Explanatory Memorandum to COM(2011)741 - Annual report on the cohesion fund (2010)

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dossier COM(2011)741 - Annual report on the cohesion fund (2010).
source COM(2011)741 EN
date 14-11-2011
52011DC0741

/* COM/2011/0741 final */ REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION ANNUAL REPORT ON THE COHESION FUND (2010)


1.

TABLE OF CONTENTS


2.

1. Financial execution of the 2000-2006 period in 2010 and closure of projects 1


3.

2. Economic environment and conditionality 5


4.

3. Audits and financial corrections 6


5.

4. Irregularities notified by the Member States 9


6.

5. Evaluation 10


7.

6. Information and publicity 11


This report is presented in conformity with Article 14 i of Regulation (EC) No 1164/1994 and covers the implementation during 2010 of Cohesion Fund projects adopted under the 2000-2006 period as well as ex-ISPA projects in the Member States concerned, including Bulgaria and Romania. Information provided are limited to the 2000-2006 period as Regulation (EC) No 1084/2006 establishing a Cohesion Fund and repealing Regulation (EC) No 1164/1994 does not require the presentation of an annual report on the Cohesion Fund for the 2007-2013 period.

As a consequence, this report covers Cohesion Fund operations in the fifteen beneficiary Member States - thirteen Member States as of end-2006, i.e. Greece, Spain, Portugal, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia, as well as ex-ISPA projects adopted in the 2000-2006 period in Bulgaria and Romania which joined the European Union on 1 January 2007. It must be recalled that, as a result of economic growth, Ireland has not been eligible since 1 January 2004; nevertheless, on-going Cohesion Fund projects are still to be closed.

Details on the implementation in 2010 of projects adopted under the 2000-2006 period for each Member State are presented in the Commission Staff Working Document accompanying this report.

8.

1. FINANCIAL EXECUTION OF THE 2000-2006 PERIOD IN 2010 AND CLOSURE OF PROJECTS


The Member States eligible for the Cohesion Fund support can be divided into three groups: a group of four Member States eligible from the beginning of the programming period 2000-2006 (Greece, Spain, Ireland and Portugal), a second group of ten Member States that joined the European Union in May 2004 (Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia, Slovenia), and the group of two Member States (Romania and Bulgaria) that joined the European Union in January 2007.

9.

1.1 Extension of the final date of eligibility of expenditure


The 'Guidelines on the Closure of Cohesion Fund and Ex-ISPA projects 2000-2006' i refers to the period of eligibility of expenditure which is set out in each individual decision granting financial assistance. In accordance with the principle of sound financial management, and the guidance sent on 9 March 2005 by the Directorate-General for Regional Policy to the Member States, for all Cohesion Fund projects the Commission set the final eligibility date, as a general rule, not beyond 31 December 2010.

In April 2010, the Commission adopted as one of the measures in support of the European Economic Recovery Plan, the 'Amendment of the Guidelines on the closure of Cohesion Fund and ex-ISPA projects 2000-2006' i. This amendment stated that the Commission may under justified circumstances decide to extend the final date of eligibility. The Commission took into account that projects first approved from 2004 onwards may have been particularly affected by issues of providing the required national public or private co-financing, or by the ability of beneficiaries to respect the original schedule of works. The Commission reflected that such projects were in the midst or even only at the start of their implementation when the crisis set in.

For projects first approved by Commission decision after 1 January 2004 the Commission may decide, on the basis of a duly justified request, to extend the final date of eligibility to 31 December 2011. If, moreover, it concerns a project with a Cohesion Fund contribution of at least EUR 100 million, the final date of eligibility may be extended to 31 December 2012.

Exception for the extension of the final date of eligibility beyond the dates above is possible only under exceptional and duly justified circumstances (i.e. administrative or legal proceedings having suspensory effects, cases of force majeure which have serious repercussions for the implementation of the project supported by the Cohesion Fund, or manifest errors attributable to the Commission).

The amendment of the guidelines on closure was welcomed by the respective Member States and the Commission believes it will contribute to more efficient and effective implementation of the 2000-2006 Cohesion Fund projects. As a consequence, a number of the Member States requested extensions of the final date of eligibility for several dozens of Cohesion Fund projects in 2010 which would mean that implementation of these projects will continue to the end of 2011 or 2012.

10.

1.2 Payments made in 2010 for projects adopted under the 2000-2006 period


In general, there were fewer final payments for Cohesion Fund projects (and ex-ISPA) for the period 2000-2006 than initially expected. Closure payment claims require thorough analysis of the closure documents and, depending on their completeness and quality, it can result in final payments at later stage than initially foreseen. The 2010 initial budget for payments for the 2000-2006 Cohesion Fund projects amounted to EUR 2,500 million. The transfer of appropriations resulted in a final budget of EUR 2,321 million. In order to close the gap between the available resources and the demand for payments, transfers have been made to the budget line related to the 2007-2013 Cohesion Fund programmes. For the period 2000-2006, the available appropriations of EUR 2,321 million were fully implemented by the end of 2010. This is a lower execution than in year 2009 (EUR 2,777 million) illustrating the fact that the Cohesion Fund project implementation cycle is reaching its final stage.

As far as the ex-ISPA budget lines are concerned, the budget initially foreseen for 2010 amounted to EUR 560 million. In September (during the Global Transfer procedure), the appropriations were reduced by an amount of EUR 184 million. After further transfers in December 2010, the final appropriations amounted to some EUR 368 million. The available appropriations were implemented in their entirety.

Table 1 presents the overall execution of payments in 2010 (including technical assistance) for the Cohesion Fund and the ex-ISPA projects.

11.

Table 1. Implementation of the Cohesion Fund and ex-ISPA payments in 2010 (in EUR)


Payment appropriations Initial Movements Final Resources Outturn

Cohesion Fund 2 500 000 -179 383 2 320 616 2 320 616

Ex-ISPA 560 000 -191 878 368 121 368 121

TOTAL 3 060 000 -371 262 2 688 737 2 688 737

Table 2 shows the level of 2010 payments for each Member State and for each sector. The main beneficiary countries are Spain in the EU-4 group, Poland in the EU-10 group and Romania in the EU-2 group. In 2010, payments were higher in comparison to the payments made in 2009 for the following countries: Poland (+ EUR 108 million or 13 % increase of payments made in 2009), Slovakia (+ EUR 14 million or 29 % increase of 2009 payments).

12.

Table 2. Payments made in 2010 to the Cohesion Fund and ex-ISPA projects per Member State and per sector


Spain 12 884 382 11 128 639 86,4% 1 755 743 13,6%

Ireland 625 755 580 710 92,8% 45 045 7,2%

Portugal 3 482 652 2 979 319 85,5% 503 333 14,5%

Czech Republic 1 226 218 1 061 982 86,6% 164 236 13,4%

Estonia 425 431 368 686 86,7% 56 745 13,3%

Hungary 1 481 998 1 075 837 72,6% 406 160 27,4%

Latvia 713 737 578 052 81,0% 135 685 19,0%

Lithuania 825 210 750, 691 544 83,8% 133 666 16,2%

Malta 21 966 17 573 80,0% 4 393 20,0%

Poland 5 634 539 4 652 759 82,6% 981 780 17,4%

Slovakia 765 689 646 665 84,5% 119 024 15,5%

Slovenia 254 129 214 745 84,5% 39 383 15,5%

Romania 2 035 838 1 550 268 76,1% 485 569 23,9%

13.

Estonia 129 290


Greece 1 298 010

Spain 4 272 630

Ireland 357 368

Cyprus

Latvia 143 251

Lithuania 171 791

Hungary 34 389

Malta

Poland 68 915

Portugal 825 206

Slovenia 81 180

Slovakia 145 781

Romania 15 776

Cyprus NO NO

Czech Republic NO 6 814 6 814 NO

Estonia NO NO

Greece NO 31 -157 -126 NO

Spain NO 115 21 006 21 121 NO

Hungary NO YES – transport sector

14.

Ireland NO 627 627 NO


Latvia NO 506 506 NO

Lithuania NO 30 30 NO

Malta NO NO

Poland NO 111 246 111 246 NO

Portugal NO 12 925 12 925 NO

Romania NO 1 728 1 728 NO

Slovenia NO NO

Slovakia NO 1 668 1 668 NO

Cyprus

Czech Republic 5 900 17,07% 467 5,14%

15.

Estonia


Greece 8 011 23,18% 18 0,2%

Spain 6 661 19,27% 5 779 63,59%

Hungary 1 748 5,06% 1 748 19,24%

Ireland 1 627 4.71%

Latvia 120 0,35%

Lithuania 5 055 14,63% 626 6,89%

16.

Malta


Poland 939 2,72%

Portugal 4 372 12,65% 321 3,54%

17.

Romania


Slovenia

Slovakia 127 0,37% 127 1,41%

18.

TOTAL34 564 9 089


19.

5. EVALUATION


The Commission in close cooperation with the Member State and managing authorities carries out the ex-post evaluation. The most recent Cohesion Fund ex-post evaluation was launched in 2009 examining all Cohesion Fund and ex-ISPA projects implemented during the years 2000-2006, and the final report is expected in January 2012. The evaluation assesses the contribution of the Cohesion Fund and ISPA (i) to the development of the EU transport system, (ii) to achieving the EU acquis in the field of environment and (iii) to the impact of ISPA as a preparation for the programmes of the Structural and Cohesion Funds. As part of the overall Cohesion Fund ex-post evaluation, ex-post cost-benefit analyses were conducted for a sample of transport and environment projects, to identify lessons for future programming periods.

The first results from the ex-post evaluation for transport infrastructure show that the Cohesion Fund co-financed 1,281 km of new roads and 3,176 km of reconstructed roads (4,457 km roads in total). As regards, the rail sector 2,010 km of new rail and 3,840 km of reconstructed rail (5,350 km rail in total) were co-financed by the Cohesion Fund.

20.

6. INFORMATION AND PUBLICITY


AS FROM 1 JANUARY 2007 ALL ISSUES CONCERNING THE COHESION FUND HAVE BEEN DEALT WITHIN THE COORDINATION COMMITTEE OF THE FUNDS (COCOF, ESTABLISHED ACCORDING TO REGULATION (EC) NO 1083/2006).

Several issues relevant for the Cohesion Fund were presented and/or discussed during the meetings of the COCOF. These include:

- DG Regional Policy informed about a proposal for a more flexible final date of eligibility (33rd and 34th meeting of the Coordination Committee of the Funds, Brussels, 28 January 2010 and 10 March 2010);

- DG Regional Policy informed the Member States about the adoption of the Amendment of the Guidelines on the closure of Cohesion Fund and ex-ISPA projects 2000-2006 (April 2010);

- DG Regional Policy held a debate on the Revised Guidance note on the amendment of decisions taken by the Commission for Cohesion Fund projects on the basis of Regulation (EC) No 1164/1994 as amended (38th meeting of the Coordination Committee of the Funds, Brussels, 22 September 2010);

- DG Regional Policy presented the final version of the COCOF note 08/0007/03 'Revised guidance note on the amendment of decisions taken by the Commission for Cohesion Fund projects on the basis of Regulation (EC) No 1164/1994 as amended' of 24 September 2010 which became available in all three working languages (39th Coordination Committee of the Funds meeting, Brussels and Mons, 20 and 21 October 2010).

In 2010, the Directorate-General for Regional Policy has continued to report in great detail on the Cohesion Fund in its Annual Activity Report i and to publish details of major projects, including those financed by the Cohesion Fund, for both of the periods 2000-2006 and 2007-2013. The details of many of these projects are available in a searchable database on the INFOREGIO website. Cohesion Fund projects have also been included in a specific publication showcasing 150 examples of projects co-financed by European regional policy.