Progress: Procedure completed
Role | Committee | Rapporteur | Shadows |
---|---|---|---|
Lead | BUDG | OLBRYCHT Jan ( EPP), MARQUES Margarida ( S&D) | KÖRNER Moritz ( Renew), ANDRESEN Rasmus ( Verts/ALE), ZĪLE Roberts ( ECR), PAPADIMOULIS Dimitrios ( GUE/NGL) |
Lead committee dossier:
Legal Basis:
RoP 105-p5
Legal Basis:
RoP 105-p5Events
The European Parliament adopted by 497 votes to 79, with 53 abstentions, a resolution on the 2021 proposal for a revision of the Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF).
According to Parliament, new policy commitments and objectives need to be matched with fresh money and are not to be financed at the expense of other Union programmes and priorities.
In this regard, a broader revision of the current MFF is needed as it was already pushed to its limits in its first year. The resolution pointed to the multiple crises and challenges that the Union has been addressing, in particular the war in Ukraine and its repercussions, and the substantial financing needs it has generated.
Therefore, Parliament called on the Commission to conduct an in-depth review of the functioning of the current MFF and proceed with a legislative proposal for a comprehensive MFF revision as soon as possible and no later than the first quarter of 2023.
Incorporation of the Social Climate Fund in the EU budget
Parliament fully supported the incorporation of the Social Climate Fund in the Union budget and the MFF as part of its long-standing position that all Union programmes and funds are to be included in the budget.
Recommendations and modifications to the MFF
Parliament called on the Council and the Commission to consider the following recommendations and modifications:
- the impact of the revised financial envelope of the Social Climate Fund should be reflected throughout this regulation, including in its annex;
- an automatic technical adjustment of the ceilings for commitment appropriations of heading 3 ‘Natural Resources and Environment’ and the ceiling for payment appropriations should be introduced to ensure that additional allocations are made available for the Social Climate Fund in the event of an increase of carbon price to a level higher than the initial assumption;
- the specific annual adjustment based on new own resources should be amended to ensure it can be prolonged in case of a delayed adoption of the following MFF.
Lastly, the resolution stated that the Commission should present a proposal for a new multiannual financial framework before 1 July 2025 , to enable the institutions to adopt it sufficiently in advance of the start of the subsequent multiannual financial framework. The ceilings and other provisions, including the adjustments to the multiannual financial framework, corresponding to the last year of the multiannual financial framework set out in this Regulation are to continue to apply in the event that a new multiannual financial framework is not adopted before the end of the term of the multiannual financial framework laid down in this Regulation.
The Committee on Budgets adopted the interim report presented by Jan OLBRYCHT (EPP, PL) and Margarida MARQUES (S&D, PT) on the 2021 proposal for a revision of the Multiannual Financial Framework.
In view of the multiple crises and challenges facing the Union, including the war in Ukraine, and the substantial funding needs it has generated, Members called on the Commission to conduct an in-depth review of the functioning of the current MFF and proceed with a legislative proposal for a comprehensive MFF revision as soon as possible and no later than the first quarter of 2023 .
Members expressed full support for the incorporation of the Social Climate Fund into the EU budget and the MFF and welcomed the Commission's proposal as a starting point as regards the increase of the ceiling for commitment appropriations of heading 3
‘Natural Resources and Environment’ and the ceiling for payment appropriations, which is a necessary pre-condition so that the financing of the Social Climate Fund is not detrimental to other Union programmes and priorities. However, they pointed out that some modifications are necessary to reflect Parliament’s position on the Fit for 55 package, including on the revised financial envelope of the Social Climate Fund.
The report also supported the proposal for a specific annual adjustment based on new own resources. It considered it to be in line with the principle, as set out in the Interinstitutional Agreement on budgetary discipline, cooperation in budgetary matters and sound financial management (IIA), that expenditure from the Union budget related to the repayment of the European Union Recovery Instrument should not lead to an undue reduction in programme expenditure or investment instruments under the MFF. It therefore reaffirmed that such an annual adjustment depends on the introduction of new own resources in line with the roadmap set out in the IIA.
The Committee on Budgets asked the Council and the Commission to consider the following recommendations and modifications:
- the impact of the revised financial envelope of the Social Climate Fund should be reflected throughout this regulation, including in its annex;
- an automatic technical adjustment of the ceilings for commitment appropriations of heading 3 and the ceiling for payment appropriations should be introduced to ensure that additional allocations are made available for the Social Climate Fund in the event of an increase of carbon price to a level higher than the initial assumption;
- the specific annual adjustment based on new own resources should be amended to ensure it can be prolonged in case of a delayed adoption of the following MFF, in line with article 312(4) TFEU. The Commission should present a proposal for a new multiannual financial framework before 1 July 2025, to enable the institutions to adopt it sufficiently in advance of the start of the subsequent multiannual financial framework.
Documents
- Results of vote in Parliament: Results of vote in Parliament
- Decision by Parliament: T9-0309/2022
- Debate in Parliament: Debate in Parliament
- Committee report tabled for plenary: A9-0227/2022
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE735.475
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE735.470
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE735.470
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE735.475
Activities
- Stanislav POLČÁK
- Rainer WIELAND
- Jan OLBRYCHT
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Margarida MARQUES
Plenary Speeches (1)
Amendments | Dossier |
6 |
2021/0429R(APP)
2022/07/13
BUDG
5 amendments...
Amendment 1 #
Paragraph 2 a (new) 2a. Reminds that the revenue deriving from ETS and forthcoming ETS II is directly linked to the industrial and economic activity within the EU, therefore warns against an overreliance on ETS future revenue forecasts given the alarming economic situation;
Amendment 2 #
Paragraph 2 b (new) 2b. Reminds that the CBAM trilogue negotiations are not finalised, therefore, sees the revision of the MFF (and, as a consequence, of the Own Resources Decision) as premature;
Amendment 3 #
Paragraph 5 a (new) 5a. Is concerned that the repayment of the NextGenerationEU Recovery Instrument depends on volatile new own resources not entered yet into force;
Amendment 4 #
Paragraph 5 b (new) 5b. Questions the methodology used by the Commission in its claims that the annual average expenditure for the Social Climate Fund will be established at the level of 8 billion EUR from 2026 to 2032;
Amendment 6 #
Proposal for a regulation Article 1 – paragraph 2 a (new) (2a) the following Article 4b is inserted: ‘Article 4b Specific annual adjustment based on carbon price fluctuation 1. Starting in 2025, an annual upward adjustment to the expenditure ceiling for the commitment appropriations of heading 3 and to the ceiling for payment appropriations for the current year shall be made in the event that the average carbon price calculated in year n- 1 is higher than 48 EUR/tonne based on the average price. 2. The annual upward adjustment referred to in paragraph 1 of this Article shall be equivalent to the amount calculated by multiplying the annual allocation deriving from the financial envelope set out in Article 9 of Regulation (EU) [XXX] of the European Parliament and of the Council establishing a Social Climate Fund by the percentage by which the average carbon price calculated in year n-1 exceeded 48 EUR/tonne.’
source: 735.475
2022/07/20
BUDG
1 amendments...
Amendment 5 #
Proposal for a regulation Recital 3 (3) The introduction of EU emissions trading for the buildings and road transport sectors, as set out in Directive 2003/87/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council2, may give rise to short term social impacts. To address this challenge, Regulation (EU) [XXX] final of the European Parliament and of the Council established3 a Social Climate Fund, to be financed by the general budget of the Union under the multiannual financial framework. The ceiling for commitment appropriations of heading 3, ‘Natural Resources and Environment’, and the ceiling for payment appropriations should therefore be adapted for the years 2024, 2025, 2026 and 2027. In the event of a higher carbon price above EUR 48/tonne3a , an additional allocation should be made available for the Social Climate Fund on an annual basis commensurately with the increase of the carbon price, in order to further support vulnerable households and users of transport in the transition towards climate neutrality. Such annual reinforcements should be accommodated within the MFF by means of an automatic carbon price fluctuation adjustment of the ceiling for commitment appropriations of heading 3, ‘Natural Resources and Environment’, and the ceiling for payment appropriations. ____________________ 2 Directive 2003/87/EC of the European
source: 735.475
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