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The establishment of a
biregional strategic alliance between the
Andean Community and the European Union that
should lead to the signing of an Association
Agreement that includes a free trade
agreement has strengthened relations between
the two blocs.
The pillars on which
this relationship has been developed are:
The Political dialogue
Access to the Single European Market
The Framework Cooperation Agreement
The
Specialized Dialogue on Drugs
Political Dialogue
The
Andean Community and the European Union
signed a Joint Declaration on the Political
Dialogue, in Rome on June 30, 1996, thus
providing an institutional framework for a
dialogue that had been conducted informally
up until that time.
According to that Declaration, the dialogue
would center on biregional and international
issues of common interest, to be addressed
at meetings between the Chairman of the
Andean Council of Presidents, the EU
Presidency, and the President of the
Commission, when convenient, as well as
between the Ministers of Foreign Affairs,
other Ministers and government officials.
Numerous meetings have been held since that
time, particularly within the framework of
the institutionalized ministerial meetings
between the European Union and the Rio Group.
Not only do they allow for an exchange of
ideas about the political and economic
situations in the two regions and the
prospects for biregional relations, but
considerable guidance is given on topics of
common interest. It is important to point
out that the Andean initiative of reaching
an Association Agreement between the two
regions took progressive shape through these
meetings.
During the Second Summit of Heads of State
and Government of Latin America, the
Caribbean and the European Union in Madrid
(May 2002), the CAN and the EU held a
meeting of Heads of State,
where it was agreed to negotiate a Political
Dialogue and Cooperation Agreement as a
prior step to starting the negotiation of an
Association Agreement between the two blocs.
The Political
Dialogue and Cooperation Agreement between
the CAN and the EU was signed on December
15, 2003 in Rome within the framework of the
European Council.
The Third LAC-EU
Summit, held in Guadalajara, Mexico on May
28 and 29, 2004, gave a strong boost to
biregional dialogue and the agenda that was
addressed highlighted social cohesion. The
Summit, furthermore, stressed the importance
of the rapid ratification of the Political
Dialogue and Cooperation Agreement signed by
the European Union and the Andean Community
on December 15, 2003 in Rome.
The Andean Community
Ministers informed the EU, at the most
recent meeting of the Political Dialogue at
the Ministerial Level, held in Luxemburg in
May 2005, that the Council of Foreign
Ministers had adopted the 2003 Agreement
through Decision 595 of July 11, 2004.
Insofar as the ratification by the CAN
Member Countries of the Political Dialogue
and Cooperation Agreement of 2003 is
concerned, Bolivia and Ecuador have ratified
it and
Peru and Colombia are expected to do
so shortly. In the case of the Europeans,
fifteen Member States of the European Union
have already ratified the Agreement.
Access to the Single
European Market: from the Special “Drugs”
GSP to the GSP “Plus”
The
European Union is the Andean Community’s
second most important trading partner. In
2004, 12% of the Andean countries’ total
exports went to that market, which supplied
13% of their imports.
The
products of Andean Community Member
Countries have been benefiting from
preferential access to the European Union
since 1991, when a special regime of tariff
preferences (“Drugs” GSP) was first extended
to them as a contribution, under the
principle of shared responsibility, to
Andean drug control efforts.
As a
result of those preferences, almost all of
the Andean industrial products and a list of
agricultural and fishery goods enter the
European market duty free. This has boosted
exports, economic growth and employment
generation in the Andean Community. The
regime, however, is temporary in nature and
subject to periodic renewal.
An
important change was made in December 2001,
with the approval of Regulation (EC)
2501/2001 on the application of generalized
tariff preferences between January 1, 2002
and December 31, 2004, a period that was
later extended to December 31, 2005.
The
regime included preferences for the
subregion, as the European Union’s
contribution to the Andean countries’ drug
control effort. It also provided for the
possible renewal of the system of
preferences for the 2005-2014 decade,
depending on the results of an evaluation,
particularly of the observance by the
beneficiary countries of ILO core labor
standards, their performance in the war on
drugs and their effective utilization of the
preferences during the 2002-2004 period.
Questioning within the World Trade
Organization led to the revision and
adjustment of the “Drugs” GSP, with the
result that the European Union adopted a new
Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) for
2006-2015 and its Regulation (EC) 980/2005
became effective on July 1, 2005.
That
Regulation establishes a General Regime, a
Special Regime to Encourage Sustainable
Development and Governance, and another
Special Regime for the Less Developed
Countries. The Andean countries benefit from
the preferences granted through the Special
Regime to Encourage Sustainable Development
and Governance (GSP “Plus”) that includes
two eligibility criteria: the ratification
and implementation of a series of
international instruments on human rights,
labor rights, the environment, drugs, and
corruption; and being classified as a
vulnerable economy on the basis of
previously defined indicators.
The Cooperation Agreement
Andean-European cooperation has evolved over
time. During the 70s, it was confined to
trade; in the 80s, emphasis was placed on
cooperation for development; and in the 90s,
efforts were directed toward building an
array of industrial, scientific,
technological, and inter-business mechanisms
characteristic of advanced economic
cooperation.
The
CAN-EU Framework Cooperation Agreement,
approved through
Decision 329
and still in effect, was signed in 1992. It
corresponds to the so-called Third
Generation Agreements that cover aspects
like the evolution clause, advanced
cooperation and the diversification of
cooperation spheres and instruments.
This
Agreement provides the legal foundation for
European Union cooperation, as administered
by the European Commission. The Mixed
Commission, whose functions are to ensure
fulfillment of the cooperation actions
provided for in the Agreement and to
recommend regional projects, among other
things, operates as its consultation and
coordination body.
By
recommendation of that Commission and of the
Subcommittees on Science and Technology and
on Trade and Industry, important regional
projects are being executed within the
framework of CAN-EU cooperation, the most
outstanding of which are the GRANADU --successfully
completed--, Quality, Competence, Statistics,
and Disaster Prevention and Relief projects
and the “Initiative for Andean Regional
Stabilization.”
It
should be added here that the
Political
Dialogue and Cooperation
Agreement will replace the Framework
Agreement, once it has been ratified by the
two parties.
The
new Agreement provides for a structured
dialogue on different fronts and takes
bioregional cooperation into new spheres
that are vitally important to the Andean
subregion, like peace and security,
democratic governance, the participation of
civil society, the social agenda, the
environment, and migrations.
Specialized dialogue on drugs
The
European Union and the Andean Community
decided in 1995 to institute a specialized
dialogue on drugs, consisting of periodic
meetings of high-level technical experts on
the subject.
As a
result of that dialogue, on December 18,
1995, five bilateral agreements were signed
between the CAN and EU Member Countries on
the control of trade in chemical substances
that can be diverted for use in the
production of illegal drugs.
To
date, there have been eight meetings of the
specialized dialogue on drugs and six on the
control of chemical precursors. These
meetings have made it possible to follow-up
on cooperation in this area and to engage,
in application of the principle of shared
responsibility, in a fruitful exchange of
information and viewpoints.
Attention should be drawn to the fact that
at the Sixth Meeting of the Specialized
Dialogue on Drugs between the Andean
Community and the European Union, held in
Cartagena, Colombia on May 28, 2003, the
Andean countries issued a Political
Declaration calling for more cooperation in
this area and proposed the execution of
specific drug control projects in different
areas.
In
this same context, the Eighth Meeting of the
Specialized Dialogue, held in Lima on May 31
and June 1, 2005, emphasized the need to
look into the possibility of obtaining
additional technical and financial
cooperation to assist the Andean Community
in its difficult drug control efforts, and
to ensure that a coordinated approach is
taken to the matter.
Toward an Association Agreement
During the meetings held within the
framework of the political dialogue, the
Andean Community and the European Union
studied, at the proposal of the Andean
countries, the possibility of negotiating an
Association Agreement to strengthen the
political, economic, social and cultural
ties between the two regions.
This
step would be particularly important for
giving Andean exports certain and stable
access to the European market and for
augmenting European investment flows to the
subregion.
The
important agreements reached in the Madrid
(2002) and Guadalajara (2004) Summits of
Heads of State and of Government of Latin
America and the Caribbean and the European
Union, within the framework of the strategic
association between the two regions, have
made it possible to launch the process aimed
at the signing of an Association Agreement
that will include a free trade agreement.
At the Second European Union – Latin America
and the Caribbean Summit, held in Madrid in
May 2002, the Heads of State of the Andean
Community and of the European Union brought
up the possibility of negotiating an
Association Agreement that would include a
Free Trade Area.
The Andean Community
Heads of State and the Troika of the
European Union agreed at the Third LAC – EU
Summit, in Guadalajara on May 28 and 29,
2004, to launch a process that would lead to
the signing of an association agreement
including a free trade area. They
accordingly decided, through a joint
communiqué, that the process would begin
with a joint assessment of Andean
integration, to be followed by the
negotiation of an association and free trade
agreement.
At the Fourth Europe – Latin America and the
Caribbean Summit in Vienna on May 12, 2006,
the Andean Community and the European Union
decided to start negotiating an Association
Agreement during 2006 that would include a
political dialogue, cooperation programs and
a trade agreement.
The “joint assessment” of Andean integration
was successfully concluded on July 13, 2006
in Brussels, at a high-level meeting between
the Andean Community and the European Union,
thus opening the way for the prompt
negotiation of an Association Agreement.
The Council of Ministers of the European
Union is expected to authorize the
negotiation of an Association Agreement to
start before 2006 is out so that it can be
concluded at the next biregional EU-Latin
American Summit, to be held in Peru in May
2008.
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Framework
agreement to boost association
between Andean Community and
European Union
Lima, May 17, 2008
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CAN and EU reach
“flexible framework agreement”
for association, President
García announces
Lima, May 17, 2008 |
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President Correa
hails agreement with flexibility
and considers it a good
“starting point”
Lima, May 17, 2008 |
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President Morales
states that the Andean countries
have reached an understanding
and asks the EU not to cause a
division among them
Lima, May 17, 2008 |
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Ehlers highlights
consolidation of the CAN and EU
opening in negotiation
Lima, May 17, 2008 |
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Andean and
European countries open the way
to an ambitious Association
Agreement
Quito, April 25, 2008 |
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Third Round of
CAN-EU Negotiations concludes
with evidence of asymmetries
Quito, April 25, 2008 |
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Andean Trade Pillar spokesman
underscores progress of CAN-EU
negotiations
Lima, April 11, 2008 |
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Andean countries enter final
phase of preparations for the
Third Round of Negotiations with
the European Union
Lima, April 10, 2008 |
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CAN intensifies preparations for
the Third Round of CAN- EU
Negotiations
Lima, February 29, 2008 |
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At seminar organized by the Andean
Labor Advisory Council
CAN-UE negotiations are analyzed
from the viewpoint of the workers
Lima, February 4, 2008 |
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EU and Andean countries
"satisfied" by the course of the
negotiations,
but admit that much still remains
to be settled
Brussels, December 14, 2007 |
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Andean
Presidents agree to continue
jointly negotiating agreement with
the European Union
Santiago, Chile, November 9, 2007 |
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Ehlers
considers that association
agreement between the CAN and EU
will be a milestone
Bogotá, September 18, 2007 |
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CAN set to launch historic
negotiation with the EU on
September 17
Lima, September 5, 2007 |
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CAN Vice-Ministers of Foreign
Affairs and of Trade prepare for
first round of negotiations with
EU
Lima, August 17, 2007 |
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Andean countries agree to launch
CAN-EU negotiations during the
Andean
Summit
Lima, June 8, 2007 |
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Decision 667:
General framework for the
negotiation of the Association
Agreement between the Andean
Community and the European Union
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EU-Andean
Community Ministerial Meeting
Joint
Communiqué
Santo Domingo, April 19, 2007 |
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EU to start negotiations for
Association Agreement with the
Andean Community; aid package for
the region of €713 million
Brussels, 20 April 2007 |
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CAN defines base
tariff for negotiations with the
EU and reaches agreement on 75% of
the tariff items
Lima, March 30, 2007 |
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At High-Level
Meeting
CAN and EU reaffirm commitment to
start bloc-to-bloc negotiations
as soon as possible
Lima, March 6, 2007 |
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EU to give green light to
negotiation with the CAN before the year is
out
Lima, October 19, 2006 |
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Andean countries step up
efforts to give uniform tariff treatment to EU
products
Lima, October 12, 2006 |
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EU-CAN High Level Meeting
12/13 July 2006
Joint Minutes |
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Work and
arrangements advance on CAN-EU
Association Agreement
Lima, July 7, 2006 |
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Letter from the Andean Community
Presidents to the President of the
European Commission, José Manuel
Durao Barroso, about the process
leading to the start of
negotiations of the CAN-EU
Association Agreement
Quito, June 13, 2006 |
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EU and CAN decide to start process
leading to an Association
Agreement
Lima, May 12, 2006 |
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Declaration of Vienna
IV EU-LAC Summit
Vienna, May 12, 2006 |
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More Information |
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