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BRUSSELS, March 23 (Xinhua) -- Heads of state and
government ofthe European Union (EU) members states kicked off a two-day spring
economic summit Thursday night, the agenda of which is expected tobe dominated
by growth and jobs and a common energy policy.
The catchword of the spring summit
would be "reforms" and several agreements have been proposed, including more
investment in education and research and development, more flexibility of
thelabor market and the support for small- and medium-sized enterprises.
There is broad-based consensus among the member
states on growth, said European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso on
Thursday. But concrete action is needed, he told a press conference after a
tripartite social summit, a dialogue between EUleaders and employment and trade
unions, ahead of the EU summit.
Barroso admitted on Thursday that there is resistance
to reforms in certain countries. But he added that the existence of resistance
means there is reform in the EU, which represents the right direction.
The leaders are expected to spend a significant
amount of time on discussions over an energy greenpaper presented by the
executive European Commission.
The document calls for the creation of a new EU-level
energy regulator and an integrated European electricity grid.
It also asks for new legislation on oil and gas
stocks to ensure Europe has an emergency gas stockpile, and a mechanism to
ensure a rapid and coordinated response to supply emergencies.
The commission also wants the EU to speak with one
voice on energy, implying that in the future one EU-level official would goto
negotiations with external partners on behalf of all the 25 member states.
Divisions are expected among the leaders as the
greenpaper, basis for future legislation, would deprive part of the authority of
national governments on energy policies.
The energy issue became priority of the EU following
the energycrisis at the beginning of the year after Russia cut off its natural
gas supply to Ukraine, through which EU countries get muchof its gas supply.
A sense of urgency was also prompted by recent rifts
among member states over blocked cross-border mergers of energy companies.
Austria, which holds the rotating EU presidency,
breathed a sigh of relief after a possible clash at the summit over
protectionism was averted.
A letter to denounce protectionism initiated by
Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, which was set to spark exchange of
fire at the summit, was withdrawn on the eve of the gathering after other
countries declined to sign up, obviously as a result of pressure from Austria.
Austria promised to discuss the issue later in
Vienna. Enditem |