The European Union consists of 27 member states with over 500 million citizens. It was founded after World War 2 to promote peace and economic cooperation. Key EU institutions include the European Parliament which is elected by EU citizens, the Council of Ministers which represents the member states, and the European Commission which proposes legislation. The EU has a single market with freedom of movement of goods, services, capital and people. It uses the euro as a single currency for 19 member states. The EU aims to promote prosperity, security, research and environmental protection through cooperation between member states.
7. The treaties – basis for democratic cooperation
built on law
1952 1958
The European Steel and Coal Community The treaties of Rome:
The European Economic Community
The European Atomic Energy Community
(EURATOM)
1987
The European Single Act:
the Single Market
1993
2003 1999 Treaty of European Union
Treaty of Nice Treaty of Amsterdam – Maastricht
8. The Lisbon treaty - taking Europe into
the 21st century
The Treaty will make the European Union:
More efficient Simpler processes, full-time president
for the Council, etc.
More democratic Stronger role for the European Parliament
and national parliaments, "Citizens Initiative",
Charter of Fundamental Rights, etc.
More transparent Clarifies who does what, greater public access
to documents and meetings, etc.
More united on High Representative for Foreign Policy, etc.
the world stage
More secure New possibilities to fight climate change
and terrorism, secure energy supplies, etc.
9. A transparent Union at your service
The website of the European Union
europa.eu
One and a half million documents available to the public
Europe Direct contact centre
Answers your questions:
00 800 6 7 8 9 10 11
Europe Direct relays
Over 400 EU Info Points across the EU
European Union Documents
Access to internal documents
upon request
The European Ombudsman
Deals with complaints over EU administration
Nikoforos Diamandouros, the EU ombudsman
10. EU population in the world
Population in millions, 2009
1339
500
307
128 142
EU China Japan Russia United States
11. The area of the EU compared to the rest
of the world
Surface area, 1 000 km²
16 889
9327 9159
4234
365
EU China Japan Russia United States
12. How rich is the EU compared to the rest
of the world?
38 700
27 800
25 100
12 508
9819 12 200
4 400
3 329
1 326
468
EU China Japan Russia United States EU China Japan Russia United States
Size of economy: 2008 gross domestic product Wealth per person: 2008 gross domestic product
in billion of euros per person
13. France 544
Spain 506
Sweden 410
Germany 357
Poland 313
Finland 305
Italy 295
United Kingdom 244
Romania 230
Greece 131
Bulgaria 111
Hungary 93
Portugal 92
Austria 83
Surface area in 1 000 km²
Czech Republic 77
Ireland 68
Lithuania 63
Latvia 62
How big are the EU countries?
Slovakia 49
Estonia 43
Denmark 43
Netherlands 34
Belgium 30
Slovenia 20
Cyprus 9
Luxemburg 3
Malta 0.3
14. Germany 82.1
France 64.4
United Kingdom 61.6
Italy 60.1
Spain 45.8
Poland 38.1
Romania 21.5
Netherlands 16.5
Greece 11.3
Belgium 10.8
Portugal 10.6
Czech Republic 10.5
Hungary 10.0
Sweden 9.3
500 million total
Austria 8.4
Bulgaria 7.6
Population in millions, 2009
Denmark 5.5
Slovakia 5.4
Finland 5.3
Ireland 4.5
Lithuania 3.3
How many people live in the EU?
Latvia 2.3
Slovenia 2.0
Estonia 1.3
Cyprus 0.8
Luxemburg 0.5
Malta 0.4
15. Luxembourg
271
Ireland
137
Netherlands
Austria
Sweden
135 123 122
Denmark
United Kingdom
Germany
118 117 116
Finland
Belgium
France
115 114 107
Spain
103
Italy
101 100
EU-27
Cyprus
95 94
Greece
91
Slovenia
2008 GDP per inhabitant
80
Czech Republic
Malta
Portugal
76 76
Slovakia
GDP per inhabitant: the spread of wealth
Index where the average of the 27 EU-countries is 100
Estonia
Hungary
72 68 63
Lithuania
61 58
Poland
56
Latvia
Romania
Bulgaria
46 40
16. How does the EU spend its money?
2012 EU budget: €147.2 billion
= 1.12% of gross national income
Citizens, freedom,
security and justice
1%
The EU as a global player:
including development aid Other, administration
6% 6%
Natural resources: Sustainable growth:
agriculture, jobs, competitiveness, regional development
environment 46%
41%
17. Climate change – a global challenge
To stop global warming, EU leaders decided in 2007 to:
reduce greenhouse gas emissions
by 20% by 2020 (30% if other developed
countries do likewise)
improve energy efficiency by 20% by 2020
raise the share of renewable energy
to 20% by 2020 (wind, solar, hydro
power, biomass)
18. Energy sources in a changing world
Fuel used in EU in 2008, as share Share of fuel imported from outside the EU in 2008
of total
100%
84%
Gas
Oil 25%
36%
60%
54%
45%
Nuclear
Coal 13%
18%
Renewables
0%
8%
Coal Oil Gas Nuclear Renewables All types
(uranium) of fuel
19. Jobs and growth
Challenges:
Demography: Europeans live longer, have fewer children
Globalisation: European economy faces competition from other parts of the world
Climate change: Emission of greenhouse gases must come down
Solutions:
European leaders have therefore agreed on a joint strategy for:
More research and innovation
A more dynamic business environment
Investing in people
A greener economy
20. Research - investing in the knowledge society
Spending on research and development in 2006 (% of GDP)
3.4%
3.0%
2.6%
1.8%
1.3%
EU EU objective China Japan United States
21. Solidarity in practice: the EU cohesion policy
2007-2013: €347 billion invested for infrastructure, business,
environment and training of workers for less
well-off regions or citizens
Regional fund
Social fund
Cohesion fund
Convergence objective: regions with
GDP per capita under 75% of the EU
average. 81.5% of the funds are spent
on this objective.
Regional competitiveness and
employment objective.
22. The euro – a single currency for Europeans
Can be used everywhere in the euro area
Coins: one side with national symbols,
one side common
Notes: no national side
EU countries using the euro
EU countries not using the euro
23. Beating inflation
European Economic and Monetary Union: stable prices
Average annual inflation in the 15 EU-countries that used the euro in 2008
29. The EU: an exporter of peace and prosperity
World trade rules
Common foreign and security
policy
Development assistance and
humanitarian aid
EU runs the peacekeeping operations
and the rebuilding of society in
war-torn countries like Bosnia-Herzegovina.
30. The EU – a major trading power
Share of world trade Share of world trade
in goods (2007) in services (2007)
EU
EU
17%
28.5%
Others
Others 40.6%
53.2% United States
14.5%
Japan United States
5.8% 18.2%
China
China Japan
9.5%
5.9% 6.8%
31. The EU is the biggest provider of development aid
in the world
The EU provides 60% of all development aid
93€
53€
44€
EU Japan United States
Official development assistance per citizen, 2007
32. Three key players
The European Parliament
- voice of the people
Martin Schulz, President of
of the European Parliament
The council of Ministers
- voice of the Member States
Herman Van Rompuy, President of the European Council
The European Commission
- promoting the common interest
José Manuel Barroso, President
of the European Commission
33. The EU institutions
European Council (summit)
Council of Ministers
European Parliament (Council of the EU) European Commission
Court of Court of Economic and Social
Justice Auditors Committee Committee of the Regions
European Investment Bank Agencies European Central Bank
34. How EU laws are made
Citizens, interest groups, experts: discuss, consult
Commission: makes formal proposal
Parliament and Council of Ministers: decide jointly
National or local authorities: implement
Commission and Court of Justice: monitor implementation
35. The European Parliament – voice of the people
Decides EU laws and budget together with Council of Ministers
Democratic supervision of all the EU’s work
Number of members elected in each country (January 2012)
Austria 19 Finland 13 Latvia 9 Romania 33
Belgium 22 France 74 Lithuania 12 Slovakia 13
Bulgaria 18 Germany 99 Luxembourg 6 Slovenia 8
Cyprus 6 Greece 22 Malta 6 Spain 54
Czech Republic 22 Hungary 22 Netherlands 26 Sweden 20
Denmark 13 Ireland 12 Poland 51 United Kingdom 72
Estonia 6 Italy 73 Portugal 22 Total 753
36. The European political parties
Number of seats in the European Parliament
per political group
(January 2012)
Alliance of Liberals and
Democrats for Europe European People’s Party
84 (Christian Democrats)
Greens/European Free Alliance 271
58
Progressive Alliance of Socialists
and Democrats
190 European Conservatives
and Reformists
53
Europe of Freedom
and Democracy
European United 33
Left - Nordic Green Left Total : 753
34 Non-attached
members 30
37. Council of Ministers – voice of the member states
One minister from each EU country
Presidency: rotates every six months
Decides EU laws and budget together
with Parliament
Manages the common foreign and
security policy
38. Council of Ministers – number of votes per
country
Germany, France, Italy and the United Kingdom 29
Spain and Poland 27
Romania 14
Netherlands 13
Belgium, Czech Republic, Greece, Hungary and Portugal 12
Austria, Bulgaria and Sweden 10
Denmark, Ireland, Lithuania, Slovakia and Finland 7
Estonia, Cyprus, Latvia, Luxembourg and Slovenia 4
Malta 3
Total: 345
“Qualified majority” needed for many decisions:
255 votes and a majority of member states
From 2014: 55% of the Member States with 65% of the population
39. Summit at the European Council
Summit of heads of state and government of all EU countries
Heldat least 4 times a year
Sets the overall guidelines for EU policies
President: Herman Van Rompuy
40. A high representative for foreign affairs and security
Catherine Ashton
Double hat: chairs the Foreign Affairs
Council meetings + Vice-president of
the European Commission
Manages the common foreign and
security policy
Head of European External Action
Service
41. The European Commission – promoting
the common interest
27 independent members,
one from each EU country
Proposes new legislation
Executive organ
Guardian of the treaties
Represents the EU on the international stage
42. The Court of Justice – upholding the law
27 independent judges,
one from each EU country
Rules on how to interpret EU law
Ensures EU countries apply EU laws in
the same way
43. The European Court of Auditors:
getting value for your money
27 independent members
Checks that EU funds are used
properly
Can audit any person or organisation
dealing with EU funds
44. The European Central Bank:
managing the euro
Ensures price stability
Controls money supply and decides interest rates
Works independently from governments
Mario Draghi
President of the Central Bank
45. The European Economic and Social Committee:
voice of civil society
344 members
Represents trade unions, employers,
farmers, consumers etc
Advises on new EU laws and policies
Promotes the involvement of
civil society in EU matters
46. The Committee of the Regions:
voice of local government
344 members
Represents cities, regions
Advises on new EU laws and policies
Promotes the involvement of local
government in EU matters
47. Civil servants working for the EU
Commission employs about 23 000 permanent civil
servants and 11 000 temporary or contract workers
Other EU institutions: about 10 000 employed
Permanent civil servants
Selected by open competitions
Come from all EU countries
Salaries decided by law
EU administration costs €15 per EU citizen per year