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EU launches review of 2035 new petrol, diesel car ban

EU launches review of 2035 new petrol, diesel car ban

Euractiv07-07-2025
Stefano Porciello Euractiv Jul 7, 2025 16:35 2 min. read News
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FIREPOWER: Kubilius to present EU leaders with 2030 war plan
FIREPOWER: Kubilius to present EU leaders with 2030 war plan

Euractiv

time21 hours ago

  • Euractiv

FIREPOWER: Kubilius to present EU leaders with 2030 war plan

Take a free trial of Euractiv Pro to get FIREPOWER in your inbox. Good afternoon and welcome back to Firepower, This week we sat down with Andrius Kubilius, the EU's commissioner for defence and space, in his office which is decorated with miniature satellites. More on that below. We also have updates on Parliament's rapporteurs for the defence omnibus regulation, and what topics Parliament's security and defence committee plans to dig into in the coming months. Finally, don't miss out on the latest moves to repurpose huge sums from EU cohesion funds for the defence industry, a controversial idea that shifts money away from civilian priorities. We also look at the Commission's ambition to directly handle contracts with arms manufacturers. INTERVIEW: Andrius Kubilius plans to brief EU leaders on what's needed by 2030 EU defence chief Andrius Kubilius told Firepower that he's making a checklist to prepare Europe for a possible war by 2030, which he plans to have ready to present to EU leaders by October. The key questions, as he put it to us: 'What kinds of projects we are going to develop, what is the calendar and what are the financial resources needed?' A top goal, Kubilius told us, is to give Europe its own high-end military systems to kill the continent's excessive reliance on US-made kit, especially when it comes to satellites for secure communication, in-air refuelling, surveillance aircraft and more. That'll come at a hefty price. Europeans are promising to budget billions more for defence in the coming years. But to do what? There are numerous options on the market, and spending must be optimised. 'Spending from the EU budget is an instrument to incentivise member states to spend trillions in a more effective way to go for joint procurement,' he said. This autumn, Kubilius hopes to start a broader discussion about creating a 'European Defence Union'. In his view, the UK, Norway and Ukraine should be a part of it. Launching that kind of a project means more reflecting on equipment needs, adequate financing and regulations. Speaking in his office, Kubilius suggested that those three non-EU countries could join the EU's secure telecommunications constellation system, IRIS², as well: 'I would not be opposed.' Kubilius also gave us his views on how to use the SAFE loans, what the European defence industry should look like in the future and more. Look for more from our interview with Kubilius on Monday. The SAFE Corner SOFT DEADLINE. EU countries officially have until Tuesday to tell the Commission if they're interested in taking loans from the €150 billion SAFE funding mechanism to buy arms, and to detail just how much €€€ they're interested in. But don't fret if you're not ready – it's a soft deadline, a Commission official told Firepower, with late applications still considered. TRACKER. Kubilius told us 20 countries are interested in borrowing €100 billion. Firepower's count of participants includes Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Czechia, Estonia, France, Ireland, Lithuania, Poland and Romania. Austria, Finland, Slovakia, Slovenia are still thinking. Greece, Italy, Latvia, Portugal are likely to want the cash. Denmark is unlikely to request it. Germany and Sweden are expected to join procurement deals but not request the loans. The Netherlands is not interested in the loans either. FRANCE, we're hearing, is considering a very modest amount. That would signal support for the made-in-the-EU programme without adding too much extra debt to France's already strained finances. Meanwhile, POLAND is planning on using SAFE money for procurement, but notably including solo deals in addition to joint European contracts, two people told Firepower. One of the two sources also said Warsaw is considering using SAFE cash to pay for orders already signed earlier this year. Going it alone is allowed for one year under SAFE rules, and there is no limit to how much of the €150 billion overall pot can go to single-country purchases. But the move undermines the fundamental SAFE concept of seeding European procurement cooperation, as some of our sources complained. The UNITED KINGDOM has shown interest in the programme, but is still waiting for the Commission and EU countries to decide on the terms for allowing British firms to get involved. The EU executive is expected to set out the basis for talks with the UK to the Council next week, two diplomats said. The KEY HURDLE to drafting a proposal has been defining what is 'fair', both in terms of how much of a SAFE-funded military product British defence firms can produce, and how much the UK government needs to contribute to Brussels, three people told Firepower. The Commission does not have a template or equation to objectively calculate the UK's contribution to the plan, an official of the EU executive recognised, which means some EU countries have felt free to push the Commission in different directions. Patriots drama incoming After a bunch of countries said they were ready to buy more US equipment to help speed up Ukraine's air defence fortifications, Germany said it was open to "contribute to providing" another five Patriot missile-defence systems to Ukraine early in the week (Kyiv reportedly already operates six). But that was before the country's defence minister Boris Pistorius made it clear they would need the US to backfill German military stocks within a few months to actually move forward with the delivery, as the US promised. Romania previously did the same thing by pledging its batteries as long as they were replaced by allies. The waiting list for a Patriot system or missile runs years, though, and there are still serious questions about whether the US can pressure industry to deliver faster, or if Washington is ready to tap into its own stocks to help Europe. FCAS family drama has Brussels reconsidering participation There's been plenty of drama this summer around the French-German-Spanish FCAS next-generation fighter jet programme, including public feuding among top aerospace contractors. The latest? Belgium is now trying to join the programme – and promptly saw the Dassault Aviation CEO and the country's defence minister publicly sniping at each other. "The timing of a Belgian membership request appears suboptimal,' Alain De Neve, aerospace expert at the Belgian Centre for Security and Defence Studies, told Firepower. 'FCAS is nearing a decisive moment: either a major industrial realignment will occur to save the 2045 timeline, or the programme may unravel into divergent national or bilateral efforts.' The German and French defence ministers, meanwhile, met on Thursday to discuss FCAS and acknowledged there's a long list of questions that need to be sorted out by the end of the year. On your radar Berlin backs Paris against EU Commission's plan to review arms export control Germany and France are united in their belief that Brussels has absolutely no role to play on weapons exports decisions, as the defence ministers from both countries made clear on Thursday. This will bolster France's opposition, which Euractiv first reported earlier this spring, against the EU executive's repeated proposal. In other news: NO MONEY FOR DEFENCE START-UPS? Some key EU countries are sceptical of shifting EU cash earmarked for civilian start-ups through the European Innovation Council's accelerator (EIC) to fund defence projects instead, according to draft Council conclusions. The Council 'invites' the Commission to 'explain the proposed extension of the EIC accelerator programme to dual use applications in view of the geopolitical situation', the document reads. The idea featured both in the Commission's proposed start-up scale-up strategy and in an earlier proposal in April, before von der Leyen put the spotlight on the EU supporting defence start-ups at the NATO summit last month. WHO'S THE HOLD-UP? Five countries – Austria, Germany, Ireland, Malta and the Netherlands – are not fully on board with letting the EIC invest its money in defence projects instead of civilian initiatives, sources told Firepower. That concern has become one of the last sticking points in negotiations over the Commission's 'mini omnibus' pitched in April, one source close to the file told Firepower. EPF DYNAMICS. The Commission has long offered to handle contracts with defence firms to buy defence equipment for third countries directly via its FPI (foreign policy instrument) and so changing the way the off-budget European Peace Facility fund operates – an idea EU countries are now warming up to, according to a person involved in the talks. Shifting purchasing responsibility from EU countries to the Commission would remove the informal supervision over contracts that capitals currently exercise, but could open the door to a more transparent procurement process. OMNIBUS RAPPORTEURS. The European Parliament is looking at who's going to lead the negotiations on the dense slate proposals from the Commission, known as the 'defence omnibus', to simplify EU rules for the defence industry. Firepower is hearing that MEPs plan to split talks over the package into three parts, each of them led by three different rapporteurs, from S&D, EPP and Renew. PARLIAMENT'S HOMEWORK. The Parliament's defence committee is planning three own-initiative reports next year, according to committee plans discussed earlier this month: 'European defence readiness 2030: assessment of needs', 'Tackling barriers to the single market for defence' and 'Flagship European defence projects of common interest'.

The Brief – 25 July 2025: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
The Brief – 25 July 2025: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

Euractiv

timea day ago

  • Euractiv

The Brief – 25 July 2025: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

Good Friday afternoon, wherever you may be. Schuman was markedly quieter this morning, coffee shops are shuttered, and motorways are laden with holiday-makers heading south for the Grand Départ. Fear not, here at Euractiv HQ desks are still occupied and newsletters will still be delivered for two more weeks. And whilst the summer exodus empties a large part of the city, there's still plenty to report on. Including secluded parties in the depths of the European Parliament, where one young MEP has been hosting exclusive soirées, with DJs, beer on tap, and free pizza. Nicoletta Ionta got the invite and spilled the goods about this novel approach to politicking. The Asian tour EU leaders made a fleeting visit to the eastern hemisphere, stopping in Japan on Wednesday before piling back aboard the plane for a rather colder reception in China on Thursday. The Japan leg was a relatively amiable affair that secured an agreement to cooperate on procuring critical raw materials and strengthen business ties. Given the EU delegation's next stop, any mention of China was avoided, though the Japan mission clearly aims to reduce dependency on the world's manufacturing behemoth. Thursday's assignment – ostensibly a celebration of 50 years' diplomatic ties between the EU and China – was always going to be awkward, with Europe hooked on Chinese goods but also outraged by its support for Russia, its grip on rare earths, and disregard for human rights. Von der Leyen has hardened her tone towards this inconvenient trading partner and reiterated these grievances on the visit, though her Chinese counterparts showed little interest, leaving the Europeans to close the day with a press conference devoid of Chinese representatives. Gaza stirs European consciences The humanitarian emergency in Gaza has deteriorated for months as Israeli forces continue their ruthless assault on Hamas forces and render the war-torn region practically uninhabitable. With Palestinian civilians trapped in camps and precious little aid being delivered, acute starvation has become one more cause of death. For many in Europe, the situation has grown intolerable. But EU criticism of Israel's offensive has fallen short of sanctions, and agreements to provide more aid have failed to alleviate the crisis. In light of the situation, France announced Thursday that it will recognise the State of Palestine – a step taken by Spain and Ireland already last year. Whether this will significantly shift the dial on EU relations with Israel is not yet clear. An emergency call between France, Germany, and the United Kingdom takes place on Friday afternoon, though Merz has already said his government will not recognise a Palestinian state "in the short term". The European Parliament is also unsure whether to allow keffiyehs (the traditional Arab headdress now symbolic of solidarity with Palestine) in the building. The lack of clarity makes it likely that this will remain a point of contention – one that already has sparked skirmishes. Kids and social media A growing concern about the dangers of social media for minors has seen Brussels set guidelines for how platforms should protect children using their online services. Measures to restrict access vary between EU countries, with France leading the fight after coming down hard on porn websites last month. Under the auspices of the Digital Services Act, other countries are tightening access requirements and testing age verification. Much ado about veggie food If you thought 'Solmon' or 'Tu-nah' were inoffensive labels for non-fish alternatives, think again. The fish industry is in a flap about names that imitate the real thing and want to put an end to it (though it won't stop companies producing the actual products). "Call a spade a spade," an industry representative argued; one MEP supportive of the cause said that fish lovers should be "worried". The opposition follows a similar battle for the right to use terrestrial meat terms for plant-based alternatives. But the industry distress has done little to dent veggie appetites, as sales of non-meat delicacies continue to rise. Belgium-France nuclear cooperation The anti-nuclear sentiment whipped up by Green parties in Belgium has finally dissipated and the new government has overturned plans to phase out the country's reactors. But to make a "more sustainable, competitive and resilient Europe", Belgium will work closely with France to extend its nuclear capacity. Across Europe, attitudes towards the zero-emissions energy sources are changing as governments recognise their potential to deliver energy sovereignty and reduce dependence on natural gas imports.

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