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La società civile dell’UE dice: “È tempo di dare priorità ai bisogni delle persone e dell’ambiente”

Mentre i leader dell’UE si incontravano al vertice del Consiglio europeo per decidere i nuovi assetti di vertice dell’Unione Europea, 120 organizzazioni della società civile – fra cui ISDE Italia – hanno chiesto di abbandonare l’agenda “Industrial Deal” promossa dalle associazioni imprenditoriali e di dare invece priorità ai bisogni delle persone e dell’ambiente, non all’avidità delle imprese.

La lettera è stata inviata al presidente del Consiglio europeo Charles Michel, al presidente della Commissione Ursula von der Leyen, ai 27 capi degli Stati membri dell’UE e ai membri del Parlamento europeo.


Dear EU and member state leaders, ministers, and parliamentarians,

As member state and European leaders gather to decide on the strategic agenda of the EU for the coming five years, we need real political solutions to the multiple crises we are facing. That is why we are writing to urge you to abandon the ‘Industrial Deal’ agenda promoted by business associations which would be disastrous for people and the environment.

Big polluting corporations led by the chemicals lobby group CEFIC have launched a plan for an EU ‘Industrial Deal’ also called the ‘Antwerp Declaration’, and further initiatives by BusinessEurope and the European Round Table for Industry echo this approach. They don’t propose any reduction in energy consumption or toxic pollution; instead what these corporate interests demand includes:

  • Getting access to more public money to boost their interests despite the needs of people and planet. This includes massive public funds at EU and national level to de-risk investments in infrastructure and ‘net-zero’ technologies. These include carbon capture and hydrogen which will lock-in further disastrous fossil fuel use and which, alongside more nuclear power, will effectively enable business-as-usual for Europe’s biggest polluters.
  • Far-reaching and speedy deregulation under the guise of ‘competitiveness’ and ‘innovation’ including the rolling back of existing social and green rules, and undermining the development and implementation of effective regulations in the future. Boosting the ‘better regulation’ agenda will exacerbate the existing prioritisation of competitiveness and economic factors in law-making.
  • ‘Completing’ the single market with stronger enforcement to enable corporations and the European Commission to block much needed bold plans for a social and green transition at the national and municipal levels. Remarkably, initiatives which promote a socially just ecological transition, public services, or collective labour law are not exempt from legal challenges under single market rules.
  • More ‘free trade’ and other measures, including what EU strategists call ‘hard power’, to secure ever more raw materials and energy supplies. This will see big corporations extracting resources from global south countries which will have to deal with the social and environmental destruction and the lost opportunity to use the resources for their own development.
  • A more business-friendly way of making EU decisions through the use of forums and dialogues with industry-biased membership and no public accountability mechanisms.

We urge EU and member state leaders to reject these unsustainable industry projects, put forward by those with the deepest pockets and the smoothest public relations machines.

Afterall the industry promotion of this agenda comes after the same lobbies successfully sabotaged a range of important legislative proposals that were desperately needed to protect nature, biodiversity, and public health, including the Chemicals Strategy for Sustainability and the Farm to Fork ambitions.

And this corporate lobby campaign comes at a time when we are facing multiple crises that hit communities and the very environment we live in and depend on. We face an ecological crisis of unknown proportions, from climate disaster to species extinction, which is already impacting Europeans’ daily lives, threatening our energy and food security, ecosystems, infrastructure, water resources, financial stability, and health.

Meanwhile the cost of living crisis has seen basic living costs like food, housing, and utilities increase massively in comparison to wages for millions of Europeans, driven by corporate profiteering, particularly by the fossil fuel and military industries, exacerbating poverty and inequality across the continent. To add insult to injury, ‘economic governance’ policies including austerity are being restarted, harming social standards and the climate transition, and undermining public services in member states. Not properly addressing issues of poverty, inequality, and poor public services are important (but preventable) drivers of the growth of extreme-right groups in various member states.

The EU and member states should have an agenda based on prioritising the needs of people and the environment. This should include:

  • Redistributing wealth to secure well-being: investing in public services, creating a meaningful Just Transition for all workers, especially those in polluting industries, and abandoning austerity policies. People at the impoverished end of the economy should not have to pay for the urgently required ecological transition.
  • Reshaping the EU and member state economies towards systemic change including decent work, fairness, safe products that do not contain hazardous substances, and real sustainability. The so-called ‘Industrial Deal’ agenda should be dropped. Instead an EU industrial strategy must be public interest-based in order to deliver a really fair and sustainable transition that works for local communities.
  • Adopting strong laws to protect people and the planet, to achieve the phaseout of fossil fuels, real zero greenhouse gas emissions, and zero pollution. The proper application of the polluter pays (and repairs) and precautionary principles will help to ensure accountability for the environmental crises and a stronger approach to public interest law-making.
  • Learning from the approach adopted towards the tobacco industry, we need new rules to protect decision-making from corporate interference. A recent WHO report on health-harming products in the EU illustrated how “a small number of transnational corporations … wield significant power over the political and legal contexts in which they operate, and obstruct public interest regulations which could impact their profit margins.” It is vital that industry is no longer able to weaken and defeat legislation which aims to protect people and the planet. 

We urge you to put this agenda at the centre of the EU programme for 2024-29 and beyond. We would be pleased to have the opportunity to discuss these issues with you in person.

Firmata da:

  • 350.org
  • Academia Cidadã
  • Afrikagrupperna (Sweden)
  • AICED (Appui aux Initiatives Communaire de Conservation de l’Environnement et de Developpement Durable (RDCongo))
  • AlgorithmWatch
  • Amigas de la Tierra – Friends of the Earth Spain
  • Anders Handeln (Austria)
  • Armenian Women for Health and Healthy Environment (AWHHE)
  • Arnika
  • Association For Promotion Sustainable Development
  • Attac Austria
  • ATTAC Spain
  • BankTrack
  • BeeLife European Beekeeping Coordination
  • Biofuelwatch, Europe/USA
  • Broederlijk Delen
  • Căși sociale ACUM!/Social housing NOW!
  • Center for International Environmental Law
  • Child Rights International Network (CRIN)
  • Climate Action Campaign at the Humboldt UU Fellowship
  • Climaxi
  • CNE CSC Belgian trade union in health social and services
  • Comite Schone Lucht | Clean Air Committee NL
  • Coordination gegen BAYER-Gefahren
  • Corporate Europe Observatory
  • DEMETER BE
  • Demeterforbundet Danmark
  • Deutsche Umwelthilfe
  • Diálogo 2000-Jubileo Sur Argentina
  • Earth Trek (Croatia)
  • Eco Hvar, Croatia
  • Ecologistas en Acción (Spain)
  • EDEN center Albania
  • Ekō
  • EnvMed – European Network for Environmental Medicine
  • Estonian Green Movement
  • Fair Resource Foundation
  • Fairwatch (Italy)
  • Fern
  • Food & Water Action Europe
  • foodwatch
  • Foreningen for Biodynamisk Jordbrug
  • Fridays for Future Romania
  • Frie Bønder – Levende Land
  • Friends of the Earth Europe
  • Friends of the Earth Finland / Maan ystävät ry
  • Frøsamlerne Danmark
  • Fundacja Strefa Zieleni, Poland
  • GAIA – Grupo de Acção e Intervenção Ambiental
  • Gallifrey Foundation, Switzerland
  • Générations Futures
  • GLOBAL 2000 – Friends of the Earth Austria
  • Global Campaign to Reclaim Peoples Sovereignty, Dismantle Corporate Power, and Stop Impunity
  • Global Witness
  • Grandmothers Act to Save the Planet (GASP)
  • Green Impact
  • Grøn Hverdag, Denmark
  • Hamraah Foundation
  • Health and Environment Justice Support (HEJSupport)
  • Herenboeren Nederland
  • Hogar sin Tóxicos (Spain)
  • Humundi
  • IATP (Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy)
  • Innovation pour le Développement et Protection de l’Environnement
  • Institute for Sustainable Development Foundation (Poland)
  • International Office, Clean Clothes Campaign
  • ISDE, International Society of Doctors for Environment (Italy)
  • La Grande Puissance de Dieu
  • Landsforeningen Praktisk Økologi – Danish Association for Practical Ecology
  • Leefmilieu
  • Les Amis de la Terre France (FoE France)
  • Les Amis de la Terre-Belgique asbl
  • LobbyControl
  • Momentum Institute – The Think Tank for the Many (Austria)
  • Muchi Children’s Home
  • Nature et Progrès Belgique
  • Naturefriends Greece
  • NOAH – Friends of the Earth Denmark
  • Observatoire du principe pollueur-payeur
  • Ocean. Now!
  • OGM dangers
  • Organic Aquaculture – Denmark
  • Päästame Eesti Metsad (Save Estonia’s Forests)
  • Parents For Future Global
  • Permakultur Danmark, Denmark
  • Pesticide Action Network Europe
  • Pesticide Action Network Germany
  • Plastic Change
  • Plastic Soup Foundation
  • Plataforma Transgenicos Fora
  • POLLINIS
  • Polska Zielona Sieć
  • PowerShift
  • Pro Natura – Friends of the Earth Switzerland
  • Protect The Forest Sweden
  • ReCommon
  • Red de Acción sobre Plaguicidas y Alternativas en México (RAPAM) A.C.
  • SAFE Food Advocacy Europe
  • Sahita Institute, Indonesia
  • Schola Campesina Aps
  • Secrets Toxiques
  • Solidagro (Belgium)
  • SOMO – Centre for Research on Multinational Corporations
  • Stichting Zaadgoed
  • Stowarzyszenie Ekologiczne EKO-UNIA, Poland
  • SÜDWIND Institut (Germany)
  • The Lifescape Project
  • The Scarab Trust
  • Think Tank (Belgium)
  • Transnational Institute
  • TROCA – Plataforma por um Comércio Internacional Justo
  • UK Hazards Campaign
  • urgewald
  • Vitale Rassen (Belgium)
  • WomanHealth Philippines
  • Women Engage for a Common Future – WECF International
  • Xnet, Institute for Democratic Digitalisation (Spain)
  • Young Friends of the Treaty (YouFT)
  • Zelena akcija / FoE Croatia
  • ZERO – Association for the Sustainability of the Earth System
  • Zukunftskonvent Germany