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IP/07/549
Brussels, 24th April 2007
Competition Commissioner Neelie Kroes said: “The state aid reform package is well under way. This latest draft Regulation will make a significant contribution to the Commission's better regulation and simplification agenda. Once adopted, it will facilitate proper compliance with state aid rules while minimising bureaucracy for both Member States and the Commission.”
The five current block exemption regulations cover the following types of aid: aid to SMEs, research and development aid in favour of SMEs, aid for employment, training aid and regional aid. Under the new draft Regulation just presented for consultation, all of these would be consolidated into one single Regulation with simplified and harmonised conditions of application. Specific rules have also been added for aid granted in the sectors of agriculture, fisheries and transport. In addition, the draft Regulation would exempt three types of aid which have never been included in a block exemption before: environmental aid, aid in the form of risk capital and exempting research and development aid (R&D) in favour of large enterprises.
For the types of aid covered and fulfilling the conditions of the new draft Regulation, Member States would no longer have to notify their aid measures to the Commission and await the Commission's approval before they could start granting aid, and so could implement such measures without delay. For instance, they would be allowed to grant aid of up to 50% of project costs to companies carrying out industrial research.
As foreseen by Council Regulation (EC) 994/98, the draft Regulation will be sent to the Member States in order to allow them to comment in the course of a meeting planned during the summer. The draft will thereafter be published in the EU's Official Journal to allow stakeholders to make their views known. The draft will then again be discussed with Member States in early 2008, with a view to the Commission adopting the final version of this regulation before summer 2008.
The draft Regulation for a general block exemption forms part of the Commission’s implementation of its June 2005 State Aid Action Plan outlining the guiding principles for a comprehensive reform of state aid rules for 2005-2009. In particular the document sets out how the Commission intends to use EC Treaty state aid rules to encourage Member States to contribute to the Strategy for growth and jobs by reducing overall aid levels while focusing remaining aid on improving the competitiveness of EU industry, creating sustainable jobs, ensuring social and regional cohesion, and improving public services. In this respect, the proposal complements the Commission Decision and Framework on services of general economic interest (see IP/05/973), the Guidelines on Risk Capital (see IP/06/1015), the Framework on research, development & innovation (see IP/06/1600) and the new de minimis Regulation (see IP/06/1765) adopted in 2006.
This consolidation of different texts is in line with the Commission's
"Better Regulation" agenda. The draft Regulation also fits into the Commission's
agenda to promote "Less and better targeted aid" in that it facilitates the
possibilities for Member States to grant subsidies that clearly fulfil
horizontal objectives in line with the European Union's objectives for growth
and jobs.
The proposal will be available at:
http://ec.europa.eu/comm/competition/state_aid/reform/reform.html
See also MEMO/07/151.