Text adopted on 16.1.92(a) A3-0384/91
RESOLUTION
embodying the opinion of the European Parliament on the convening
of Intergovernmental Conferences with a view to the amendment of
the ECSC and EAEC Treaties
The European Parliament,
- having regard to Article 96 of the ECSC Treaty and Article
204 of the EAEC Treaty,
- having regard to the Council's letter of 12 November 1991
requesting its opinion on the proposal for a meeting of the
Intergovernmental Conferences with a view to the amendment
of the ECSC and EAEC Treaties (C3-0403/91),
- having regard to its resolution of 16 January 1992 on the
integration of the ECSC and EAEC Treaties into the EEC
Treaty,
- having regard to the report of the Committee on
Institutional Affairs (A3-0384/91),
A. recalling the obvious fact that Political Union requires
the revision of all the treaties establishing the European
Communities, on the basis of which the European Parliament
has been asking to be consulted since its resolution of 11
July 1990 on the Intergovernmental Conference in the
context of Parliament's strategy for European Union and in
particular in its resolution of 22 November 1990 embodying
its opinion on the convening of the Intergovernmental
Conferences on Economic and Monetary Union and on Political
Union;
1. Is astonished at this hasty, last-minute consultation -
despite the European Parliament's reminders on this subject
over the last year or more - which is evidence of the
inefficiency of the Council and intergovernmental
procedures;
2. Supports the convening of the Intergovernmental Conferences
on the basis of acceptance by the Council of the following
undertakings:
(a) the matters governed by the ECSC and EAEC Treaties
should be integrated into the EEC Treaty in order to
achieve what was announced in 1965 in Article 32 of the
Merger Treaty;
(b) the amendments made to the ECSC and EAEC Treaties
during the present exercise should at least provide for
parallel adaptation of the institutional and decision-
making machinery of these Treaties to the new EEC
treaty system, including the legislative procedures and
the provisions for approving international agreements;
points out that, unless adapted, the ECSC and the EAEC
Treaties would:
(i) contain no assent procedures, even for Articles
equivalent to those where the EEC Treaty will
so provide, e.g. Articles 101 (international
agreements), 4 (amendment to Annex I) and 54
(statutes of supply agency), of the EAEC Treaty;
(ii) contain no co-decision procedures, even for
Articles equivalent to those where the EEC
Treaty will so provide, e.g. Articles 7
(research programme) and 31 (basic health and
safety standards), of the EAEC Treaty;
(iii) contain no cooperation procedures, even for
Articles equivalent to those where the EEC
Treaty so provides, e.g. Articles 9
(establishment of institute), 47 (establishment
of joint undertakings), 50 (amendment of
statutes of joint undertakings), and 96
(discrimination on grounds of nationality), of
the EAEC Treaty;
(iv) not even provide for Parliament to be consulted
in a number of areas where the Council adopts
legislative provisions on a proposal of the
Commission, e.g. Articles 4, 7, 9, 24, 25, 41,
42, 47, 48, 50, 54, 69, 78, 101 and 197 of the
EAEC Treaty;
(v) retain procedures which allow certain categories
of treaty amendment without approval by the
European Parliament or any national parliament
(Articles 4, 76, 85 and 90 of the EAEC Treaty);
(c) the results of the Intergovernmental Conferences will
be put to the European Parliament with a view to an
agreement between the Intergovernmental Conferences and
the Parliament on the proposals to be submitted for
ratification to the national parliaments;
3. Instructs its President to forward this resolution to the
Council, the Commission and the Governments and Parliaments
of the Member States.
1(b)A3-0349/91
RESOLUTION
on the integration of the ECSC and EAEC treaties into the EEC
Treaty
The European Parliament,
- having regard to the motion for a resolution by Mr Martin
on the incorporation of the objects of the ECSC Treaty and
the EAEC Treaty into the EEC Treaty (B3-1943/90),
- having regard to the Darmstadt Ecology Institute's study on
proposals for revision of the Treaties establishing the
European Communities in the energy sector,
- having regard to the report by its Committee on
Institutional Affairs and the opinions of the Committee on
Economic and Monetary Affairs and Industrial Policy and the
Committee on Energy, Research and Technology (A3-0349/91),
A. whereas the ECSC Treaty is due to expire in 2002,
B. whereas the convention on certain institutions common to the
European Communities of 25 March 1957 and the Merger Treaty
of 8 April 1965 amalgamated the institutions of the three
Communities,
C. having regard to the Commission communication of 15 March
1991 on the future of the ECSC Treaty (SEC (91) 0407),
D. having regard to the regrettable divergences in decision-
making procedures under the three treaties, which hamper
vital transparency and thus detract from the legitimacy of
the Communities' activities,
E. having regard to the interinstitutional conflicts stemming,
in particular, from the increased divergences between the
machinery of the institutions resulting from the Single
European Act, leading to numerous disputes over the
selection of correct legal bases that are taken as far as
the European Court of Justice and damage the transparency
and legitimacy of action taken by Community bodies;
1. Advocates that the objects of the ECSC and EAEC Treaties
should be incorporated into the EEC Treaty at the earliest
opportunity; calls for the necessary work to start
immediately and expects it to be completed and forwarded to
the Member States for ratification no later than the
intergovernmental conference planned for 1996;
2. Emphasises the need for the ECSC budgetary and financial
system to be incorporated into that of the EEC;
3. Believes that the levy procedure provided for in the ECSC
Treaty should also be applied for the purposes of objectives
laid down in the present EEC Treaty;
4. Calls for the standardization of legislative and
implementing procedures in a treaty establishing a single
European Community, as provided for as long ago as 1965 in
Article 32 of the Merger Treaty;
5. Sees the impending expiry of the ECSC Treaty, with the
financial effects this will have on lending and borrowing
capacity, as an appropriate opportunity to achieve this
goal;
6. Calls for a joint decision-making procedure on the
following lines:
- all constitutional decisions should require Council
unanimity and the assent of a majority of the Members
of the European Parliament, as well as ratification by
the Member States (for example, Articles 138, 201, 236
and 237 of the EEC Treaty);
- all decisions involving laws should come under a co-
decision procedure, in which the Council and Parliament
have equal rights;
- items of legislation, which by way of exception
continue to require unanimous decision by the Council
(for example, Article 235 of the EEC Treaty), should
be enacted with the assent of the European Parliament;
- implementing provisions should be enacted either by the
Member States or by the Commission, where appropriate
in conjunction with a committee procedure; in the
latter event both chambers of the legislature shall
have the power of legislative retrieval;
7. Rejects as spurious the argument of alleged technical
difficulties in integrating the ECSC and EAEC treaties for
the following reasons:
- only a few constitutional provisions need to be
transferred, while numerous legal and administrative
provisions can be transferred using separate
procedures;
- far more complex matters, such as the completion of the
internal market (since 1985) and German unification
have been dealt with in a much shorter time, thanks to
the necessary goodwill;
8. Notes that the objectives of the ECSC Treaty are provisions
of a constitutional nature;
9. Insists on the inclusion of a safeguard clause to ensure
that established social benefits and social policy
provisions under the ECSC Treaty will continue to apply
after they have been incorporated into the new treaty and
trusts that it will still be possible in future to make use
of the social policy instruments of the present ECSC
Treaty;
10. Proposes that the draft set out in the opinion of the
Committee on Energy, Research and Technology should be taken
as the basis for future work;
11. Instructs its President to forward this resolution and the
report on which it is based to the Council, Commission and
the Governments and Parliaments of the Member States.