Source: EURLEX
Language: en
Format: md

C 303 E/646 EN Official Journal of the European Union 13.12.2006

**Wednesday, 5 July 2006**

**P6_TA(2006)0302**

**Towards a more integrated approach for industrial policy**

**European Parliament resolution on a policy framework to strengthen EU manufacturing — towards**
**a more integrated approach for industrial policy (2006/2003(INI))**

_The European Parliament_,

— having regard to the communication from the Commission entitled ‘Implementing the Community
Lisbon Programme: A policy framework to strengthen EU manufacturing — towards a more integrated
approach for industrial policy’ (COM(2005)0474),

—
having regard to the Commission Staff Working Documents accompanying that communication
(SEC(2005)1215, SEC(2005)1216 and SEC(2005)1217),

—
having regard to the conclusions of the Competitiveness Council of 28 November 2005,

—
having regard to the Presidency conclusions of the Brussels European Council of 23 and 24 March
2006,

—
having regard to the opinion of the European Economic and Social Committee to the aforementioned
Commission communication (INT/288 — CESE 595/2006),

—
having regard to Rule 45 of its Rules of Procedure,

—
having regard to the report of the Committee on Industry, Research and Energy and the opinion of the
Committee on Employment and Social Affairs (A6-0206/2006),

A. whereas the abovementioned Commission communication outlines, on the basis of a detailed screening
of the competitiveness of 27 individual sectors, a work programme for industrial policy in manufacturing industries for the coming years,

B. whereas a dynamic and highly competitive industrial sector and high social and environmental standards
are the ingredients of the European model of economic development,

C. whereas the EU manufacturing industry provides around 20 % of EU output and employs some
34 million people more than half of which work in small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs),

D. whereas the Council recognises the importance of the manufacturing industry as a generator of new and
innovative products,

1. Welcomes the Commission communication, which sets out a policy framework and an enhanced work
programme for the manufacturing industries for the coming years; considers this communication a major
building-block for shaping a sound and balanced industrial policy by combining concrete sectoral actions
with cross-sectoral policy initiatives;

2. Recognises the important role of the manufacturing industries in the EU; points out that manufacturing, services and trade are strongly and increasingly interlinked in the modern business environment;
strongly supports, therefore, the development of a coherent industrial policy at European level to tackle the
challenges of globalisation;

3. Recalls that the EU must aspire to remain a major industrial power, and not merely confine itself to
developing its services sector;

4. Considers that the EU should take care to ensure the joint development of competitiveness strategies in
the industrial and service sectors and promote good practice as regards the entrepreneurial environment and
entrepreneurship, including corporate social responsibility and equal opportunities for men and women;

13.12.2006 EN Official Journal of the European Union C 303 E/647

**Wednesday, 5 July 2006**

5. Recalls that the objectives of the Lisbon strategy are minimum objectives which the Member States
should commit themselves to upholding; notes that, recently, several Member States adopted national policies to strengthen manufacturing industries; believes that isolated national policies could hamper the development of a European industrial policy and that better coordination between actions taken by the Member
States and Community actions could strengthen both; therefore urges the Commission and the Member
States to devise mechanisms to effectively coordinate actions in this field, involving governments, industry
and stakeholders at European, national and regional level;

6. Notes that, without government action, it will be impossible to establish a framework for industry
which is stable and attractive and affords legal certainty; points out that the work of a modern public sector
is vital for dealing with infrastructure and fostering both education and innovation;

7. Considers that the Community policy of aid and support for national industrial policies must aim to
develop European Flagships for Excellence, creating synergies between the skills of local labour markets and
research centres, without neglecting a political and macroeconomic environment which is geared to development, and as a means of promoting greater investment and creating wealth and high-quality jobs with
rights; welcomes the fact that the Commission communication gives a definition of a European industrial
policy; stresses, however, that this approach must not be purely horizontal but that there is also a need to
think in sector-specific terms;

8. Reminds the Commission of the need to mainstream energy-saving and efficiency measures in all
policy areas; notes that energy costs are a major factor in many industries and calls, therefore, on the
Commission to propose specific measures and programmes in this respect as part of its industrial policy;

9. Supports the initiatives set out in the Commission communication; welcomes the detailed analysis of
the 27 sectors and the clear focus in the recommendations; sees, however, the concrete implementation of
the initiatives as the current challenge; believes that, to guarantee coherent implementation in the long term,
the initiatives proposed will need to be coordinated within one directorate-general, the Directorate-General
for Enterprise and Industry, and one Council configuration, the ‘Competitiveness’ configuration; in this
respect, calls on the Commission to inform the European Parliament of the progress achieved in relation to
the initiatives before the end of 2006; calls on the Commission also to consider the possibility of a
systematic evaluation and regular assessment of the benefits and added value of initiatives such as high-level
groups, innovation panels and working parties in those sectors in which they operate;

10. Encourages the Commission to pay adequate attention to all sectors of the manufacturing industries
and, where necessary, to fill in the gaps, both with regard to the analysis of certain sectors and to the
actions to be taken, bearing in mind the high degree of regional concentration existing in some industries;

11. Recognises the need for increased competitiveness in manufacturing industries; welcomes the fact that
the Commission stresses the social responsibility of business and the need for sustainable development; calls
on the Commission to accord the same weight to the working environment and to the health and safety of
workers as to ensuring the creation of more and better jobs;

12. Recognises that, to pursue a European industrial policy in sectors of strategic interest to Member
States' economies, it is essential to strengthen existing industries, to keep the internal market open, to regulate as and where necessary, and to allow for factors related to competitiveness which could affect employment levels in many Member States, as well as supporting the modernisation of all European industry that is
already competitive or could become competitive;

13. Is convinced that the future of Europe's manufacturing industries lies in increased added value and
better quality; is therefore concerned that overall EU trade is still concentrated in sectors with medium-high
technologies and low to intermediate labour skills; believes that education and training at all levels are key
issues, both in terms of improving labour force qualifications and facilitating structural change; regrets the
fact that the Commission communication does not pay enough attention to education, lifelong learning and
training; urges the Member States to increase their efforts to attract more young students into technical and
scientific studies;

C 303 E/648 EN Official Journal of the European Union 13.12.2006

**Wednesday, 5 July 2006**

14. Welcomes the Commission's recognition of the fact that a well-trained and flexible labour force is the
EU's most important resource and competitiveness factor; calls on the EU to concentrate on enhancing skills
development for workers at all levels, particularly unskilled workers;

15. Takes a positive view, furthermore, of the Commission's proposals to address the shortage of special
skills facing industry through policies to promote transparency and the transfer and recognition of qualifications and to identify current needs for skills per sector and where skills shortages lie;

16. Points out that more clear-cut investment is needed to improve the skill levels of the work force, for
instance by way of training-related operational programmes for science and technology aimed at guaranteeing the quality of, and diversifying, training opportunities in the various Member States;

17. Calls on undertakings to ensure the best possible training conditions for workers by providing
ongoing training for their employees, with undertakings drawing up skills plans and taking responsibility in
a general way for lifelong learning and the continuing training of their workers;

18. Considers that the transfer of knowledge and the application of research results in new products and
processes is still too weak in the manufacturing industries, and especially in SMEs; in this respect, sees a
clear need to bridge the current gap between the research community and the market sector; is convinced
that special attention must be given to jointly tackling this problem and urges the Commission and the
Member States to swiftly come forward with concrete measures to solve it; to this end stresses that the
possibilities offered by the Competitiveness and Innovation Framework Programme should be utilised rationally and as effectively as possible;

19. Believes that consideration should be given to the specific needs of micro and small businesses, since
the problems they face cannot be compared with those facing large enterprises;

20. Recognises that schemes need to be devised to provide direct support for research activities carried
out in consortia, involving companies and research units or university teams, thus enabling skills and technologies to be transferred more rapidly;

21. Emphasises, in line with the 2006 Report of the Independent Expert Group on R&D and Innovation,
entitled ‘Creating an Innovative Europe’, that State aid to companies other than SMEs is appropriate when it
is granted for the purpose of encouraging cooperation with other companies, SMEs, academic institutions in
‘open innovation clusters’, poles of excellence, and collaborative R&D programmes;

22. Points out that the EU's prosperity depends on developing world-class innovative European industries;

23. Welcomes the concept of Technology Platforms which will provide a boost to developing lines of
research which will meet the requirements of the market; believes, however, that more funding is needed for
applied research leading to innovative products; in this respect, welcomes the European Investment Bank's
(EIB) intention to increase substantially the financing available for growth-enhancing investments in R&D
and SMEs; recalls the conclusions of the abovementioned Brussels' European Council, expecting up to
30 billion _Euro_ in venture capital and guaranteed bank loans to support innovation and to reinforce action
in R&D; encourages the Commission and the EIB, together with the private sector, to give follow-up to these
conclusions in practical terms;

24. Stresses the major potential of nano-sciences and nano-technologies and urges the manufacturing
industry to keep up to date with technological progress and the provisions of the 2005 to 2009 European
programme of action in this field so as to be in a position to take advantages of the opportunities and new
perspectives opening up for each of its sectors;

25. Stresses the problem of access to finance and venture capital, especially for innovative start-ups and
SMEs; therefore, asks the Commission to closely involve the EIB and the European Investment Fund in the
work of the sectoral initiatives;

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**Wednesday, 5 July 2006**

26. Considers that it might be very useful to set up a high-level group to ensure that legislation
concerning industry, energy, and the environment is consistent with the aim of improving sustainability and
competitiveness; points out that, as well as the electricity market, the market in natural gas likewise needs to
be analysed, bearing in mind that both entail far-reaching implications for some manufacturing industries;

27. Points out that the manufacturing industries are often marked by regional concentration; therefore
urges regional and national authorities, working in close collaboration with economic and social players, to
draw up local strategy plans for areas which are, or have the potential to become, centres of innovative
manufacturing clusters; to this end, calls for local strategy plans to be targeted at making the best possible
use of the primary wealth producing sector, research potential and any comparative benefits offered by each
region; calls on Member States to make full use of the possibilities in the Structural Funds in this respect;

28. Points out that future European industrial policy measures must allow not just for the sectoral dimension, but also for the territorial dimension; notes that areas with a high concentration of manufacturing
industry have to have industrial and economic policies geared to their specific needs; calls on the Commission, therefore, to follow up the proposals announced in its communication by bringing further consideration to bear on the questions whether cooperation should be intensified among regions facing similar
problems and challenges and how manufacturing companies in those regions might be encouraged to set up
networks within which to pursue and coordinate the necessary industrial and economic policies;

29. Welcomes the Commission proposal to integrate and coordinate industrial policy with other policies,
including cohesion, environmental, R&D, and energy policies; notes that cohesion policy and industrial
policy are interrelated, given that infrastructure and human resources are needed to enable industrial policy
to succeed and to enhance the significant role of the European Works Councils, and hence that it is essential
to bring policies into a coherent relationship and secure a high degree of involvement within society;

30. Believes that sectors facing fierce international competition should jointly adopt measures to facilitate
their restructuring and modernization; in this respect, cites a number of initiatives, such as LeaderSHIP 2015,
CARS21 and the High-Level Group on textiles and clothing, as good examples; in view of the urgent need
for action in those sectors, calls on the Commission to submit concrete proposals by Autumn 2006 with a
view to their adoption by the Council, following an opinion from the European Parliament, before the end
of 2006; welcomes the intention of the Commission to set up such sector-specific initiatives for the pharmaceutical, chemical, defence, space and mechanical engineering industries;

31. Is of the opinion that, as far as individual sectors are concerned, workers' trade unions, consumer associations, and employers' organisations must be involved in the debate so as to help ensure that industrial
policy solutions will be better suited to their purpose and more comprehensive;

32. Stresses the importance of establishing a dialogue with all the parties concerned, and welcomes the
creation of the High-Level Group on Competitiveness, Energy and the Environment;

33. Welcomes the European Globalisation Adjustment Fund; insists that it focus on helping workers made
redundant due to globalisation to find new jobs, mainly by improving and adapting their qualifications;

34. Maintains that no Community aid should be granted to companies which, after receiving such support
in a Member State, transfer their manufacturing operations to another country without completely fulfilling
the agreements entered into with the Member State concerned;

35. Calls for the rights of workers to be protected when manufacturing companies are restructured and
hence for information to be made fully available to workers' representative bodies;

36. Points out that dialogue between management and workers has a key role to play in matters related to
modernisation and in coming up with ways to anticipate and to implement the changes needed for sectors
to remain or become competitive;

C 303 E/650 EN Official Journal of the European Union 13.12.2006

**Wednesday, 5 July 2006**

37. Calls on the Commission to make an in-depth analysis of the current situation of the manufacturing
industries in the new Member States and the challenges ahead and to ensure that Community legislation is
properly enforced; this will make it possible to obtain aggregated data for the 25 Member States and, on the
basis of those data, to analyse the various sectors and draw up recommendations to guide industrial policy;

38. Calls on the Commission to take further measures in support of exporting companies and those
which invest on the largest scale in research and innovation projects;

39. Urges the Commission to focus on the area of market surveillance and the fight against unfair competition and counterfeiting; invites the Commission to come forward before the end of 2006 with concrete
proposals in the area of protection and enforcement of intellectual property rights; in this regard, considers
that efforts need to be intensified with a view to hunting out imported counterfeit products from nonmember countries and that, to unearth practices of this kind, Member States should exchange information
and employ more advanced technology applications at the points where goods enter the EU;

40. Calls on the Commission to monitor and record the extent to which imported products comply with
European environmental and consumer health protection legislation and affect the competitiveness of European products;

41. Stresses the importance of market access for the manufacturing industries; urges the Commission to
continue its efforts, working in tandem with the sectors affected, to identify international practices which
can adversely affect the competitiveness of European undertakings, particularly regulations and subsidies,
and tackle barriers to trade and investment that are in breach of international rules; sees in bilateral agreements a good opportunity to overcome these challenges in a fair, transparent and forward-thinking manner
and hence to make the principle of reciprocity the general rule in the Union's trading relations;

42. Stresses that legislation seeking to include environmental matters in economic policies and strategies
should allow the Member States scope for flexibility in the choice of economic and financial instruments;

43. Believes that, as regards the measures to be taken, especially in the WTO, it is necessary to allow for
the context obtaining in, and the specific characteristics of, each sector, the opportunities and challenges that
may arise, and the difficulties posed for individual Member States;

44. Calls on the Member States and the Commission to pursue sustainable development objectives by
bringing economic, social, and environmental aspects into an even balance;

45. Instructs its President to forward this resolution to the Council and Commission, and to the governments and parliaments of the Member States.