EMPL adjusted the error rate reported by the Member States in the case of 13 out of 117 annual audit reports for 2012 or dubbed them unreliable (in 2011 this had been the case for 42 of the 117 annual audit reports); considers this particular cause for concern because the Commission takes the opinions, the annual audit reports and the management declarations of the Member States as a basis for its risk analysis and for its own audits;
238. Acknowledges that in the past programming period the Commission has checked 85 out of 91 national audit authorities; observes that they are responsible for 111 operational programmes, or 99 % of the appropriations provided;
239. Regrets that the 2012 activity report of DG EMPL contains a reservation relating to EUR 68 million of the payments made for the 2007-2013 programming period, pertaining to 27 out of 117 operational programmes (Spain 9, Italy 4, United Kingdom 3) and notes that interruption and suspension procedures were adopted where required; insists on the need for simplification;
240. Welcomes the strict application of interruptions to and cessation of payments; agrees with the Commission that these are extremely effective instruments; observes that, according to the 2012 activity report of DG EMPL, during the reporting period 38 interruptions to payments, with a total value of EUR 881,7 million, were imposed (the corresponding figure for 2013 being 29 with a value of EUR 389,5 million) and two cessations of payment as of 31 December 2012 (Germany);
241. Welcomes the Commission report on ‘Simplification and Gold-Plating in the European Social Fund’[109], and calls on the Commission to continue unremittingly its efforts to bring about administrative simplification in the Member States;
242. Stresses that serious conflicts between the powers of Member States and of the Union are increasingly common in the field of social policy, calls on the Commission to respect the principle of the welfare state, which is enshrined in the constitutions of many Member States, and considers that there is considerable potential for savings on the Union budget here;
243. Calls for a policy to reduce youth unemployment which possesses Union added value; regards the role of the Union as being in particular to improve infrastructure for vocational training and further training; calls, in this regard, for an ‘honest’ European subsidy policy which focuses far more on transfers of know-how from Member States with low youth unemployment rates to Member States where those rates are high, but without further arousing false expectations and without further making promises on matters for which the Union cannot assume primary responsibility;
244. Is critical of the fact that the Commission has failed to act on repeated calls from Parliament to indicate the sums of Union funding, in both absolute and proportional terms, which have been used to improve training schemes for the 2007-2013 funding period;
245. Observes that Union citizens and tax-payers cannot be shown what has been achieved by making payments amounting to billions from the ESF and Structural Funds to combat youth unemployment; draws attention to the fact that those carrying out labour market measures on the ground dispute the alleged failure to keep statistics on them; in this regard notes the important role of Member States in providing statistics and regular reports according to common criteria on the use of Union funds for tackling youth unemployment; reminds the Commission of its accountability for the use of Union tax revenue for young unemployed people, and considers the results of Union subsidy policies to be inadequate, particularly in relation to the expectations which have been aroused in terms of reducing youth unemployment;
246. Notes the need for integrated approach and complementarity of measures tackling youth unemployment at Union and national level as well as with other Union funded programmes and instruments that could help decrease the levels of youth unemployment, such as Horizon 2020, Erasmus+ and Erasmus for Young Entrepreneurs; considers that this will ensure the effective and efficient use of Union funds and the added value of national policies to efforts at Union level;
247. Demands clarification regarding a major case of fraud in connection with the ESF in Spain; notes that the fraud involved the organisation of educational and training events that are alleged to have been entirely fictional, held over the Internet with non-existent participants, with the level of grants depending on the number of registered participants; is concerned, since several million euros are involved; expects the Commission to provide information that might explain why this case was not noticed by any of the bodies responsible for control in the hierarchy of control obligations established by the regulation governing the fund (Madrid Court of Auditors, Spanish Court of Auditors, European Commission – DG EMPL, European Court of Auditors), and whether OLAF was involved; demands clarification as to whether the European Court of Auditors was aware of this case; demands to know how many similar cases have occurred in the past (cases in the Netherlands, for example, and in other Member States);
248. Reiterates its call to monitor the financial instruments, particularly ESF, European Globalisation Fund, relevant components of the Instrument for Pre-Accession Assistance and the European Progress Microfinance Facility, and measure their performance against the specific policy goals laid down by the EU 2020 strategy , as well as in the annual European Semester policy process;
External relations
249. Notes with concern that the Court of Auditors estimates the most likely error rate for the external relations, aid and enlargement policies to be 3,3 % (1,1 % in 2011);
250. Stresses that the rise in the error rate must also be interpreted in the light of the new sampling approach developed by the Court of Auditors, the Court's sample including in 2012 only interim payments, final payments and the clearance of advances;
251. Points out with concern that all of the errors detected by the Court of Auditors had in principle been subject to the Commission’s check and that none had been prevented or detected;
252. Recalls that the methodological change in the sampling approach of the Court of Auditors makes it possible to compare the error rate in shared management (5,3 %) and in centralised management (4,3 %), and points out in this regard that the score of the Commission in the field of external relations is rather good;
253. Points out that the residual error rate noted by the Moore and Stephens audit report commissioned by EuropeAid is higher, at 3.63 %, than the annual error rate estimated by the Court of Auditors; stresses that it contradicts the argument put forward by the Commission that the error rate is necessarily lower at the end of a period as errors are corrected;
254. Urges the Commission to efficiently correct the errors detected and to perform the recoveries efficiently;
255. Notes that the relatively good score of the Commission in the external relations area could be at least partly explained by the fact that in two areas – budget support and Union contributions to multi-donor projects carried out by international organisations such as the United Nations – the nature of the payment conditions limits the extent to which transactions are prone to errors;
256. Notes with satisfaction that the supervisory and control system of DG ELARG has been declared by the Court of Auditors to be effective although the method used for the calculation of the residual error rate has still to be ameliorated;
257. Regrets that shortcomings persist in EuropeAid's ex ante checks and in the supervisory and control system and that, according to the findings of the Court of Auditors, the Commission’s 2011 reorganisation continues adversely to affect the activity of its Internal Audit Capacity; regrets that the supervisory and control systems of EuropeAid are only partially effective, which means that they fail to detect and correct material errors;
258. Endorses the recommendations of the Court of Auditors that the Commission should ensure timely clearance of expenditure, promote better document management by implementing partners and beneficiaries, improve the management of contract awarding procedures by setting out clear selection criteria and documenting the evaluation process better, enhance the quality of expenditure checks carried out by external auditors and apply a consistent and robust methodology for the external relations directorates-general to calculate the residual error rate;
259. Welcomes the performance audits produced by the Court of Auditors, in particular in its special reports concerning the European Union's aid to the Democratic Republic of Congo, Egypt and Palestine, as they assess whether the management of the Commission accords with the principles of efficiency, effectiveness and economy; suggests, in light of these reports, that the Commission and the Court of Auditors work closely together to further develop both measurable indicators and the methodology of performance audits, regarding Union funded projects with a high political nature, such as those oriented towards strengthening the respect for human rights, the rule of law and democracy, where a decision to continue or discontinue a project does not only depend on actual results in a given time frame;
260. Supports the Commission's continuing efforts to shift from an input-based to a performance- and impact-oriented approach and urges the adoption of specific, measurable, achievable, relevant and timed benchmarks for all programmes in Heading 4 as advocated by the Court of Auditors; expresses its hope that these programmes will not be affected by the same shortcomings as those audited in this year's report;
261. Notes the problems the Court of Auditors has identified with regard to the management of social allowances and urges the Commission to implement all recommendations; welcomes the steps the Commission has taken so far and encourages it to speed up the roll-out of its new programme to resolve it;
262. Recalls its recommendation to re-use materials utilised in election observation missions in other such missions or Union delegations in order to reduce their budgetary impact and maximise the use of budgetary resources;
Development and Cooperation
263. Appreciates that more than 1350 projects were evaluated in 2012 in view of relevance and project design, efficiency, effectiveness, impact and sustainability under the Commission's Results Oriented Monitoring system; notes a decrease of projects with major problems from 8 % (in 2010 and 2011) to 5 % in 2012[110];
264. Notes with concern that the number of cases OLAF started investigating in relation to EuropeAid/DG DEVCO managed projects has increased from 33 (in 2011) to 45 in 2012 while acknowledging that the number of new cases remained still lower than in any year between 2005 and 2010;
265. Welcomes the Commission's "Transparent Aid" initiative[111] providing comprehensive and timely information about humanitarian and development aid and potentially helping to reduce double funding;
266. Welcomes the introduction by EuropeAid/DG DEVCO, in 2012, of a coherent methodology for the calculation of the estimated residual error rate (RER), i.e. the level of errors which have evaded all checks to prevent, detect and correct errors; is satisfied that the Court of Auditors found the methodology used to estimate the RER appropriate and useful;
267. Expresses concern however about the level of the RER, estimated to be 3.6 % for EuropeAid/DG DEVCO, and calls on the Commission to reinforce efforts to better analyse, document and explain the main types of errors and to take appropriate measures, including consultation with relevant stakeholders, to reduce errors in the future in particular in the relation to payments to international organisations which accounted for 38 % of the overall RER[112].
Research and other internal policies
268. Observes that the main funding instruments in this policy group are the Research Framework Programmes amounting to EUR 7 957 million or 68 % of operational expenditure and the Lifelong Learning Programme amounting to EUR 1 529 million or 13 % of operational expenditure;
269. Observes that, of the 150 transactions audited by the Court of Auditors, 73 (49 %) were affected by errors; notes that, on the basis of the errors which it has quantified, the Court of Auditors estimates the most likely error rate to be 3.9 %, and that, according to the Court of Auditors, cleared advances – a new component of the sample for 2012 (see points 1.6, 1.7 and 1.15 of the Annual Report) – account for 2,1 %; observes that this means that this area of auditing (research and other internal policies) is around the materiality threshold;
270. Notes that the Court of Auditors describes the supervisory and control systems for the Framework Programmes of Research which it has audited as partially effective, while it rates the audited supervisory and control system for the Lifelong Learning Programme as effective;
271. Stresses that the errors have been the same for years: primarily the charging of ineligible costs;
272. Welcomes the fact that the annual activity reports of the directorates-general which the Court of Auditors has analysed contain an appropriate assessment of financial management in terms of the regularity of the underlying transactions: notes that the information submitted largely confirms the observations and conclusions of the Court of Auditors;
273. Considers it incomprehensible that the Court of Auditors still finds a significant error rate in the cost statements drawn up by independent auditors; considers, therefore, that the Commission and Member States should supply auditors with all the necessary background material and training material to facilitate correct auditing of cost statements; stresses that certified cost statements make sense only if the Commission can rely on them;
274. Joins the Court of Auditors in welcoming the simplification measures introduced by the Commission from 2011 (e.g. for the methods used by beneficiaries to calculate average staff costs) and the report on the subject submitted by the Commission[113]; calls on the Commission to update this report for the 2013 discharge procedure;
275. Stresses the importance of the Court of Auditors’ Special Report 2/2013, ‘Has the Commission ensured efficient implementation of the seventh framework programme for research?’, which the Committee on Budgetary Control has analysed[114];
276. Learns from the 2012 activity report for research and innovation that the prime concern in the administration of research is to strike an acceptable balance between the attractiveness of the programme to participants and the justified requirements of financial control; notes that, in this connection, the Director-General stated that a procedure designed to attain a residual error rate of 2 % under all circumstances is not viable;[115]
277. Is concerned that the Court of Auditors, as in relation to the 2011 financial year, has identified substantial quantifiable errors in projects under the programme in support of Information and Communications Technologies; notes that the Commission has devised a special audit strategy for non-research projects, in accordance with which – up to 2017 – 215 audits of non-research projects are to be performed; calls on the Commission to report whether the wrongly paid EUR 470 000 has been recovered;
278. Notes that up to the end of 2012, in relation to the 6th framework programme, 78 % of the projected corrections were made; 1 506 out of a total of 7 101 corrections were still pending; of these, 1 336 relate to audits closed in 2011 or earlier; calls on the Commission to report on the status of projected corrections relating to FP6;
279. Is concerned that the inadequate progress in introducing the Schengen Information System II (SIS II) has led the Director-General for Home Affairs to include a reservation in his activity report; calls on the Commission to report on the progress in introducing SIS II;
OLAF
280. Observes that the President of the Commission still has not accounted to Parliament in plenary for the loss of office of Health Commissioner John Dalli on 16 October 2012; insists on the necessity of respecting the presumption of innocence and notes that the serious accusations of corruption levelled at the Commissioner by the tobacco industry, which he has always rejected, remain unproven to this day;
281. Strongly deplores the fact that OLAF’s investigation of the accusations has been seriously flawed, according to an analysis by the OLAF Supervisory Committee, and that OLAF refuses to explain matters and is also not being called to account in this respect;
282. Draws attention to the reversal of the burden of proof in this case, such that the focus is not on the culpability of the accused but it is necessary for the accused himself to seek to prove his innocence before a series of courts; draws attention to the fact that Mr Dalli has contested the voluntary character and the lawfulness of his resignation before the General Court of the European Court of Justice which might result in an award of damages to the detriment of the taxpayer and has also launched an action in defamation against Swedish Match before the Belgian authorities;
283. Calls for complete clarification and for full and prompt cooperation by the Commission with the courts in Belgium and Malta in the Dalli case and for an independent inquiry into the methods used by OLAF in this case;
284. Is worried about the high financial indicators for opening an investigation included in the Investigative Policy Priorities of OLAF for the years 2012 and 2013 that are in the customs sector: EUR 1 million, in the agriculture sectors: EUR 100 000 for SAPARD and above EUR 250 000 for agriculture; in the structural funds: EUR 500 000 in the European Social Fund as well as in the Cohesion Fund and EUR 1 million in ERDF, in the external aid and centralised expenditure sectors: EUR 50 000 and also in the Union staff sector: EUR 10 000; criticises that it is in the responsibility of the managing DGs to care about possible fraud cases below these financial indicators without having qualified staff at their disposal; sees taxpayers money and the financial interest of the Union endangered;
285. Notes that it has not received eight months after the adoption of Parliament's resolution[116] on the protection of the financial interest 2011 in plenary, the legal analysis of the legality of recordings of private phone conversations during administrative investigations concerning members of the Union institutions and Union officials conducted by OLAF requested in paragraph 75 of that resolution;
286. Is deeply concerned about the findings of the Supervisory Committee that OLAF has not established a prior legality check for investigative measures other than those specifically listed in OLAF's Instructions to Staff on Investigative Procedures (ISIP); notes that this endangers respect for the fundamental rights of, and procedural guarantees relating to, the persons concerned;
287. Notes that breaches of essential procedural requirements during preparatory investigations could affect the legality of the final decision taken on the basis of investigations by OLAF; assesses this as potentially high-risk, since breaches would thus incur the legal liability of the Commission;
288. Deems the direct participation of OLAF's Director-General in some investigative tasks, inter alia interviews of witnesses, unacceptable; points out that the Director-General could be faced with a conflict of interest, since, under Article 90(a) of the Staff Regulations of Officials of the European Union and Article 23(1) of the ISIP he is the authority who receives complaints against OLAF's investigations and decides whether or not appropriate action is taken with regard to any failure to respect procedural guarantees;
289. Notes with concern the large number of suspected fraud cases which the Commission has reported to OLAF but which OLAF dismissed and referred back to the Commission; observes that no record is kept of the follow-up measures taken by the Commission; calls on OLAF at least to monitor the follow-up measures to these cases; calls for an analysis of the suspected fraud cases dismissed and referred back to the Commission in 2012 and 2013;
290. Is alarmed by the results of two surveys among OLAF staff and the shortcomings which have become apparent in the functioning of OLAF since the reorganisations; calls on the Court of Auditors to perform a follow-up audit and to follow up its Special Report 2/2011 in order to investigate the impact of the reorganisation;
291. Requests that the Commission provide the Committee on Budgetary Control with a non-redacted version of the document D/000955 from the 5 February 2009 produced by OLAF on the misuse of Union funds by a high-ranking member of a Union institution;
292. Expects to be informed by the Commission about all Clearing House meetings in 2012 and 2013 in regard to the participants at these meetings and the agendas; is worried about the independence of OLAF and requests that the Supervisory Committee analyse how far the Clearing House meetings endanger the independence of OLAF;
Tobacco smuggling
293. Calls for an assessment of the existing agreements with the four tobacco groups (Philip Morris International Corporation Inc. (PMI), Japan Tobacco International Corporation, British American Tobacco Corporation and Imperial Tobacco Corporation), taking into account the new Directive on Tobacco Products[117] , the ratification of the Protocol to the FCTC Convention[118] and Parliament's view on the issue of whether and, if appropriate, how the tobacco cooperation agreement with PMI is to be extended;
294. Calls for decisive measures by OLAF to combat cigarette smuggling: liaison units with China, the United Arab Emirates and Ukraine and at the appropriate places where smuggling is concentrated, as well as at Europol, in order to improve cooperation; stresses the importance of access to information and relevant databases in this connection;
295. Calls on the Commission to describe what measures need to be taken in the Union to control the market for tobacco leaves, cut raw tobacco and mechanical equipment for the production of cigarettes, in order to combat illegal cigarette factories;
Absence of progress in Bulgaria
296. Welcomes the clear statements by the Commission in the progress report of 22 January 2014 on developments in Bulgaria; is very concerned about the lack of progress under the Cooperation and Verification Mechanism, which is now seven years old, and about the persistently high prevalence of corruption and the general difficulty observed there in assigning responsibilities and correcting errors; calls on the Commission to adopt a resolute attitude towards Bulgaria and to seriously examine whether it is even possible for Union funds to be deployed in accordance with the rules in such an environment;
Slow progress in Romania
297. Welcomes the findings in the Commission's progress report of 22 January 2014 on developments in Romania; is very concerned about the slow progress made by Romania under the Cooperation and Verification Mechanism; draws attention to proposals to amend the Penal Code on issues regarding conflicts of interest for locally elected office-holders and an amnesty for Members of Parliament guilty of corruption; considers that it is hardly possible, in the light of this development, to deploy Union funds in accordance with the rules in such an environment;
Roma
298. Observes that the Commission is fundamentally unable to make any statements about measures funded by the EU budget to promote the integration of Roma people in their home countries; is critical of the fact that, despite the Roma Strategy of 2010, the Commission has not sought any way of demonstrating how measures have been taken for the benefit of Roma people; criticises the inadequate gathering of data by the Commission in the ESF, which does not make it possible to show Union citizens and tax-payers what has been achieved in terms of integration of Roma people drawing on ESF and Structural Fund appropriations; reminds the Commission that it has a duty to account for the use of Union tax revenue for the benefit of Roma people;
IT policies
299. Calls on the Commission to explore open source, well-audited solutions for e-mail and calendaring, including end-user softwares; reminds the Commission that also other parts of the stack not normally visible to end-users such as firewalls, web servers etc. can be considered from an open source, secure perspective if a public tender relies on functional specifications rather than brand-name products;
300. Notes an increase in complaints by civil-society organisations whose operations at least partially concern the Roma and which are denied access to Union funding because of an excess of red tape; calls on the Commission to support these organisations more in the overall process;
301. Is concerned with the situation of effective captivity of the Union institutions with specific software-vendors; deplores that the Commission despite this realization has made no steps in 2012 towards preparing open, public tenders for ICT, based on transparent criteria and functional specifications rather than brand-names;
302. Recalls that the size of the SACHA II contract, and the full set of specific brand name products defined therein, was so large that only a very small number of contractors (two) could participate in the open, public tender; urges the Commission to prepare smaller open, public tenders to enable more actors to participate in such procurement and with a larger diversity of offers;
Studies and advice/consultation from external providers
303. Notes that the Commission was not able to provide Parliament with a clear, concise list in a machine readable format from the Commissions ABAC system such as an Excel table or a .CSV-file that includes the topics of all studies as well as the specific issue of any external advice/consultation carried out for the Commission by external providers with the names of these providers as well as the country where the respective provider has its seat while also indicating the date the authorising officers committed the budget appropriations for the studies or the external advice broken down by years starting in 2009 ending 2013; expects that list to be submitted to the Committee on Budgetary Control until 1 May 2014;
Getting results from the EU budget
Management plans and annual activity reports
304. Notes that the objectives stated in Article 38(3)(e) of the Financial Regulation (EU, Euratom) No 966/2012 which should be measured by indicators are to a large extent used by the directors-general as objectives in their management plans, and points out that the directors-general should report in their annual activity reports on the results achieved and the extent to which the results have had the impact intended;
305. Welcomes the fact that, in order to reduce the number of objectives and indicators, the Commission has introduced the programme statements of operational expenditure in its working document part 1 accompanying the draft budget 2014 (see COM(2013)0450);
306. Shares the criticism expressed by the Court of Auditors (Annual Report for 2012, point 10.9) that the objectives taken directly from high-level policy or legislative documents are often not sufficiently focused and are therefore not useful for management plans and annual activity reports;
307. Insists on the fact that those ‘objectives taken from high-level policy documents’ often relate to policies not fully under the responsibility of the Union; therefore calls on the directors-general to define objectives corresponding strictly to the competences of the Union and according fully with the principle of subsidiarity;
308. Regrets that evaluations have not been a useful source of evidence to substantiate reporting on policy achievements in the annual activity reports and that this is largely due to the fact that evaluations are oriented towards operational questions rather than performance or because the Commission has doubts as to the quality of information obtained from Member States’ authorities;
TFEU Article 318 evaluation report
309. Regrets the fact that, instead of focusing on the achievement of the Union's main objectives, the Commission provided a range of evaluation summaries covering European Union programmes in all policy areas of expenditure under the Multiannual Financial Framework 2007-2013 and in accordance with the budget headings;
310. Recalls that on 17 April 2013 Parliament urged the Commission to modify the structure of the Article 318 evaluation report ‘distinguishing the internal polices from the external ones and focussing within the section relating to internal policies on the Europe 2020 strategy, placing the emphasis on the progress made in the achievement of the flagships initiatives’[119];
311. Welcomes the fact that the Commission plans to improve performance reporting in the annual activity reports of its directorates-general, to make a closer link between the annual management plans and annual activity reports on the one hand and the Article 318 evaluation report on the other hand and to adopt the evaluation report in parallel with the synthesis report;
312. Welcomes the Commission’s intention of drawing up and organising its evaluation report in accordance with the new performance framework established by the Multiannual Financial Framework 2014-2020; stresses once again, however, that such a performance framework should encompass the following three main elements: achievement of the programme objectives (results), sound programme management by the Commission and the Member States and how programme results and sound management contribute to the Union’s main objectives;
313. Recalls that in order to ensure the sound financial management of Union funds, the Commission administers the Central Exclusion Database–a database of entities excluded from Union funding for reasons such as insolvency, final court judgments for fraud, corruption, decisions of a contracting authority for grave professional misconduct and conflict of interest; regrets that the Central Exclusion Database administered by the Commission is not accessible to the public or to the Members of Parliament; recalls that a similar database of debarred firms administered by the World Banks is public; calls on the Commission to make the Central Exclusion Database public.
11.2.2014
OPINION of the Committee on Foreign Affairs
for the Committee on Budgetary Control
on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, Section III – Commission and executive agencies
Rapporteur: María Muñiz De Urquiza
SUGGESTIONS
The Committee on Foreign Affairs calls on the Committee on Budgetary Control, as the committee responsible, to incorporate the following suggestions in its motion for a resolution:
1. Stresses that the Union's resources must be managed in line with the principles of transparency and good governance; notes the Court of Auditor's finding that the increase in the rate of material errors in Heading 4 for the 2012 financial year is owed to a change in the sampling approach that now includes the clearing of advances paid in previous year;
2. Supports all of the Court of Auditors recommendation with regard to Heading 4, in particular for the improvement of supervisory and control systems with regard to the clearing of advances, while recalling that the Union's external assistance is implemented partly by entities external to the Union, often under difficult conditions, including crises and conflicts, and requires a certain amount of adaptability, flexibility, and speed to be effective; is, nevertheless, concerned about the results and impact of existing controls and urges the European Commission to strengthen them to improve the results and effectiveness of European assistance implemented by third parties of which, during the fiscal year 2012, 796 million euros are provided as budgetary support and 1.4 billion euros to international organisations; asks the Commission to provide more information on the management of these funds in recipient countries and organisations;
3. Welcomes the considerable improvements DG ELARG has implemented with regard to its internal controls which reduced the occurrence of errors compared to 2011; also welcomes the progress achieved by the Service for Foreign Policy Instruments and DG ECHO;
4. Supports the Commission's continuing efforts to shift from an input-based to a performance- and impact-oriented approach and urges the adoption of specific, measurable, achievable, relevant and timed benchmarks for all programmes in Heading 4 as advocated by the Court of Auditors; expresses its hope that these programmes will not be affected by the same shortcomings as those audited in this year's report;
5. Notes the problems the Court of Auditors has identified with regard to the management of social allowances and urges the Commission to implement all recommendations; welcomes the steps the Commission has taken so far and encourages it to speed up the roll-out of its new programme to resolve it.
6. Recalls its recommendation to re-use materials utilised in election observation missions in other such missions or EU delegations in order to reduce their budgetary impact and maximise the use of budgetary resources;
RESULT OF FINAL VOTE IN COMMITTEE
Date adopted |
11.2.2014 |
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Result of final vote |
+: –: 0: |
42 0 5 |
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Members present for the final vote |
Sir Robert Atkins, Bastiaan Belder, Hiltrud Breyer, Elmar Brok, Michael Gahler, Marietta Giannakou, Andrzej Grzyb, Takis Hadjigeorgiou, Richard Howitt, Tunne Kelam, Nicole Kiil-Nielsen, Andrey Kovatchev, Paweł Robert Kowal, Wolfgang Kreissl-Dörfler, Eduard Kukan, Vytautas Landsbergis, Krzysztof Lisek, Sabine Lösing, Marusya Lyubcheva, Willy Meyer, Francisco José Millán Mon, María Muñiz De Urquiza, Annemie Neyts-Uyttebroeck, Norica Nicolai, Ria Oomen-Ruijten, Justas Vincas Paleckis, Pier Antonio Panzeri, Ioan Mircea Paşcu, Tonino Picula, Bernd Posselt, Hans-Gert Pöttering, Cristian Dan Preda, José Ignacio Salafranca Sánchez-Neyra, Werner Schulz, Sophocles Sophocleous, Laurence J.A.J. Stassen, Davor Ivo Stier, Charles Tannock, Eleni Theocharous, Geoffrey Van Orden, Sir Graham Watson, Boris Zala |
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Substitute(s) present for the final vote |
Kinga Gál, Doris Pack, Janusz Władysław Zemke |
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Substitute(s) under Rule 187(2) present for the final vote |
Ivari Padar, Dubravka Šuica |
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12.2.2014
OPINION of the Committee on Development
for the Committee on Budgetary Control
on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, Section III - Commission and executive agencies
Rapporteur: Charles Goerens
SUGGESTIONS
The Committee on Development calls on the Committee on Budgetary Control, as the committee responsible, to incorporate the following suggestions in its motion for a resolution:
1. Recalls that development assistance projects deal with structural shortcomings and take place in difficult contexts; risks of errors and failure thus have to be balanced against the potential benefits and the costs of non-action while aiming to ensure efficient and transparent use of funds;
2. Appreciates that more than 1350 projects were evaluated in 2012 in view of relevance and project design, efficiency, effectiveness, impact and sustainability under the Commission's Results Oriented Monitoring system; notes a decrease of projects with major problems from 8% (in 2010 and 2011) to 5% in 2012[120];
3. Notes with concern that the number of cases OLAF started investigating in relation to EuropeAid/DG DEVCO managed projects has increased from 33 (in 2011) to 45 in 2012 while acknowledging that the number of new cases remained still lower than in any year between 2005 and 2010;
4. Welcomes the Commission's "Transparent Aid" initiative[121] providing comprehensive and timely information about humanitarian and development aid and potentially helping to reduce double funding;
5. Welcomes the introduction by EuropeAid/DG DEVCO, in 2012, of a coherent methodology for the calculation of the estimated residual error rate (RER), i.e. the level of errors which have evaded all checks to prevent, detect and correct errors; is satisfied that the Court found the methodology used to estimate the RER appropriate and useful;
6. Expresses concern however about the level of the RER, estimated to be 3.6% for EuropeAid/DG DEVCO, and calls on the Commission to reinforce efforts to better analyse, document and explain the main types of errors and to take appropriate measures, including consultation with relevant stakeholders, to reduce errors in the future in particular in the relation to payments to international organisations which accounted for 38% of the overall RER[122].
RESULT OF FINAL VOTE IN COMMITTEE
Date adopted |
11.2.2014 |
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Result of final vote |
+: –: 0: |
20 0 0 |
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Members present for the final vote |
Thijs Berman, Ricardo Cortés Lastra, Véronique De Keyser, Nirj Deva, Leonidas Donskis, Charles Goerens, Catherine Grèze, Mikael Gustafsson, Jean Roatta, Birgit Schnieber-Jastram, Michèle Striffler, Alf Svensson, Keith Taylor, Anna Záborská, Iva Zanicchi |
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Substitute(s) present for the final vote |
Philippe Boulland, Edvard Kožušník, Csaba Őry, Cristian Dan Preda |
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Substitute(s) under Rule 187(2) present for the final vote |
Tadeusz Ross |
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13.2.2014
OPINION of the Committee on Employment and Social Affairs
for the Committee on Budgetary Control
on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, Section III - Commission and executive agencies
Rapporteur: Pervenche Berès
SUGGESTIONS
The Committee on Employment and Social Affairs calls on the Committee on Budgetary Control, as the committee responsible, to incorporate the following suggestions in its motion for a resolution:
1. Welcomes that the Court of Auditors continued to assess the area of Employment and social affairs through a sample of high number of transactions; regrets the increased error rate for this policy field, which stood at 3.2% in 2012 compared to 2.2% in the previous year; notes that this error rate was still the lowest amongst all policy areas; and asks the Court of Auditors to assess also the budget lines with less financial allocations in the area of employment and social affairs;
2. Points out the importance of the European Social Fund (ESF) as a main policy tool to implement employment and social policy, particularly in the time of economic downturn, when such investment in human capital, employment and social inclusion is most needed; notes that ESF spending accounted for around 97% of the policy area spending in 2012;
3. Reiterates its call to monitor the financial instruments, particularly ESF, European Globalisation Fund, relevant components of the Instrument for Pre-Accession Assistance and the European Progress Microfinance Facility, and measure their performance against the specific policy goals laid down by the EU 2020 strategy , as well as in the annual European Semester policy process;
4. Regrets the errors resulting from ineligible projects and expenditure; reiterates its call for more efficient monitoring of compliance with eligibility rules;
5. Considers that several errors resulting from breaches for public procurement rules and ineligibility of participants could be accounted for the additional requirements of national legislation; calls on the Commission and the Member States to review such instances of active and passive gold-plating in order to reduce unnecessary administrative burden and complexity to access ESF and other employment and social affairs expenditure; draws attention in this regard to the Commission’s recent report entitled Simplification and Gold-plating in the European Social Fund[123] notably in the implementation of the new regulation;
6. Notes the observations of the Court of Auditors concerning the benefits of the use of simplified cost options, which reduces the risk of error and administrative burden on beneficiaries; welcomes that 26% of the sampled ESF transactions already made use of these options in 2012[124]; supports the more extensive use of the simplified cost options in the future multiannual financial period, provided that misapplications of rules do not remain undetected;
7. Recalls the need improve the utilisation of the funding of EURES, the consumption rate of which showed a decline between 2010 and 2012; welcomes the launch of ‘Your first EURES job’ activities in 2012, as one of the flagship actions addressing the issue of youth unemployment;
8. Calls the attention of European and national authorities, when setting up the control mechanisms vis-à-vis the use of the Fund for European Aid to the Most Deprived, to adapt it according to the nature of the stakeholders involved.
RESULT OF FINAL VOTE IN COMMITTEE
Date adopted |
13.2.2014 |
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Result of final vote |
+: –: 0: |
34 3 0 |
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Members present for the final vote |
Regina Bastos, Heinz K. Becker, Phil Bennion, Pervenche Berès, Philippe Boulland, Alejandro Cercas, Ole Christensen, Derek Roland Clark, Minodora Cliveti, Andrea Cozzolino, Frédéric Daerden, Karima Delli, Sari Essayah, Richard Falbr, Nadja Hirsch, Stephen Hughes, Danuta Jazłowiecka, Jean Lambert, Patrick Le Hyaric, Verónica Lope Fontagné, Thomas Mann, Csaba Őry, Konstantinos Poupakis, Elisabeth Schroedter, Gabriele Stauner, Jutta Steinruck |
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Substitute(s) present for the final vote |
Georges Bach, Philippe De Backer, Edite Estrela, Sergio Gutiérrez Prieto, Anthea McIntyre, Paul Murphy, Antigoni Papadopoulou, Gabriele Zimmer |
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Substitute(s) under Rule 187(2) present for the final vote |
Timothy Kirkhope, George Lyon, Jarosław Leszek Wałęsa |
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5.2.2014
OPINION of the Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety
for the Committee on Budgetary Control
on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, Section III – Commission and executive agencies
Rapporteur: Jutta Haug
SUGGESTIONS
The Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety calls on the Committee on Budgetary Control, as the committee responsible, to incorporate the following suggestions in its motion for a resolution:
1. Would like to reiterate that, in accordance with the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU) the European Parliament shall give discharge to the Commission in respect of the implementation of the budget after examination of the accounts, the financial statement, the evaluation report referred to in Article 318 TFEU, the annual report by the Court of Auditors (ECA) together with the replies of the institutions under audit, the statement of assurance and any relevant special reports by the Court of Auditors;
2. Takes note of the presentation of the environment and health policy areas within the Court of Auditors Annual Report; is concerned that both policy areas appear in the chapter also devoted to rural development and fisheries; reiterates its criticism towards the illogical composition of policy areas in this specific chapter; is not of the opinion that the Court should take the political decision of grouping policy areas; requests the Court of Auditors to revise its approach with the next annual report;
3. Considers it noteworthy in this context, that the chapter Rural development, environment, fisheries and health appears with the highest error rate in the report of the Court for 2012 with 7, 9% against 4,8% in average; observes that the Court refers in its report only to one project related to the LIFE+ programme and to the internal control system of DG SANCO; is very much concerned, taking into account Commission's replies, as the error rate accounts for all policy areas; notices that there are different views between the Court of Auditors and the Commission with regard to the way in which errors should be calculated; understands that, unlike the Commission services, the Court quantifies a 100 per cent error rate of a project even if the error is solely administrative or only one part of the project amount is effected;
4. With regard to the overall implementation of the budgetary headings for environment, climate action, public health and food safety in 2012, the Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety is satisfied; recalls again that less than 0,8 per cent of the Union budget is dedicated to those policy instruments bearing in mind the clear EU added value in these fields and the support from European citizens for EU environmental and climate policies as well as for public health and food safety;
Environment and Climate Action
5. Advises to explore if the discharge decision should be based upon OECD guidelines to ensure high quality internationally recognised accounting, audit and financial disclosure standards; invites the European institutions to incorporate and commit to introducing OECD guidelines within a common framework for all European institutions and bodies if the assessment recommends so;
6. Underlines that EUR 390.208.834 have been available to DG ENV in commitment appropriations; 99,9 % have been implemented; with regard to payment appropriations it is satisfactory that 90,32% of EUR 261.717.133 available have been used;
7. Takes note that DG CLIMA has raised its implementation to 98,57% of EUR 42.585.882 in commitment appropriations and 73,44% of EUR 27.917.373 in payment appropriations; is aware that an higher implementation was not achievable partly due to an unsuccessful call jointly with Member States for the procurement of the EU ETS auction monitor and to a contract for the provisional EU ETS auctioning platform which was, in the end, at no cost;
8. Is again very satisfied with the 98,75% overall implementation of the LIFE+ operational budget; notes that in 2012 EUR 280.771.849 were dedicated to call for proposals for projects in member States, EUR 8.999.631 supported operational activities of NGOs that are active in protecting and enhancing the environment at European level and which are involved in the development and implementation of Community policy and legislation and EUR 47.283.151 were used for measures intended to support the Commission's role of initiating and monitoring policy and legislation development; an amount of EUR 17.589.277 were used for administrative support;
9. Is aware that the payment rate of LIFE+ actions is always slightly lower compared to commitment appropriations; points out that with the Global Transfer DEC 30/2012 an amount of EUR 2.7 million has been released as the number of requests for interim (and final) payments received was slightly below the initial estimates; takes also note of the transfer of EUR 2.13 million to other budget lines which had been initial foreseen to cover expenses occurred with the completion of LIFE III;
10. Acknowledges that an amount of EUR 855.852 has been allocated as contributions to international conventions, protocols and agreements of which the Union is a party thereof, or is involved in preparatory work for future international agreements;
11. Considers the progress in the implementation of six Pilot Projects (PPs) and five Preparatory Actions (PAs) amounting all together to EUR 15.733.692 as satisfactory; is aware that the execution of these actions can be burdensome for the Commission due to the small amounts available in relation to the necessary procedures for execution (e.g. action plan, call for proposals); encourages the budgetary authority to focus in the future on PPs and PAs with true added value for the Union;
Public Health and Food Safety
12. Notes that DG SANCO was responsible to implement EUR 230.436.939 on public health budget lines in 2012 of which 99,3% have been committed satisfactorily; is however aware that roughly 77% of that budget is directly transferred to three decentralised agencies (ECDC, EFSA and EMA); agrees also on the execution of 99,2% in payment appropriations; notes that EUR 2.5 million of payment credits have been added through the global transfer DEC 30/2012 becoming necessary following a slow-down in the signature of grant agreement s under a 2011 call of which pre-financings were to be paid in 2012;
13. Is satisfied that the implementation of all PPs and PAs under the responsibility of the DG SANCO is well advanced and all commitment appropriations were consumed;
14. Notes the observations by the Court of Auditors on the Executive Agency for Health and Consumers, an administrative entity of the Commission; is aware that the Executive Agency was responsible for implementing EUR 37.8 million in commitments available to the Public health programme in 2012 and for EUR 35.5 million in payment appropriations; has taken careful note of the replies given by the Executive Agency and supports its intention to further improve the cooperation with external contractors and participants;
15. Acknowledges that the implementation rate for Food safety, animal health and welfare and plant health is at 96,8% which is higher than the level of 2011 (95.1%); notes further that this figure takes into account a reduction of commitment appropriations of EUR 64.7 million during the global transfer due to a favourable animal health situation;
16. Recognises the execution rates in payments of 99,7 %, which represents an increase compared to 2011 (98.1%); considers it noteworthy that with the global transfer exercise an additional EUR 17 million were received for the Eradication programmes in order to have enough funds to pay outstanding obligations vis-à-vis the Member States from previous years;
17. Is of the opinion, on the basis of the data available and the implementation report, that discharge can be granted to the Commission in respect of expenditure in the areas of environmental and climate policy, public health and food safety for the financial year 2012.
RESULT OF FINAL VOTE IN COMMITTEE
Date adopted |
22.1.2014 |
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|
|
|
Result of final vote |
+: –: 0: |
56 7 0 |
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Members present for the final vote |
Elena Oana Antonescu, Sophie Auconie, Pilar Ayuso, Paolo Bartolozzi, Sandrine Bélier, Lajos Bokros, Franco Bonanini, Biljana Borzan, Milan Cabrnoch, Martin Callanan, Yves Cochet, Spyros Danellis, Chris Davies, Anne Delvaux, Bas Eickhout, Edite Estrela, Jill Evans, Karl-Heinz Florenz, Elisabetta Gardini, Gerben-Jan Gerbrandy, Matthias Groote, Françoise Grossetête, Satu Hassi, Jolanta Emilia Hibner, Karin Kadenbach, Martin Kastler, Christa Klaß, Claus Larsen-Jensen, Jo Leinen, Peter Liese, Kartika Tamara Liotard, Zofija Mazej Kukovič, Linda McAvan, Miroslav Ouzký, Vladko Todorov Panayotov, Gilles Pargneaux, Antonyia Parvanova, Andrés Perelló Rodríguez, Pavel Poc, Anna Rosbach, Oreste Rossi, Dagmar Roth-Behrendt, Kārlis Šadurskis, Daciana Octavia Sârbu, Carl Schlyter, Horst Schnellhardt, Richard Seeber, Dubravka Šuica, Salvatore Tatarella, Thomas Ulmer, Glenis Willmott, Sabine Wils, Marina Yannakoudakis |
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Substitute(s) present for the final vote |
Gaston Franco, Jutta Haug, Filip Kaczmarek, Marusya Lyubcheva, Miroslav Mikolášik, Vittorio Prodi, Giancarlo Scottà, Alda Sousa, Vladimir Urutchev, Andrea Zanoni |
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20.2.2014
OPINION of the Committee on Transport and Tourism
for the Committee on Budgetary Control
on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, Section III – Commission and executive agencies
Rapporteur: Oldřich Vlasák
SUGGESTIONS
The Committee on Transport and Tourism calls on the Committee on Budgetary Control, as the committee responsible, to incorporate the following suggestions in its motion for a resolution:
1. Notes that in the 2012 budget, as finally adopted and amended during the course of the year, specifically for policies within the remit of the Committee on Transport and Tourism, a total of EUR 1 940 022 989 was included in commitment appropriations and EUR 1 497 274 373 was available in payment appropriations; notes further that of these amounts:
– EUR 1 335 211 119 in commitment appropriations and EUR 801 200 112 in payment appropriations was available for Trans-European Networks for Transport (TEN-T),
– EUR 32 569 800 in commitment appropriations and EUR 17 106 945 in payment appropriations was available for transport safety,
– EUR 64 508 800 in commitment appropriations and EUR 25 852 114 in payment appropriations was available for the Marco Polo programme,
– EUR 161 013 270 in commitment appropriations and EUR 154 148 555 in payment appropriations was available for the transport agencies,
– EUR 176 840 000 in commitment appropriations and EUR 377 590 430 in payment appropriations was available for the Galileo programme,
– EUR 166 880 000 in commitment appropriations and EUR 117 219 217 in payment appropriations was available for transport, including a priority area dedicated to sustainable urban mobility, under the Seventh Framework Programme for Research and Development,
– EUR 3 000 000 in commitment appropriations and EUR 4 157 000 in payment appropriations was available for tourism;
2. Calls for greater clarity, both in the Annual Accounts by the European Commission as well as the Annual Reports by the European Court of Auditors with regard to the overall budget for transport policy and transport projects, as the latter are eligible also on the basis of cohesion policy, but cannot be identified within this heading;
3. Notes that administrative and operating expenses are steadily increasing; calls therefore on the Commission to ensure that its sole aim is to promote effective management of EU policies and therefore suggests reflecting on possible measures, such as establishing incentives, in order to concentrate resources on investment activities, without compromising the operational capability and proper functioning of programmes;
4. Points out that in the context of the trans-European transport networks, some Member States that are eligible for financing from the Cohesion Fund are experiencing major difficulties with regard to developing and carrying out projects and making efficient use of EU funding; points out that through the Connecting Europe Facility, the Commission must help these Member States to develop an adequate pipeline of projects, in particular by strengthening the institutional capacity of the public administrations concerned and by organising additional calls for proposals;
5. Welcomes the 100 % utilisation rate for commitment appropriations and 100 % utilisation rate for payment appropriations for TEN-T projects, as these projects are important in that they aim to integrate transport networks in order to develop the internal market, promote sustainable intermodal mobility and stimulate economic development as well as better employment;
6. With regard to TEN-T projects and the Connecting Europe Facility, calls on the Commission to manage budget resources more efficiently and to take account of possible acceleration of EU funded projects at the end of financial periods, which can be found in previous periods, in order to avoid possible incapability to honour its financial obligations towards beneficiaries such as Europe's regions, towns or businesses;
7. Demands the Commission to annually involve the European Parliament in due time into TEN-T/CEF co-financing, with information on the choice of transport infrastructure projects and amounts; asks the Commission to inform the European Parliament annually with lists of transport projects and amounts of co-financing through the regional and cohesion funds;
8. Appreciates and is encouraged by the achieved decrease in the frequency of errors among the transactions audited by the Court (49 % as compared to 59 % in 2011) and welcomes the reinforced control provisions in the 2007-2013 programming period and application of a strict policy of interruptions/suspensions by the Commission. However, is deeply concerned that as in 2012 the Court found quantifiable errors in six out of eight TEN-T projects audited (75 %), further measures addressing weaknesses in TEN-T projects such as detailed advisory work and guidance material need to be taken as a matter of priority.
9. Proposes that in relation to the sectors for which the Committee on Transport and Tourism is responsible, the Parliament grants to the Commission discharge in respect of the implementation of the European Union general budget for the financial year 2012.
RESULT OF FINAL VOTE IN COMMITTEE
Date adopted |
20.2.2014 |
|
|
|
|
Result of final vote |
+: –: 0: |
28 4 0 |
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Members present for the final vote |
Inés Ayala Sender, Georges Bach, Izaskun Bilbao Barandica, Michael Cramer, Joseph Cuschieri, Philippe De Backer, Luis de Grandes Pascual, Saïd El Khadraoui, Ismail Ertug, Jacqueline Foster, Franco Frigo, Mathieu Grosch, Jim Higgins, Dieter-Lebrecht Koch, Georgios Koumoutsakos, Eva Lichtenberger, Marian-Jean Marinescu, Gesine Meissner, Dominique Riquet, Brian Simpson, Giommaria Uggias, Peter van Dalen, Patricia van der Kammen, Artur Zasada |
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Substitute(s) present for the final vote |
Spyros Danellis, Isabelle Durant, Eider Gardiazábal Rubial, Alfreds Rubiks, Bernadette Vergnaud, Janusz Władysław Zemke |
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Substitute(s) under Rule 187(2) present for the final vote |
Birgit Sippel, Robert Sturdy |
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12.2.2014
OPINION of the Committee on Regional Development
for the Committee on Budgetary Control
on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, Section III – Commission and executive agencies
Rapporteur: Georgios Stavrakakis
SUGGESTIONS
The Committee on Regional Development calls on the Committee on Budgetary Control, as the committee responsible, to incorporate the following suggestions in its motion for a resolution:
1. Notes that the Court of Auditors has concluded that for regional policy the proportion of tested transactions which are free of error has increased as compared to 2011, while those affected by one or more errors has decreased, and the most likely error rate for 2012 is at 6, 8% (as compared to 6% in 2011); reminds that errors are often administrative in nature and do not necessarily mean that funds have disappeared, been lost or wasted or that fraud has been committed;
2. Stresses that there is an important difference in the type of errors and a distinction should be drawn between major errors, such as overpayment/underpayment or fraud, and minor and clerical errors, since only 0.42% of errors were reported by Member States to be a consequence of fraud for ERDF, Cohesion Fund and ESF programmes in the 2007-2013 programming period;
3. Notes that any error, regardless of size or gravity, in a public procurement procedure leads the Court of Auditors to classify the entire expenditure on that procedure as an error, even when no financial loss has been incurred and the project has been delivered as planned;
4. Draws attention to the different approach by the Commission and the Court to the calculation of error rate in relation to transactions to which the Commission applied flat-rate corrections and calls for the standardisation of the methodology;
5. Notes that the cumulative financial corrections implemented to the end of 2012 for ERDF, Cohesion Fund and ESF programmes, in the current programming period, amount to 0.2%;
6. Acknowledges the increasing level of suspension and interruption of payments by the Commission, which ensures that corrective actions are systematically carried out in cases where deficiencies are identified;
7. Draws attention to the multiannuality of the cohesion policy management system and underlines that the final evaluation of irregularities related to the policy implementation will be possible only at the closure of the programming period;
8. Welcomes the new rules for the 2014-2020 programming period, decided through the co-decision procedure, including measures such as the designations of audit and certifying authorities, accreditations of audit authorities, audit examination and acceptance of accounts, financial corrections and net financial corrections, proportional control, ex-ante conditionalities that aim to further contribute to the reduction of the level of error; supports in this respect the growing results orientation and the thematic concentration of cohesion policy that should assure high added-value of the co-financed operations; welcomes also the definition of serious deficiency and the anticipated increased level of corrections for repeated deficiencies;
9. Welcomes the recent Communication of the Commission outlining the approach towards the application of net financial corrections in the areas of agriculture and cohesion policy in the next programming period; awaits the delegated act laying down detailed rules for the criteria for the assessment of the functioning of management and control systems, for establishing the level of financial corrections to be applied and for applying flat-rate corrections.
RESULT OF FINAL VOTE IN COMMITTEE
Date adopted |
11.2.2014 |
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|
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Result of final vote |
+: –: 0: |
33 0 4 |
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Members present for the final vote |
François Alfonsi, Luís Paulo Alves, Francesca Barracciu, Catherine Bearder, Victor Boştinaru, Nikos Chrysogelos, Ryszard Czarnecki, Francesco De Angelis, Tamás Deutsch, Rosa Estaràs Ferragut, Danuta Maria Hübner, Iñaki Irazabalbeitia Fernández, Seán Kelly, Constanze Angela Krehl, Jacek Olgierd Kurski, Petru Constantin Luhan, Elżbieta Katarzyna Łukacijewska, Iosif Matula, Erminia Mazzoni, Miroslav Mikolášik, Jens Nilsson, Lambert van Nistelrooij, Jan Olbrycht, Younous Omarjee, Markus Pieper, Ovidiu Ioan Silaghi, Monika Smolková, Georgios Stavrakakis, Nuno Teixeira, , Justina Vitkauskaite Bernard, Kerstin Westphal, Joachim Zeller |
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Substitute(s) present for the final vote |
Martina Anderson, Karin Kadenbach, Evgeni Kirilov, Marie-Thérèse Sanchez-Schmid |
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Substitute(s) under Rule 187(2) present for the final vote |
Ivana Maletić |
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23.1.2014
OPINION of the Committee on Fisheries
for the Committee on Budgetary Control
on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, Section III – Commission
(COM(2013)0570 – C7‑0273/2013 – 2013/2195(DEC))
Rapporteur: Gabriel Mato Adrover
SUGGESTIONS
The Committee on Fisheries calls on the Committee on Budgetary Control, as the committee responsible, to incorporate the following suggestions in its motion for a resolution:
1. Takes note of the communication from the Commission to the European Parliament, the Council and the Court of Auditors on the annual accounts of the European Union for the financial year 2012; takes further note of the Annual Report of the Court of Auditors concerning the financial year 2012; takes note of DG MARE's 2012 annual activity report;
2. Notes that maritime affairs and fisheries is not covered in sufficient detail in the Annual Report of the Court of Auditors;
3. Notes that the Court of Auditors has no particular remarks to make on DG MARE's 2012 activity report;
4. Welcomes the particularly high implementation rate in Title 11 of Section III of the 2012 budget, as regards both commitment appropriations (99.68%) and payment appropriations (98.97%);
5. Notes with concern that the Court of Auditors draws attention in its report to a high overall error rate; deeply regrets that this error rate has risen by comparison with the previous financial year but also notes the change in the Court's sampling method; deplores the fact that the information submitted by the Court of Auditors is not more specific to the policy areas concerned;
6. Insists that the Court of Auditors should present a separate error rate for fisheries and maritime affairs in its future reports; takes the view that the specific sample for DG MARE should be increased in order to ensure that it is properly representative;
7. Notes the two reservations issued by DG MARE for 2012; notes that one of these reservations has been made since 2009 and concerns a programme that started in 2001; notes that, despite repeated calls for it to close this file, DG MARE has still not arrived at an administrative or legal solution that would enable it to lift this reservation; urges the Commission once again to reach a suitable conclusion on this reservation in order to safeguard the European Union’s interests;
8. Takes the view that the second reservation issued in DG MARE's 2012 annual activity report, concerning material ineligible expenditure detected in the European Fisheries Fund (EFF), illustrates the high quality of DG MARE's internal control;
9. Encourages DG MARE in its control efforts with regard to appropriations under shared management, particularly in relation to the EFF;
10. Urges the Member States concerned to resolve the problems identified by DG MARE so that the reservations can be lifted;
11. Urges the Court of Auditors once again to include an audit on the external dimension of the common fisheries policy in its work programme;
12. Proposes, on the basis of the data available, to grant the Commission discharge in respect of its expenditure in the areas of maritime affairs and fisheries for the financial year 2012.
RESULT OF FINAL VOTE IN COMMITTEE
Date adopted |
22.1.2014 |
|
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|
|
Result of final vote |
+: –: 0: |
18 1 0 |
|||
Members present for the final vote |
John Stuart Agnew, Antonello Antinoro, Alain Cadec, Chris Davies, João Ferreira, Carmen Fraga Estévez, Pat the Cope Gallagher, Dolores García-Hierro Caraballo, Isabella Lövin, Gabriel Mato Adrover, Guido Milana, Maria do Céu Patrão Neves, Ulrike Rodust, Raül Romeva i Rueda, Struan Stevenson, Isabelle Thomas, Jarosław Leszek Wałęsa |
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Substitute(s) present for the final vote |
Izaskun Bilbao Barandica, Ole Christensen, Jens Nilsson |
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13.2.2014
OPINION of the Committee on Culture and Education
for the Committee on Budgetary Control
on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, Section III – Commission and executive agencies
Rapporteur: Morten Løkkegaard
SUGGESTIONS
The Committee on Culture and Education calls on the Committee on Budgetary Control, as the committee responsible, to incorporate the following suggestions in its motion for a resolution:
1. Is pleased to see that in 2012, the upward trend in the demand for mobility continues in the context of the Lifelong Learning Programme (LLP), and that both the LLP and the Youth in Action Programme were implemented on schedule and in all participating countries;
2. Is pleased to see that in 2012, the European Institute of Innovation and Technology (EIT) moved from the initial start-up phase to a consolidation of activities with the existing three KICs with ambitious plans for enhancing the KIC portfolio;
3. Is concerned that the LLP (2007–2013) still had an error rate in excess of the 2% threshold; recognises that the movement to lump-sum payments will improve the error rate;
4. Notes with satisfaction that the DG Education and Culture has continued its efforts to ensure that primary and secondary controls are effective, and that fair progress has been made by National Agencies and National Authorities on removing deficiencies in their management and control systems;
5. Is pleased with the improvement the Education, Audiovisual and Culture Executive Agency (EACEA) has made with respect to payments within contractual time and within targeted time;
6. Is concerned that for the DG Communication, 30% of verified files in the ex-post review contained administrative and non-quantifiable errors; understands the ex-post controls are not as yet representative; however, urges that the recommendations of better financial planning be implemented;
7. Welcomes the Commission's objective to support TV, Radio and Internet within the communication and media activities in their annual activity report 2012, where the Commission aims to support independent reporting on EU affairs in their own language; with this in mind finds it worrying that many official EU languages are not covered by the networks whereas broadcasting in Arabic has been developed in order to transmit information within and outside the EU, and asks the Commission for the publication of user statistics for all networks in all languages.
RESULT OF FINAL VOTE IN COMMITTEE
Date adopted |
13.2.2014 |
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Result of final vote |
+: –: 0: |
19 1 0 |
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Members present for the final vote |
Piotr Borys, Jean-Marie Cavada, Silvia Costa, Santiago Fisas Ayxela, Mary Honeyball, Emma McClarkin, Katarína Neveďalová, Doris Pack, Chrysoula Paliadeli, Monika Panayotova, Marco Scurria, Hannu Takkula, László Tőkés, Helga Trüpel, Milan Zver |
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Substitute(s) present for the final vote |
Heinz K. Becker, Ivo Belet, Iosif Matula, Joanna Katarzyna Skrzydlewska, Isabelle Thomas |
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Substitute(s) under Rule 187(2) present for the final vote |
Jens Geier |
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24.2.2014
OPINION of the Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs
for the Committee on Budgetary Control
on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012, Section III – Commission and executive agencies
(COM(2013)0570 – C7‑0273/2013 – 2013/2195(DEC))
Rapporteur: Zuzana Roithová
SUGGESTIONS
The Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs calls on the Committee on Budgetary Control, as the committee responsible, to incorporate the following suggestions in its motion for a resolution:
1. Takes note of the Court of Auditors' conclusion that the consolidated accounts of the European Union present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Union as at 31 December 2012 but that supervisory and control systems examined are partially effective in ensuring the legality and regularity of payments underlying the accounts; takes note of the Court of Auditors' conclusion that all policy groups covering operational expenditure are materially affected by error with an estimated error rate for expensed payments underlying the accounts having increased from 3,9 % to 4,8 % in 2012;
2. Takes note of the Court of Auditors' conclusion that the payments for research and other internal policies were affected by material error; wishes that the Court of Auditors' annual report provides detailed information on the expenditure for the area of freedom, security and justice ;
3. Welcomes the increase by 15,9% of commitment appropriations for the area of freedom, security and justice in 2012 and takes note of the decrease by 3,5% of payments appropriations in the same period;
4. Notes that the Annual Activity Report of DG Home for 2012 reports that progress was achieved on the development of the SIS II and the successful implementation in most Member States’ systems; is also aware that not all audit recommendations of the Schengen Facility have been adequately and effectively implemented by the Commission;
5. Regrets that weaknesses in the monitoring of closure procedures and in the ex post audit strategy were identified by the IAS audits; highlights the need for compliance with Internal Control Standards.
RESULT OF FINAL VOTE IN COMMITTEE
Date adopted |
12.2.2014 |
|
|
|
|
Result of final vote |
+: –: 0: |
48 0 1 |
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Members present for the final vote |
Jan Philipp Albrecht, Roberta Angelilli, Rita Borsellino, Arkadiusz Tomasz Bratkowski, Carlos Coelho, Agustín Díaz de Mera García Consuegra, Ioan Enciu, Frank Engel, Kinga Gál, Kinga Göncz, Ágnes Hankiss, Anna Hedh, Salvatore Iacolino, Lívia Járóka, Teresa Jiménez-Becerril Barrio, Timothy Kirkhope, Juan Fernando López Aguilar, Monica Luisa Macovei, Svetoslav Hristov Malinov, Véronique Mathieu Houillon, Anthea McIntyre, Nuno Melo, Roberta Metsola, Claude Moraes, Antigoni Papadopoulou, Georgios Papanikolaou, Judith Sargentini, Birgit Sippel, Csaba Sógor, Renate Sommer, Rui Tavares, Nils Torvalds, Kyriacos Triantaphyllides, Wim van de Camp, Axel Voss, Tatjana Ždanoka, Auke Zijlstra |
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Substitute(s) present for the final vote |
Alexander Alvaro, Silvia Costa, Franco Frigo, Mariya Gabriel, Siiri Oviir, Zuzana Roithová, Salvador Sedó i Alabart, Sir Graham Watson |
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Substitute(s) under Rule 187(2) present for the final vote |
Françoise Castex, Knut Fleckenstein, Anne E. Jensen, Luis Yáñez-Barnuevo García |
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12.2.2014
OPINION of the Committee on Women's Rights and Gender Equality
for the Committee on Budgetary Control
on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the financial year 2012: Section III - Commission and executive agencies
Rapporteur: Barbara Matera
SUGGESTIONS
The Committee on Women's Rights and Gender Equality calls on the Committee on Budgetary Control, as the committee responsible, to incorporate the following suggestions in its motion for a resolution:
1. Underlines that under the Treaties the promotion of equality between men and women is a fundamental principle of the European Union and gender issues are cross-sectoral issues; recalls that the issue of gender equality should be incorporated and mainstreamed into all policies and addressed at all levels of the budgetary process; calls therefore on the Court of Auditors to assess the implementation of the general budget of the Union from the gender perspective, where applicable;
2. Stresses that under the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union any discrimination shall be prohibited (Article 21) and equality between men and women must be ensured in all areas, including employment, work and pay (Article 23);
3. Notes the Court of Auditors' numerous observations as well as the increase in the estimated error rate as regards the area on employment and social affairs, the policy area primarily covering gender equality aspects; reiterates its call for specific details if any of the observations concerns spending related to gender equality;
4. Points out the need for further efforts to develop gender-specific indicators and data which would allow for the accomplishment of the objectives from a gender perspective to be monitored and can be included in the reports on the implementation of the budget; notes that the budget of the Union should not be a neutral instrument and that the strategic and policy orientation underpinning it should reflect the interests and concerns of people and thus, engendering the budget is the best way of meeting the aspirations and needs of both men and women;
5. Points out that the annual reports on the implementation of the budget could include the outcomes of objectives set in terms of equality between women and men;
6. Stresses that equality between women and men is a precondition for fulfilling the overall Union objectives of growth, employment and social cohesion;
7. Calls on the Commission to take into account a gender perspective when projecting payment requirements on medium and long term, when identifying future needs for achieving gender balance and when planning budgetary priorities that partake of the principle of gender equality;
8. Stresses that defending women's rights and promoting policies to encourage the active participation of women in all aspects of social life are essential to democracy in all countries.
RESULT OF FINAL VOTE IN COMMITTEE
Date adopted |
12.2.2014 |
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|
|
|
Result of final vote |
+: –: 0: |
18 1 0 |
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Members present for the final vote |
Regina Bastos, Marije Cornelissen, Edite Estrela, Iratxe García Pérez, Mikael Gustafsson, Mary Honeyball, Astrid Lulling, Elisabeth Morin-Chartier, Norica Nicolai, Siiri Oviir, Antonyia Parvanova, Marina Yannakoudakis, Anna Záborská |
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Substitute(s) present for the final vote |
Izaskun Bilbao Barandica, Nicole Kiil-Nielsen, Katarína Neveďalová, Doris Pack, Antigoni Papadopoulou, Rui Tavares, Angelika Werthmann |
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RESULT OF FINAL VOTE IN COMMITTEE
Date adopted |
18.3.2014 |
|
|
|
|
Result of final vote |
+: –: 0: |
22 3 0 |
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Members present for the final vote |
Marta Andreasen, Jean-Pierre Audy, Inés Ayala Sender, Zuzana Brzobohatá, Tamás Deutsch, Martin Ehrenhauser, Jens Geier, Gerben-Jan Gerbrandy, Ingeborg Gräßle, Cătălin Sorin Ivan, Rina Ronja Kari, Monica Luisa Macovei, Jan Mulder, Eva Ortiz Vilella, Monika Panayotova, Crescenzio Rivellini, Paul Rübig, Bart Staes, Georgios Stavrakakis, Michael Theurer, Derek Vaughan |
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Substitute(s) present for the final vote |
Amelia Andersdotter, Philip Bradbourn, Esther de Lange, Marian-Jean Marinescu, Vojtěch Mynář, Jan Olbrycht, Markus Pieper |
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Substitute(s) under Rule 187(2) present for the final vote |
Daniel Caspary, Fiona Hall, Annette Koewius |
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- [60] OJ C 331, 14.11.2013, p. 1.
- [61] OJ C 331, 14.11.2013, p. 10.
- [62] OJ L 248, 16.9.2002, p. 1.
- [63] OJ L 298, 26.10.2012, p. 1.
- [64] OJ L 11, 16.1.2003, p. 1.
- [65] OJ L 297, 22.9.2004, p. 6.
- [66] OJ L 32, 6.2.2007, p. 88.
- [67] OJ L352, 24.12.2013, p. 65.
- [68] OJ L 56, 29.2.2012.
- [69] OJ C 334, 15.11.2013, p. 1.
- [70] OJ C 331, 14.11.2013, p. 1.
- [71] OJ C 331, 14.11.2013, p. 10.
- [72] OJ L 248, 16.9.2002, p. 1.
- [73] OJ L 298, 26.10.2012, p. 1.
- [74] OJ L 11, 16.1.2003, p. 1.
- [75] Texts adopted, P7_TA-PROV(2014)0000.
- [76] OJ L 56, 29.2.2012.
- [77] OJ C 334, 15.11.2013, p. 1.
- [78] OJ C 331, 14.11.2013, p. 1.
- [79] OJ C 331, 14.11.2013, p. 10.
- [80] OJ L 248, 16.9.2002, p. 1.
- [81] OJ L 298, 26.10.2012, p. 1.
- [82] OJ L 11, 16.1.2003, p. 1.
- [83] OJ L 347, 20.12.2013, p. 320.
- [84] Council Regulation (EU, Euratom) No 1311/2013 of 2 December 2013 laying down the Multiannual Financial Framework for the years 2014-2020 (OJ L 347, 20.12.2013, p. 884).
- [85] COM(2013)0682, 26 September 2013.
- [86] COM(2013)0934, 13 December 2013.
- [87] Commission Staff Working Document – Summary of Executive Summaries Internal Audit Engagements finalised by the IAS in 2012 (SWD(2013)0314), p. 22 ff as well as Annual Activity Report of the Directorate General for Agriculture and Rural Development, p. 6.
- [88] Press release ECA/13/47 of the Court of Auditors on Special Report 16/2013 on the ’single audit’, 18 December 2013.
- [89] COM(2005)0012, 26 January 2005, p.6.
- [90] European Parliament resolution of 4 February 2014 on the future role of the Court of Auditors. The procedure on the appointment of Court of Auditors' Members: European Parliament consultation (Texts adopted, P7_TA(2014)0060).
- [91] On 26 January 2005, Mr Barroso presented to Parliament his Commission’s strategic objectives for 2005-2009. One of the priorities for the five-year period was that the Commission’s ‘accountability should be enhanced by striving for a positive declaration of assurance from the European Court of Auditors’ (COM(2005)0012, p. 6).
- [92] COM(2013)0682/2, 30 September 2013.
- [93] See points 4 and 5 of the Communication (COM(2013)0682/2).
- [94] OJ C 373, 20.12.2013, p.1.
- [95] Study to quantify and analyse the VAT Gap in the EU-27 Member States – Final Report (TAXUD/2012//EN/316) http://ec.europa.eu/taxation_customs/taxation/vat/key_documents/reports_published/index_en.htm
- [96] OJ L 347, 11.12.2006, p. 1.
- [97] ARES(2013) 684754.
- [98] Footnote 15, point 3.9 of the Annual Report for 2012.
- [99] Certain Statutory Management Requirements and the Good Agricultural and Environmental Condition (GAEC).
- [100] Lithuania, Slovakia, Cyprus, Malta, Italy, Spain, United Kingdom, France, Greece, Portugal, Austria, Sweden (see the Annual Reports since 2007).
- [101] See also the answer to Written Question No 12 to Commissioner Cioloş, hearing of 17 December 2013: average duration of audits with financial corrections after conciliation procedure 1124 days.
- [102] Main weaknesses identified: deficiencies in administrative checks related to eligibility conditions and commitments such as non-detection of ineligible VAT or double financing, insufficient evaluation of the reasonableness of the costs (Germany – Brandenburg and Berlin – Poland, Romania and Sweden), weaknesses in the application of reductions or recoveries, deficiencies in the design and implementation of the control system for cross-compliance checks: insufficient GAEC standards or incorrect implementation of the nitrate directive.
- [103] Council Regulation (EC) No 1290/2005 of 21 June 2005 on the financing of the common agricultural policy (OJ L 209, 11.8.2005, p. 1).
- [104] OJ L 308, 16.11.2013, p. 27.
- [105] The precise description for each CAP measure of the key and ancillary controls and the level of flat rates to be applied for each situation resulting from the criteria described in the annex should be fixed in Commission guidelines based on the existing ones which are solidly established and have allowed the Commission to obtain positive rulings from the Court of Justice on most of the cases contested by the Member States.
- [106] Regulation (EU) No 1303/2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 17 December 2013 laying down common provisions on the European Regional Development Fund, the European Social Fund, the Cohesion Fund, the European Agricultural Fund for Rural Development and the European Maritime and Fisheries Fund and laying down general provisions on the European Regional Development Fund, the European Social Fund, the Cohesion Fund and the European Maritime and Fisheries Fund and repealing Council Regulation (EC) No 1083/2006 (OJ L 347, 2012.2013, p. 320).
- [107] Regulation (EU) No 1301/2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 17 December 2013 on the European Regional Development Fund and on specific provisions concerning the Investment for growth and jobs goal and repealing Regulation (EC) No 1080/2006 (OJ L 347, 2012.2013, p. 289).
- [108] Regulation (EU) No 1304/2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 17 December 2013 on the European Social Fund and repealing Council Regulation (EC) No 1081/2006 (OJ L 347, 20.12.2013, p. 470).
- [109] EMPL H1/JJ/DV vgk (2013), 13 November 2013.
- [110] Commission Staff Working Document SWD(2013)0307 accompanying the Annual Report 2013 on the European Union's Development and external assistance policies and their implementation in 2012; cf. p 161
- [111] https://tr-aid.jrc.ec.europa.eu
- [112] http://ec.europa.eu/atwork/synthesis/aar/doc/devco_aar_2012.pdf
- [113] Ares(2013) 2634919.
- [114] Texts adopted P7_TA-PROV(2014)0000, recommendations in Part XVI.
- [115] Activity report for 2012 of DG Research and Innovation, p. 45 et seq.
- [116] Texts adopted, P7_TA(2013)0318.
- [117] Directive 2014/…/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of … 2014 on the approximation of the laws, regulations and administrative provisions of the Member States concerning the manufacture, presentation and sale of tobacco and related products and repealing Directive 2001/37/EC (OJ L …).
- [118] WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control.
- [119] Paragraph 1(af) of the Resolution of 17 April 2013 (OJ L 308, 16.11.2013, p. 27).
- [120] Commission Staff Working Document SWD(2013) 307 final accompanying the Annual Report 2013 on the European Union's Development and external assistance policies and their implementation in 2012; cf. p 161
- [121] https://tr-aid.jrc.ec.europa.eu
- [122] http://ec.europa.eu/atwork/synthesis/aar/doc/devco_aar_2012.pdf
- [123] Simplification and Gold-plating in the European Social Fund, Ref. Ares(2013)3470438978 - 13/11/2013, Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion DG, European Commission
- [124] Simplification and Gold-plating in the European Social Fund, Ref. Ares(2013)3470438978 - 13/11/2013, Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion DG, European Commission, p.4.