BETA


Events

2022/04/28
   EC - Commission response to text adopted in plenary
Documents
2021/12/16
   EP - Results of vote in Parliament
2021/12/16
   EP - Decision by Parliament
Details

The European Parliament adopted by 668 votes to 3, with 14 abstentions, a resolution on the implementation of the Kimberley Process Certification Scheme (KPCS).

As a reminder, the KPCS was established as a UN-mandated certification scheme in 2003 to stop the trade in conflict diamonds, which was fuelling civil wars. The KPCS has a tripartite structure involving governments as decision-makers and international diamond industry and civil society representatives as observers. The EU and its 27 Member States count as a single participant. The KPCS claims to have been effective in almost completely stopping the trade in conflict diamonds as originally defined, with it now representing less than 1 % of the trade in rough diamonds, compared to 15 % in 2003.

Revised definition

The KPCS defines conflict diamonds as ‘rough diamonds used by rebel movements or their allies to finance conflict aimed at undermining legitimate governments’. Human rights abuses continue to occur in relation to diamond mining across diamond-rich conflict-affected and high-risk areas and may include child and forced labour, beatings, torture, sexual violence, the forced disappearance of people, forced evictions and resettlement, illegal land grabs and the destruction of ritually or culturally significant sites. The desire of consumers to have certainty about the origin and ethical nature of diamonds cannot currently be met. This has resulted in a decline for demand for natural diamonds. Mechanisms such as the KPCS need to be regularly reviewed and updated to ensure they are able to meet consumer expectations and international obligations relating to corporate social responsibility and sustainable development.

Against this background, Parliament stressed the urgent need to revise the definition of conflict diamonds to include human rights and the social and environmental conflict-related dimensions of diamond production to ensure that diamonds coming into the EU market are not linked to any human rights abuses or environmental crimes, whether committed by rebel groups, governments or private companies. It stressed that the KPCS should apply, in addition to rough diamonds, to cut and polished stones.

Effective implementation

Parliament called for the KPCS to be more effectively implemented to ensure that no conflict diamonds enter legitimate supply chains and for the strengthening and improved monitoring and enforcement of the internal controls of participating states. Parliament also urged the parties to the KPCS to create an independent monitoring mechanism , as the recommendations issued by peer review visits are of a non-binding nature and often fail to address weaknesses in the implementation of internal controls or bring meaningful change in cases of non-compliance with KPCS minimum requirements.

Improved traceability

The resolution pointed out that it is essential to be able to track diamonds from mine to market through more than just the paper trail accompanying diamond shipments. Therefore, it is fully receptive to the idea of using new technologies such as blockchain to improve traceability and welcomed the work towards the digitalisation of Kimberley Process certificates.

Adequate funding

The Commission and the European External Action Service are called on to ensure that sufficient funds are allocated for capacity-building under the Peace, Stability and Conflict Prevention thematic programme to support the sustainable and conflict-sensitive management of natural resources and compliance with the Kimberley Process and other similar initiatives applicable to conflict minerals, in order to improve the livelihoods of mining communities and enhance artisanal mining. Parliament called for those who allocate geographic funds to also take capacity-building and conflict prevention activities into account.

In addition, Parliament called on the EU to consider additional autonomous measures to ensure that rough, cut and polished diamonds linked to human rights abuses are not placed on the EU market, in order to overcome the shortcomings of the KPCS.

Documents
2021/12/14
   EP - Debate in Parliament
2021/12/13
   EP - Motion for a resolution
Documents
2021/12/10
   EP - Oral question/interpellation by Parliament
Documents
2021/09/09
   EP - LANGE Bernd (S&D) appointed as rapporteur in INTA

Documents

Votes

Mise en œuvre du système de certification du processus de Kimberley - Implementation of the Kimberley Process Certification scheme - Umsetzung des Zertifikationssystems des Kimberley-Prozesses - B9-0591/2021 - Proposition de résolution (ensemble du texte) #

2021/12/16 Outcome: +: 668, 0: 14, -: 3
DE FR IT ES PL RO NL BE SE HU PT AT CZ EL BG FI DK IE HR SK LT LV SI EE CY LU MT
Total
90
77
74
59
52
31
29
21
21
21
21
19
20
19
16
14
14
12
12
14
9
8
8
7
6
6
5
icon: PPE PPE
173

Hungary PPE

1

Denmark PPE

For (1)

1

Latvia PPE

2

Estonia PPE

For (1)

1
2

Luxembourg PPE

2

Malta PPE

For (1)

1
icon: S&D S&D
140

Czechia S&D

For (1)

1

Greece S&D

2

Lithuania S&D

2

Latvia S&D

2

Slovenia S&D

2

Estonia S&D

2

Cyprus S&D

2

Luxembourg S&D

For (1)

1
icon: Renew Renew
100

Italy Renew

3

Poland Renew

1
3

Hungary Renew

2

Austria Renew

For (1)

1

Finland Renew

3

Ireland Renew

2

Croatia Renew

For (1)

1

Lithuania Renew

1

Latvia Renew

For (1)

1

Slovenia Renew

2

Estonia Renew

3

Luxembourg Renew

2
icon: Verts/ALE Verts/ALE
68

Spain Verts/ALE

3

Poland Verts/ALE

For (1)

1

Netherlands Verts/ALE

3

Belgium Verts/ALE

3

Sweden Verts/ALE

3

Portugal Verts/ALE

1

Austria Verts/ALE

3

Czechia Verts/ALE

3

Finland Verts/ALE

3

Denmark Verts/ALE

2

Ireland Verts/ALE

2

Latvia Verts/ALE

1

Luxembourg Verts/ALE

For (1)

1
icon: ECR ECR
64

Germany ECR

1

Romania ECR

1

Greece ECR

1

Bulgaria ECR

2

Croatia ECR

1

Slovakia ECR

For (1)

1

Lithuania ECR

1

Latvia ECR

2
icon: ID ID
68

Netherlands ID

Against (1)

1
3

Czechia ID

For (1)

Against (1)

2

Finland ID

2

Denmark ID

For (1)

1

Estonia ID

For (1)

1
icon: The Left The Left
37

Netherlands The Left

For (1)

1

Belgium The Left

For (1)

1

Sweden The Left

For (1)

1

Finland The Left

For (1)

1

Denmark The Left

1

Cyprus The Left

2
icon: NI NI
35

Germany NI

2

Croatia NI

Abstain (1)

2

Slovakia NI

Against (1)

Abstain (1)

2

Lithuania NI

1

History

(these mark the time of scraping, not the official date of the change)

docs/2
date
2022-04-28T00:00:00
docs
url: /oeil/spdoc.do?i=57526&j=0&l=en title: SP(2022)89
type
Commission response to text adopted in plenary
body
EC
docs/2
date
2021-12-16T00:00:00
docs
url: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-9-2021-0516_EN.html title: T9-0516/2021
type
Text adopted by Parliament, single reading
body
EP
events/1
date
2021-12-16T00:00:00
type
Decision by Parliament
body
EP
docs
url: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-9-2021-0516_EN.html title: T9-0516/2021
events/1
date
2021-12-16T00:00:00
type
Results of vote in Parliament
body
EP
docs
url: https://oeil.secure.europarl.europa.eu/oeil/popups/sda.do?id=57526&l=en title: Results of vote in Parliament
events/2
date
2021-12-16T00:00:00
type
Decision by Parliament
body
EP
docs
url: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-9-2021-0516_EN.html title: T9-0516/2021
events/2/summary
  • The European Parliament adopted by 668 votes to 3, with 14 abstentions, a resolution on the implementation of the Kimberley Process Certification Scheme (KPCS).
  • As a reminder, the KPCS was established as a UN-mandated certification scheme in 2003 to stop the trade in conflict diamonds, which was fuelling civil wars. The KPCS has a tripartite structure involving governments as decision-makers and international diamond industry and civil society representatives as observers. The EU and its 27 Member States count as a single participant. The KPCS claims to have been effective in almost completely stopping the trade in conflict diamonds as originally defined, with it now representing less than 1 % of the trade in rough diamonds, compared to 15 % in 2003.
  • Revised definition
  • The KPCS defines conflict diamonds as ‘rough diamonds used by rebel movements or their allies to finance conflict aimed at undermining legitimate governments’. Human rights abuses continue to occur in relation to diamond mining across diamond-rich conflict-affected and high-risk areas and may include child and forced labour, beatings, torture, sexual violence, the forced disappearance of people, forced evictions and resettlement, illegal land grabs and the destruction of ritually or culturally significant sites. The desire of consumers to have certainty about the origin and ethical nature of diamonds cannot currently be met. This has resulted in a decline for demand for natural diamonds. Mechanisms such as the KPCS need to be regularly reviewed and updated to ensure they are able to meet consumer expectations and international obligations relating to corporate social responsibility and sustainable development.
  • Against this background, Parliament stressed the urgent need to revise the definition of conflict diamonds to include human rights and the social and environmental conflict-related dimensions of diamond production to ensure that diamonds coming into the EU market are not linked to any human rights abuses or environmental crimes, whether committed by rebel groups, governments or private companies. It stressed that the KPCS should apply, in addition to rough diamonds, to cut and polished stones.
  • Effective implementation
  • Parliament called for the KPCS to be more effectively implemented to ensure that no conflict diamonds enter legitimate supply chains and for the strengthening and improved monitoring and enforcement of the internal controls of participating states. Parliament also urged the parties to the KPCS to create an independent monitoring mechanism , as the recommendations issued by peer review visits are of a non-binding nature and often fail to address weaknesses in the implementation of internal controls or bring meaningful change in cases of non-compliance with KPCS minimum requirements.
  • Improved traceability
  • The resolution pointed out that it is essential to be able to track diamonds from mine to market through more than just the paper trail accompanying diamond shipments. Therefore, it is fully receptive to the idea of using new technologies such as blockchain to improve traceability and welcomed the work towards the digitalisation of Kimberley Process certificates.
  • Adequate funding
  • The Commission and the European External Action Service are called on to ensure that sufficient funds are allocated for capacity-building under the Peace, Stability and Conflict Prevention thematic programme to support the sustainable and conflict-sensitive management of natural resources and compliance with the Kimberley Process and other similar initiatives applicable to conflict minerals, in order to improve the livelihoods of mining communities and enhance artisanal mining. Parliament called for those who allocate geographic funds to also take capacity-building and conflict prevention activities into account.
  • In addition, Parliament called on the EU to consider additional autonomous measures to ensure that rough, cut and polished diamonds linked to human rights abuses are not placed on the EU market, in order to overcome the shortcomings of the KPCS.
docs/1
date
2021-12-13T00:00:00
docs
url: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/B-9-2021-0591_EN.html title: B9-0591/2021
type
Motion for a resolution
body
EP
docs/2
date
2021-12-16T00:00:00
docs
url: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-9-2021-0516_EN.html title: T9-0516/2021
type
Text adopted by Parliament, single reading
body
EP
events/1
date
2021-12-16T00:00:00
type
Decision by Parliament
body
EP
docs
url: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-9-2021-0516_EN.html title: T9-0516/2021
forecasts
  • date: 2021-12-16T00:00:00 title: Vote in plenary scheduled
procedure/stage_reached
Old
Awaiting plenary debate/vote
New
Procedure completed
events
  • date: 2021-12-14T00:00:00 type: Debate in Parliament body: EP docs: url: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/CRE-9-2021-12-14-TOC_EN.html title: Debate in Parliament
forecasts/0
date
2021-12-14T00:00:00
title
Debate in plenary scheduled
procedure/title
Old
Implementation of the Kimberley Process Certification scheme
New
Resolution on the implementation of the Kimberley Process Certification Scheme