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Universal Dependencies - English - ParTUT

LanguageEnglish
ProjectParTUT
Corpus Parttrain
AnnotationBosco, Cristina; Sanguinetti, Manuela

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s-201 My second point has already been mentioned:
s-202 In principle, I believe that in many cases where transport is concerned we should be working towards increased flexibility and country-specific rules.
s-203 However, when it comes to safety, I am rather sceptical because safety in Sweden, for example, is in principle no different from safety in Germany, Italy or Austria.
s-204 Should flexibility of this kind result in there being inadequate rules in some countries then we should work towards greater harmonisation.
s-205 My third point has also been mentioned already.
s-206 As you know, like Mr Rack, I come from a transit country, where this issue plays a particularly important role.
s-207 We do not want to make the conditions of competition worse for some countries unilaterally and improve them for countries such as Austria or other transit countries.
s-208 Mr President, I would firstly like to congratulate the rapporteur, Mr Koch, on his magnificent work and his positive cooperation with the Commission with regard to improving the texts and presenting this report and this proposal;
s-209 in the end there is only one amendment on the requirements for the aptitude examination for safety advisers in the transport of dangerous goods by road, rail or inland waterway.
s-210 We understand that it is important that the two institutions - Parliament and Commission - cooperate and work together and that the current cooperation with the Committee on Regional Policy, and in particular the transport group, is magnificent.
s-211 The common position includes practically all of the amendments accepted by the Commission and harmonises the minimum examination requirements for safety advisers and, at second reading, we can accept the amendment on the proposed date, which is much more realistic than the one originally suggested by the Commission, bearing in mind that we have now spent several years debating this question.
s-212 Very briefly, I would like to thank the various Members for their interventions and to tell you that safety is one of the Commission's priorities in the field of transport.
s-213 As Mr Simpson has said very correctly, this is a process which we can never take for granted or regard as having come to an end.
s-214 The process of increasing safety margins and safety guarantees in transport is a process which must be improved day by day.
s-215 In this regard, I would also like to refer very briefly to the problems of the tunnels, which Messrs Rack and Swoboda have referred to, which, in the case of Austria, is doubtless a very sensitive issue, and great effort should be made to improve their safety.
s-216 In one of the worst accidents to have occurred recently, the goods being transported were not dangerous in themselves.
s-217 Margarine and a few kilos of paint which, in principle, do not present risks, led to a genuine disaster.
s-218 Therefore, we will have to see how the requirements guaranteeing the maximum degree of safety can be further improved.
s-219 Finally, I would like to say that we have to consider safety in all types of transport.
s-220 This week we will be holding a debate here on the safety of sea transport, in light of the Erika disaster, and in the course of this year we will have to discuss our objectives in terms of the safety of air transport.
s-221 But I would like to say that safety is a priority objective for the Commission.
s-222 As I will say in the debate on the Erika disaster, we do not wait until there is a disaster to deal with the question of safety, but we work on it even when there are no such circumstances, which simply serve to demonstrate the urgency for an effective response to this type of problem.
s-223 I would like to repeat my appreciation to all the speakers and especially to the rapporteur, Mr Koch.
s-224 The debate is closed.
s-225 The vote will take place tomorrow at 12 p.m..
s-226 Transport of dangerous goods by road.
s-227 The next item is the report (A5-0104/1999) by Mr Koch, on behalf of the Committee on Regional Policy, Transport and Tourism, on the proposal for a European Parliament and Council Directive amending Directive 94/55/EC on the approximation of the laws of the Member States with regard to the transport of dangerous goods by road [COM (1999) 158-C5-0004/1999-1999/0083 (COD)].
s-228 Mr President, Commissioner, ladies and gentlemen, the Directive on the approximation of the laws of the member states with regard to the transport of dangerous goods by road, which entered into force on 1 January 1997, contains a number of transitional provisions which are only valid for a limited period of time, the term of validity being linked to the completion of specific standardisation work by the CEN, that is the European committee for standardisation.
s-229 Delays in the CEN's work are now making it difficult to apply this very Directive.
s-230 In particular, annexes cannot be adapted to take account of technical and industrial developments.
s-231 I regret this since we are having to take action because others have not done their job.
s-232 In this respect, I accept this proposal to amend Directive 94/55/EC which has been tabled for discussion today.
s-233 Should the European Union fail to take action, then Member States would be obliged to amend their national legislation for a very brief period, until the CEN completes its work, which would cause unnecessary cost and uncertainty.
s-234 The amendment to the Directive on today's agenda does not therefore affect the existing harmonisation of the transport of dangerous goods in the community.
s-235 It merely prolongs transitional rules by postponing deadlines, deletes provisions which are no longer applicable, and lays down the procedures for a) carrying out the ad hoc transportation of dangerous goods and b) enacting less stringent national regulations, in particular for the transport of very small amounts of dangerous goods within strictly defined local areas.
s-236 The amendment to the Directive is consequently in full accordance with the principle of subsidiarity;
s-237 the Member States obtain more powers.
s-238 In so doing, it is supported by a committee of experts on the transport of dangerous goods under the regulatory procedure.
s-239 The procedures for the exercise of these implementing powers conferred on the Commission were laid down afresh in the Council Decision of June 1999.
s-240 Two of the amendments tabled and adopted unanimously by the committee relate precisely to this amended comitology procedure.
s-241 We would like to ensure that there is a reference to this as early as the recitals and that the period within which the Council has to make a decision - which is not clearly worded - is set at a maximum of three months.
s-242 In addition, the need for greater transparency has been pointed out.
s-243 A final amendment is intended to ensure that tanks and tankers put into service between 1 January 1997 and the entry into force of this Directive may continue to be used provided that they have been constructed and maintained in accordance with it.
s-244 Mr President, colleagues, a happy new year and millennium to you all.
s-245 I would like to briefly comment on the Commission's proposal to amend the Directive on the transport of dangerous goods by road.
s-246 It is good that this Directive should be established now, as, otherwise, member states would have to amend their national acts for a very short time, a period of transition, which would again mean unnecessary costs and which would once more increase concern with regard to EU bureaucracy.
s-247 My amendments concern the frost-resistance ratings for tankers carrying these dangerous goods.
s-248 According to the Commission's proposal -20º C would have been sufficient.
s-249 On the shores of the Mediterranean, it is hard to imagine that in Lapland temperatures can fall considerably lower than that.
s-250 There is support for the EU in Lapland also, so let us remember them.
s-251 I have thus proposed that the frost rating be lowered to -40° C.
s-252 This would be necessary to keep safety standards at the level they were in northern regions previously.
s-253 Mr President, with your permission I should like to begin by expressing my admiration for the way in which you executed the quick changeover of the chairmanship just now during the debate.
s-254 I thought that it was quite superb.
s-255 On the subject at hand, I think that the people of Europe must be able to be confident that the goods - however dangerous they are - which are transported on Europe's roads, railways, and so on are as safe as possible.
s-256 This Directive is a contribution to this.
s-257 What we are doing today is essentially a nuisance.
s-258 The rapporteur, Mr Koch, to whom we express our thanks for the work which he has done on this, has already pointed out that basically everything could have been somewhat more advanced had it not been for the inactivity on the part of the CEN, which has been very dilatory in drawing up and adapting the Directive.
s-259 This is also important where the prerequisites for the internal market are concerned.
s-260 If we are to get a common transport market genuinely up and running, it is important that we should not only have regulations but that these regulations should also, as far as possible, apply to every country.
s-261 I should like to conclude by commenting on a third matter which is also of significance, namely an amendment tabled by Member of Parliament, Mr Ari Vatanen.
s-262 By approving this amendment, we take account of the fact that it can be very cold in the northern parts of the European Union.
s-263 This makes it necessary to also take account of the ways in which materials and packaging are affected by cold of this kind.
s-264 It is good that, in establishing the present regulations, we can also be flexible.
s-265 I hope that the Commission is able to accept the present amendment.
s-266 Mr President, I would like to thank not only Mr Koch, but also the Vice-President of the Commission for the clear and unambiguous way in which they have declared their support for safety in the transport sector and acknowledged it as a priority.
s-267 For one thing is clear:
s-268 We all regret that the European Committee for Standardisation (CEN) has not been able, in the required time, to carry out the amendment of the provisions necessary for the required harmonisation within the European Union.
s-269 This debate and the amendment of the Directive currently in force allow us to incorporate differentiating elements which demonstrate the diversity of this Europe of ours.
s-270 A moment ago, Mr Vatanen spoke to us of lower temperatures, not of 20 degrees below zero, but of 40 degrees below zero.
s-271 Of course, we accept that amendment - it is absolutely right - and I believe that we should incorporate specific circumstances which demonstrate the climatic diversity of the European Union, which sometimes take the form of specifics and of concrete requirements for the establishment of standards and characterisations of a technical nature.
s-272 I would like to say, with regard to Mr Swoboda's comments on the activity of the CEN, that we are urging them to speed up their work as much as possible because it would be terrible if, despite the new deadline, we were to find ourselves after a year and a bit with the same difficulties because their work has not been concluded.
s-273 The Commission accepts all of the contributions of the parliamentary committee and the rapporteur, Mr Koch, which are contained in the various amendments, specifically four.
s-274 We therefore accept the four amendments which have been proposed.
s-275 Structural Funds-Cohesion Fund coordination.
s-276 The next item is the report (A5-0108/1999) by Mrs Schroedter, on behalf of the Committee on Regional Policy, Transport and Tourism, on the communication from the Commission in the field of the Structural Funds and their coordination with the Cohesion Fund:
s-277 Mr President, it is particularly pleasing for me to make my first speech in the European Parliament on what is regarded as the most important issue within that part of the United Kingdom that I represent in this Parliament, namely Wales.
s-278 A major part of Wales, as you know, has been granted Objective 1 status under the Structural Funds programme.
s-279 It is quite clear that many people within Wales are looking to the European Structural Funds programme to alleviate some of the great difficulties that we undoubtedly face.
s-280 We have seen the gap between rich and poor widen.
s-281 We are looking, therefore, within the Structural Funds programme not just to see industrial restructuring but also to see a wider improvement in the whole of the economic base within the Principality.
s-282 That is why I want to highlight some of the issues that I believe the Commission must have at the forefront.
s-283 We look to the Commission to deal with points in relation to additionality.
s-284 We are dissatisfied with the fact that those figures seem to have been in some way hidden within UK figures.
s-285 We look to the Commission also to ensure that there is matched funding for projects.
s-286 We look to it to challenge the UK Government, to ensure that the private sector, which surely must be providing the major impetus for Structural Funds expenditure, is involved in the planning stage.
s-287 Finally, we ask that the Commission ensures that Structural Fund monies are spent in a way which is transparent.
s-288 Too much of what takes place within this Parliament is not transparent.
s-289 This is one area in which I believe the Commission can be a very great friend to Wales.
s-290 Mr President, our committee views these issues very differently and, to start, I will speak from the point of view of research.
s-291 We see it as a very positive sign that, in her own conclusions, the rapporteur has taken account of our committee's proposal that the Cohesion Fund countries should broaden the research infrastructure by locating universities and colleges in such a way that they would serve those who live in undeveloped regions better than now and make it easier for educated people to remain in their home districts.
s-292 Another matter we would like to address, specifically from the point of view of industrial policy, is that we would have liked the Commission to pay more attention to the effects of services, electronic commerce and the growing use of the Internet, when they were planning the coordination of Structural Funds and Cohesion Funds.
s-293 Poverty and wealth used to depend more on means of livelihood.
s-294 In my opinion the committee drafting the report has not taken sufficient account of this, so on behalf of the Committee on Industry, External Trade, Research and Energy, I would draw the Commission's attention to this issue.
s-295 Finally, as the committee representing energy, we would have liked the issue of support for renewable energy resources from Cohesion and Regional Development funds to have been emphasised still more, thus, through a process of coordination, increasing the use of renewables so that the scant funding resources in the energy programme might have been compensated by means of these more substantial sums.
s-296 I would like to draw people's attention to Amendments Nos 1 and 2 which were agreed by the Committee on Employment and Social Affairs but not accepted by the Committee on Regional Policy, Transport and Tourism.
s-297 These amendments deal with the social economy and the need to provide social risk capital and support financially local schemes to develop employment opportunities and strengthen social cohesion.
s-298 In the past, this Parliament has viewed the social economy as an important potential provider of employment.
s-299 These amendments also fit in with this Parliament's view that social exclusion is a serious issue needing constructive action.
s-300 We hope that those considering rejection of these amendments have very powerful reasons to offer to both Parliament and their citizens who are seeking employment.

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