|
BRUSSELS, March 24 (Xinhua) -- The European Union
(EU) summit which concluded here on Friday agreed to begin work on a common
approach to energy policy across the 25-member bloc.
The heads of government from the member states approved plans to establish a European energy strategy, which
aims to liberalize the energy market in Europe, deal more effectively with
external suppliers of oil and gas, improve security of supply, and open markets
to competition.
The strategy also requires major investment in
renewable energies by EU states to reduce the bloc's dependency on oil.
Mid-2007 was fixed for full energy market
liberalization, and 2020 was set as a deadline for achieving a 20 percent energy
saving.
The summit also required the EU foreign and security
policy chief Javier Solana to table a proposal on the external relations
strategy concerning energy.
"I'm very happy that our proposal was well-received,"
said European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso at the closing press
conference.
Under Barroso's leadership, the EU's executive body
tabled the common energy strategy to the summit meeting.
In a conclusion document issued by the summit, the EU
leaders listed three objectives for the bloc's energy policy:
-- increasing security of supply;
-- ensuring the competitiveness of European economies
and the affordability of energy supply to the benefit of both businesses and
consumers;
-- promoting environmental sustainability.
In order to achieve these goals, the leaders believed
that the 25-member bloc should:
-- Ensure transparency and non-discrimination of
markets;
-- Be consistent with competition rules;
-- Be consistent with public service obligations;
-- Fully respect EU member state's sovereignty over
primary energy sources and choice of energy-mix.
"Europe is not built in a day," said Austrian
Chancellor Wolfgang Schuessel who chaired the EU summit, as his country is
holding the EU presidency.
He said it was not possible to set up a mature
EU-wide energy policy "within a few hours" or "within a few days."
However, he noted that the EU leaders had "provided
the impetus" to the strategy and the summit was "very successful."
Before the summit, economic protectionism had been
widely reported by the western media following a dispute between France and
Italy over Italian energy giant Enel's failed merger with the French company,
Suez.
British Prime Minister Tony Blair criticized economic
protectionism, urging the EU to take more action to liberalize theenergy
markets.
"The argument for liberalization has not been totally
won but the direction of travel is right," he said, citing 10 Downing Street as
an example of the benefits of liberalized energy markets.
"The electricity in Number 10 Downing Street is
supplied by a French company, the water by a German company, the gas is
suppliedby four companies, three of which are not British," he said.
"Liberalized energy markets and more open markets are
good for business and for consumers right across Europe. This argument is being
won by those who want to open up to liberalization," he added. Enditem (By Wu
Liming ) |