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Support from the EU Solidarity Fund helps Slovenia and Greece recover from climate-related disasters

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The Commission paid €328 million in EUSF support to Slovenia to help the country recover from the floods that occurred in August and September of 2023. An additional €76 million was transferred to Greece to ease the financial burden of reconstruction efforts after the damage caused by cyclone ‘Daniel’ in September 2023.

Today’s payments come on top of two EUSF advance payments that were already paid to Slovenia and Greece to help kick-start recovery operations: a €100 million advance payment was paid to Slovenia while a €25 million advance payment was paid to Greece.

Therefore, the total amount of EUSF aid granted to Slovenia and Greece collectively amounts to around €529 million and is a tangible expression of the EU’s solidarity with Member States faced with unprecedented climate-related disasters.

The mobilisation of EUSF is based on applications submitted by eligible countries. The emergency and recovery operations may be financed by the EUSF retroactively from day one of the disaster.

EU standing in solidarity with Slovenia and Greece as they recover and rebuild.

In August 2023, Slovenia experienced severe flooding caused by intense rainfall, which affected almost two-thirds of the country. The Sava, Drava, and Mura rivers burst their banks, with key infrastructure including roads and energy supplies damaged, as well as hundreds of private homes and public buildings. The flooding triggered landslides and resulted in significant economic losses.

In September 2023, Greece was struck by the devastating cyclone ‘Daniel’, which ravaged large parts of Greece, mainly in the regions of Thessaly and Central Greece. The cyclone was the deadliest Mediterranean tropical-like cyclone in recorded history, resulting in the widespread destruction of homes.

The EUSF support made available today will help Slovenia and Greece restore key infrastructure, in the fields of transport, water and wastewater, and will help fund temporary accommodation and rescue services.

Background

The EU Solidarity Fund (EUSF) is the EU’s main instrument for post-disaster recovery and is a tangible expression of EU solidarity. It supports Member States and accession countries hit by climate-related disasters and, since 2020, major health emergencies.

Since 2002, the EUSF has mobilised over €8.6 billion for interventions in 130 disaster events (110 natural disasters and 20 health emergencies) in 24 Member States (plus the United Kingdom) and four accession countries (Albania, Montenegro, Serbia, and Türkiye).

The Commission’s RESTORE proposal which proposes amendments to several funding regulations is another expression of the EU standing in solidarity with countries faced with climate-related disasters. The proposal is currently with the co-legislators for adoption.

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EU invests €1.2 billion in cross-border energy infrastructure

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EU sends emergency energy assistance to Ireland following storm Éowyn

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Following Ireland’s request for assistance relating to power outages caused by the record-breaking storm Éowyn, the EU Civil Protection Mechanism has been activated. The EU has immediately mobilised 13 power generators from the Commission’s own strategic reserve, rescEU, hosted in Poland. 4 power generators offered by Denmark via the Mechanism will also soon reach Ireland and help provide electricity on the ground.

The EU also activated the Copernicus Emergency Management Service and has provided analytical support to the national authorities.

The EU’s Emergency Response Coordination Centre continues to closely monitor the situation and remains in constant contact with the national authorities, ensuring that additional assistance can be promptly channelled if needed.

EU Commissioner for Preparedness, Crisis Management and Equality, Hadja Lahbib, said:

“Extreme weather events, like storm Éowyn, increasingly put Europe‘s disaster resilience to the test. But they also demonstrate the growing strength of our joint preparedness and solidarity efforts. Our thoughts are with all those affected and with the first responders in Ireland who are doing their best to bring life back to normal. I thank Denmark for their prompt offer of assistance, and Poland for their excellent collaboration in hosting and delivering the rescEU power generators to Ireland. We are in this together.”

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Steering the EU towards greater sustainable competitiveness

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A new framework to rekindle economic productivity and secure the EU’s competitive edge has been presented by the European Commission. The Competitiveness Compass builds on the recommendations set out in Mario Draghi’s report on the future of European competitiveness. It will steer the EU’s work on competitiveness over the next five years and translate the report’s recommendations into concrete actions for the EU’s future prosperity.

The EU enjoys a strong system of rights and values, a Single Market, top-notch infrastructure and a skilled workforce, but the Compass recognises that more must be done to ensure Europe keeps pace with other major economies in a challenging and increasingly competitive world. While all the time looking to secure the EU’s climate neutrality, it sets a path for Europe to become the place where future technologies and clean products are invented, manufactured, and put on the market.

The Compass identifies 3 core areas of action:

  • Innovation – The EU must close the innovation gap by creating an environment where innovative start-ups, effective industrial leadership and the diffusion of technologies across businesses thrive. Concrete initiatives from the Commission include ‘Apply AI’ and ‘AI Gigafactories’ to drive industrial adoption of AI; action plans for advanced materials, quantum, biotech, robotics and space technologies; and an EU Start-up and Scale-up Strategy that will address the obstacles that are preventing new companies from emerging and scaling up.
  • Decarbonisation and competitiveness – The EU will help bring down high and volatile energy prices through an Affordable Energy Action Plan. It will set out a competitiveness-driven approach to decarbonisation through its upcoming Clean Industrial Deal, while an Industrial Decarbonisation Accelerator Act will extend accelerated permitting to sectors in transition. It will also launch action plans for energy intensive sectors, such as steel, metals, and chemicals.
  • Security and resilience – The EU will reduce dependencies and increase its resilience and security by continuing to build effective trade partnerships with economies around the world. Through a new range of Clean Trade and Investment Partnerships it will help secure a supply of raw materials, clean energy, sustainable transport fuels, and clean tech from across the world. It will also review public procurement rules to introduce a European preference in public procurement for critical sectors and technologies

Underpinning these actions will be five cross-cutting activities:

  • Simplification by drastically reducing the regulatory and administrative burden on firms
  • Lowering barriers to the Single Market through its Horizon Single Market Strategy
  • Financing competitiveness by establishing a European Savings and Investment Union
  • Promoting skills and quality jobs through a Union of Skills
  • Better coordination of policies at EU and national level by introducing a Competitiveness Coordination Tool

The Competitiveness Compass is the first major initiative of the Commission in the 2024-2029 mandate.

For more information

Strengthening European competitiveness

Draghi report

Communication – A Competitiveness Compass for the EU

A factsheet on the Competitiveness Compass

Press release: An EU Compass to regain competitiveness and secure sustainable prosperity

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