On 4-5 June, the meeting of the Committee for Civilian Aspects of Crisis Management (CIVCOM) took place in Riga. Discussions focused on topical issues related to the planning and conduct of the EU's Common Security and Defence Policy (CSDP) civilian missions, and the participation of civilian experts from Member States to these missions.
Sunday 7 June 2015
G7 Summit - Schloss Elmau (Germany)
11.00 Press briefing by President Donald Tusk and President Jean-Claude Juncker
13.00 Official welcome by Chancellor Angela Merkel
13.30 First working session
15.00 Second working session
16.30 Family photo
17.30 Meeting with Prime Minister of Canada Stephen Harper
19.15 Official reception
20.30 Working dinner
Monday 8 June 2015
G7 Summit - Schloss Elmau (Germany)
09.00 Third working session
10.45 Fourth working session with outreach guests
12.20 Family photo with outreach guests
12.45 Working lunch with outreach guests
Wednesday 10 June 2015
EU-CELAC summit
09.15 Bilateral meetings
14.00 Official welcome
14.30 Opening Ceremony
15.30 First working session
17.00 Second working session
18.30 Family photo
19.00 Social dinner
Thursday 11 June 2015
EU-CELAC summit
10.00 Retreat session
12.15 Closing ceremony
13.00 Press conference by the President of the European Council, the President of the European Commission and the CELAC pro-tempore President
16.00 EU-SICA high level meeting
17.30 EU-CARIFORUM high level meeting
Friday 12 June 2015
EU-Mexico summit
09.30 Leaders' meeting
10.00 Plenary session
14.00 Meeting with President of Burkina Faso Michel Kafando (photo opportunity)
Merkel, standing, with her finance and defence ministers in the Bundestag last month
Just when is the real deadline before which Greece has to reach a deal with its creditors to gain access to €7.2bn in bailout aid?
Its current bailout ends on June 30, and officials think that if a deal is in place by the next scheduled meeting of eurozone finance ministers, June 18, there may just be enough time for Greece to pass the necessary legislation to get the rescue disbursement before the clock runs out.
But Stefan Wagstyl, the FT’s man in Berlin, writes to point out there’s another looming deadline that could cause problems for a Greece decision, tied to the upcoming recess of the Bundestag, which must approve any aid tranche:
It could be that Greece’s real deadline is much earlier that many realise: June 14. That is the date by which German officials say Greece and its bailout monitors must complete a new agreement for the German parliament to have time to vote on it before the end of the month.
Read moreThe Permanent Representatives Committee on 4 June 2015 approved, on behalf of the Council, a compromise agreed with the European Parliament on a directive aimed at further developing an EU-wide market for electronic payments.
The directive incorporates and repeals an existing payment services directive (directive 2007/64/EC), which provided the legal basis for the creation of an EU-wide single market for payments.
Catering for changes in e-commerceThe revised directive adapts existing rules to emerging and innovative payment services, including internet and mobile payments. It establishes a comprehensive set of rules with the aim of ensuring a more secure environment for payments, in particular for those using remote channels. The directive also sets up a more harmonised and effective framework for supervision by national authorities.
Since adoption of the original payment services directive in 2007, innovative methods for the initiation of payments in the field of e-commerce have evolved. They usually form a software "bridge" between the website of the merchant and the online banking platform of the payer's bank in order to initiate internet payments on the basis of a credit transfer. These services will now be covered by the directive. They enable the payment initiation service provider (who never holds the user's funds) to give assurance to the payee that the funds necessary for a specific payment transaction are available on the account and the payment has been initiated.
A regulatory regime to cover the activities of account information services will also be provided for. These services offer the payment service user, for example, with aggregated online information on one or more payment accounts held with one or more other payment service providers. This enables the payment service user to have an overall view of his/her financial situation at any given moment, within a secure environment.
Secure internet paymentsAt the same time, the directive promotes the strengthening of security measures for internet payments and for the use of services provided by new market players. It will ensure strong customer authentication to identify the client for each transaction. The new and strengthened supervisory regime will further increase the security level and consumer protection in this field.
Next stepsThe Council presidency reached a compromise with the Parliament on 5 May 2015. The Council had set out its position in December 2014. The directive will now have to be approved by the Parliament at first reading, so as to allow adoption by the Council once the texts have been finalised in all languages.
Once adopted, member states will have two years to transpose the directive into their national laws and regulations.
In the context of EU sanctions related to the misappropriation of Ukrainian state funds, the Council decided on 5 June to extend the asset freeze for three of the four persons covered by measures applying until 6 June 2015. The measures are extended by 9 months for two of the persons concerned and by 4 months for the third.
The 4th European Standardization Summit on 4 June served as a platform for discussions on how standardisation can contribute to a cleaner and smarter economy in Europe focusing on the construction sector.