You are here

European Union

Capitals water down plans for EU military-grade eye-in-the-sky

Euractiv.com - Tue, 24/03/2026 - 16:58
Council text seen by Euractiv says planned Earth Observation Governmental Service should just pool and share existing capabilities, not spin up an EU constellation

Que savons-nous de l'arrestation en Guinée de 11 personnes soupçonnées d'implication dans des réseaux terroristes ?

BBC Afrique - Tue, 24/03/2026 - 16:58
Onze personnes soupçonnées de faits de terrorisme ont été arrêtées en Guinée Conakry. Selon le procureur général qui donne l'information, l'ensemble de ces individus ont été déférés et placés sous mandat de dépôt.
Categories: Afrique, European Union

As an AI Scholar, I Am Now Putting a High Probability on an AI Doomsday

Foreign Policy - Tue, 24/03/2026 - 16:51
What happens when the house of cards collapses?

Is EU Inc a bonfire of the vanities, and can it burn through single market red tape? [Advocacy Lab]

Euractiv.com - Tue, 24/03/2026 - 16:32
Reducing bureaucracy is key to turning the Single Market into an engine of scale and competitiveness, but will the idea catch fire?

Prosecco, sugar and feta: the farm fights of the EU-Australia deal

Euractiv.com - Tue, 24/03/2026 - 16:28
Commission attaches unprecedented conditions to sugar concessions

INTERVIEW: Supply chain issues ‘biggest hindrance’ for defence industry scale-up

Euractiv.com - Tue, 24/03/2026 - 16:14
An arms producer warns that Europe's defence scale-up is hampered by a fragile supply chain

EU should discuss security with Russia ‘in the future,’ says Costa

Euractiv.com - Tue, 24/03/2026 - 16:09
European Council president bats away a question from pro-Russian student at Sciences Po university

Commission to act over Slovakia’s ‘discriminatory’ diesel pricing

Euractiv.com - Tue, 24/03/2026 - 16:02
Bratislava's attempt to shield Slovaks from surging oil prices is 'against EU law', according to the Commission

Biomethane: Europe’s Fast Track to Industrial Resilience [Promoted Content]

Euractiv.com - Tue, 24/03/2026 - 16:00
A new Joint Biomethane Declaration delivers a clear message from industry: Industry needs biomethane. Its scale-up must happen now. Policymakers must remove barriers and align frameworks to unlock biomethane’s potential for competitiveness, energy security and rapid emissions reductions across Europe’s hardest-to-abate sectors.

Ces 10 vestiges allemands qui continuent de raconter l'histoire coloniale du Togo

BBC Afrique - Tue, 24/03/2026 - 15:56
Le Togo était une "colonie modèle" pour les Allemands qui, jusqu'aujourd'hui, continuent d'entretenir une relation étroite de coopération avec le pays.
Categories: Afrique, European Union

50 shades of blue: Denmark’s right wing fractures ahead of key vote

Euractiv.com - Tue, 24/03/2026 - 15:54
A clear left-wing victory in Tuesday’s election could ultimately still benefit the right

European officials investigate possible Hezbollah links to antisemitic attack wave

Euractiv.com - Tue, 24/03/2026 - 15:51
European security agencies are investigating a wave of attacks on Jewish targets across the continent claimed by a previously unknown militant group, raising concerns about possible links to networks aligned with Hezbollah

Fraught Financing Will Further Weaken the Defense Industrial Base

Foreign Policy - Tue, 24/03/2026 - 15:38
The Pentagon’s new $200 billion private equity fund would harm the critical industries it aims to support.

MEPs push for clarity over EU’s new crisis ‘hub’

Euractiv.com - Tue, 24/03/2026 - 15:09
Lawmakers across the political spectrum warn new plans could add confusion

Russian oil import ban dropped from Brussels short-term agenda

Euractiv.com - Tue, 24/03/2026 - 14:50
European Commission plays down disappearance of keenly awaited proposal from April-May schedule

European Parliament Plenary Session – March II 2026

Written by Clare Ferguson with Áine Feeney

Members gather for their second plenary session in March 2026, to progress decisions on a number of important files. Representatives of the European Council and European Commission are expected to make statements on the conclusion of the leaders’ meeting of 19 March 2026, at which the European Union’s competitiveness and the situation in the Middle East, as well as continued support for Ukraine was discussed. The Council and Commission are also due to make statements on energy security, independence and supply in the current fraught geopolitical context, with a view to ensuring market stability and affordable energy for industry and citizens.

Against a background of trade tariff instability, and to pave the way for  negotiations with the Council on implementing the 2025 framework agreement between the EU and the United States (the ‘Turnberry deal’), Parliament is on Thursday set to consider its first-reading position on Committee on International Trade (INTA) reports on the two regulations proposed. The report on the main proposal covers EU industrial tariff liberalisation/agricultural tariff rate quotas, proposing a ‘sunset’ date of 31 March 2028, defensive measures in case of additional demands, and a safeguard clause. The second report, which deals specifically with trade in lobster, proposes a ‘sunset’ date of 31 December 2028, and includes defensive measures in case of US imposition of additional tariffs, breaches of human rights or threats to EU security interests. Both reports propose to evaluate the situation six months following implementation of the EU-US framework agreement.

Harking back to an earlier, financial, crisis, Members remain determined to protect taxpayers from the consequences of failed banking institutions. A debate is therefore scheduled for Wednesday afternoon on deposit protection and early intervention measures, with a vote scheduled on agreed texts on a package of proposals that seek to further harmonise the current EU bank crisis management and deposit insurance framework. The agreements would facilitate access to industry support for failing banks, with resort to national deposit guarantee schemes set as a last resort. They also clarify the criteria for choosing whether to liquidate or rescue a bank and retain the current two-tier system for deposit protection.

The development and use of artificial intelligence (AI) is changing many aspects of daily life, and at considerable speed. The EU’s flagship Artificial Intelligence Act introduced measures to encourage development whilst also protecting citizens. However, setting up the governance structure to apply the act takes time. To ensure safe AI development can continue in the interim, Members are due to vote on Thursday to set Parliament’s position for negotiations on proposed measures to simplify application of the AI Act. A report from Parliament’s Committees on Internal Market and Consumer Protection and on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs agrees with the Council proposal that fixed deadlines should be set for delaying the rules governing high-risk AI systems. The report also introduces a targeted ban on AI generation of non-consensual sexual and intimate content.

Following lengthy negotiations, Members are expected to consider a provisional agreement on the proposed directive to combat corruption on Wednesday. Aimed at developing a more robust legal and policy framework, the Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs’ report on the proposal called for an extended definition of a ‘public official’ subject to criminal proceedings in the case of ‘abuse of function’, and to introduce new categories of offence. It also sought enhanced rights for the public to participate in corruption-related proceedings and called for  EU countries to adopt anti-corruption strategies. Parliament’s recommendations shaped the compromise text in this latter respect, but with limited extensions to definitions.

In the EU, citizens largely enjoy access to clean water. The EU’s urban wastewater legislation was updated in 2024, to bring it into line with the EU’s climate neutrality targets. The new Urban Wastewater Treatment Directive (UWWTD) introduced stricter requirements for urban wastewater treatment, water re-use and sanitation. An oral question to the Commission is tabled for Thursday morning on the implementation of this file. The question is likely to raise debate on how to uphold the ‘polluter pays’ principle without risking production of vital medicines, as the pharmaceutical industry is a major user of water resources. During negotiations on the file, Parliament insisted on measures to avoid unintended consequences for vital products like medicines and to promote the re-use of wastewater and plant modernisation.

The EU’s global gateway strategy seeks to promote clean and secure energy connections by working with international partners worldwide. On Thursday morning, Members are due to consider a report from the Committees on Foreign Affairs (AFET) and on Development (DEVE), assessing the first four years of the strategy’s implementation. While noting the funding has been successfully spent on promoting sustainable and inclusive growth in non-EU countries, the report nevertheless proposes improvements. These include moving to a more demand-driven strategy, based on partners’ needs and greater private sector involvement. The committees recommend revising the governance structure for greater democratic legitimacy, and advocate simpler and more predictable financing, as well as avoiding global gateway projects exacerbating debt in third countries.

Against the backdrop of several national bans on conversion practices in EU countries, on Wednesday, Parliament is set to discuss a European Citizens’ Initiative (ECI), with over one million signatures in support, calling for an EU-wide ban on conversion practices targeting LGBTIQ+ individuals. Conversion practices (also known as conversion ‘therapies’) are widely condemned as constituting torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment, resulting in severe physical and psychological harm. The European Parliament firmly opposes conversion practices and has long denounced all forms of LGBTIQ+ discrimination.

European Parliament Plenary Session March II 2026 – agenda

Au cœur de l'opération russe présumée visant à déclencher des manifestations antigouvernementales en Angola

BBC Afrique - Tue, 24/03/2026 - 12:56
Un groupe de Russes et d'Angolais sont jugés en Angola pour avoir prétendument fomenté des manifestations, ce qu'ils nient.
Categories: Afrique, European Union

BUDGET BRIEF: Line on the Horizon

Euractiv.com - Tue, 24/03/2026 - 12:49
Including: European chief prosecutor talks, CONT Horizon vote, clean tech shortfall, CAP and more

Israel says will take ‘control’ of security zone up to Lebanon’s Litani River

Euractiv.com - Tue, 24/03/2026 - 12:31
Lebanon was dragged into the Middle East war when Hezbollah began firing rockets into Israel in early March to avenge the killing of Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei

Guerre d’Iran : quelle est la stratégie de Téhéran ?

IRIS - Tue, 24/03/2026 - 12:30

Chaque mardi, Pascal Boniface reçoit un membre de l’équipe de recherche de l’‪‪IRIS pour décrypter un fait d’actualité internationale. Aujourd’hui, échange avec Julia Tomasso, chercheuse à l’IRIS au sein des programmes Défense, Stratégie, Armement et Moyen-Orient / Afrique du Nord, autour de la stratégie iranienne dans le conflit qui l’oppose aux États-Unis et à Israël.

L’article Guerre d’Iran : quelle est la stratégie de Téhéran ? est apparu en premier sur IRIS.

Pages