CELEX: 62004CJ0414
Language: en
Date: 2006-11-28
Title: Judgment of the Court (Grand Chamber) of 28 November 2006.#European Parliament v Council of the European Union.#Regulation (EC) No 1228/2003 - Conditions for access to the network for cross-border exchanges in electricity - Regulation (EC) No 1223/2004 - Temporary derogations in favour of Slovenia - Legal basis.#Case C-414/04.

Case C-414/04
      European Parliament
      v
      Council of the European Union
      (Regulation (EC) No 1228/2003 – Conditions for access to the network for cross‑border exchanges in electricity – Regulation (EC) No 1223/2004 – Temporary derogations in favour of Slovenia – Legal basis)
      Summary of the Judgment
      1.        Accession of new Member States – 2003 Act of Accession – Adaptation of Community acts which have not been adapted by the Act
            of Accession itself – Concept
      (2003 Act of Accession, Art. 57; Council Regulation No 1223/2004)
      2.        Accession of new Member States – Czech Republic – Estonia – Cyprus – Latvia – Lithuania – Hungary – Malta – Poland – Slovenia
            – Slovakia – Community acts adopted after signature of the 2003 Treaty of Accession – Adoption of temporary derogations in
            favour of new Member States – Appropriate legal basis
      (Art. 249(2) and (3) EC and Art. 299 EC; 2003 Act of Accession, Art. 2(2) and (3))
      3.        Actions for annulment – Judgment annulling a measure – Effects – Limitation by the Court
      (Art. 231, second para., EC; Council Regulation No 1223/2004)
      1.        The measures which can be adopted on the basis of Article 57 of the Act concerning the conditions of accession of the Czech
         Republic, the Republic of Estonia, the Republic of Cyprus, the Republic of Latvia, the Republic of Lithuania, the Republic
         of Hungary, the Republic of Malta, the Republic of Poland, the Republic of Slovenia and the Slovak Republic and the adjustments
         to the Treaties on which the European Union is founded, providing for the adaptation of acts of the institutions which have
         not been adapted by the act itself, are limited, in principle, to adaptations intended to render earlier Community measures
         applicable in the new Member States, to the exclusion of all other amendments and, particularly, to the exclusion of temporary
         derogations. It follows that such temporary derogations such as those enacted by Regulation No 1223/2004 amending Regulation
         No 1228/2003 as regards the date of application of certain provisions to Slovenia, whose sole object and purpose is to delay
         temporarily the effective application of the Community act concerned as regards a new Member State, cannot be described as
         ‘adaptations’ within the meaning of Article 57 of the 2003 Act of Accession.
      
      As to the circumstance that a certain number of measures establishing derogations of the type of those provided for by Regulation
         No 1223/2004 are said to have been adopted on the basis of the article of the 1994 Act of Accession corresponding to Article
         57 of the 2003 Act of Accession, that cannot have any effect on the scope of the latter provision. In fact, what is merely
         Council practice cannot derogate from the rules laid down in the EC Treaty, and cannot therefore create a precedent binding
         on the Community institutions with regard to the correct legal basis.
      
      Regulation No 1223/2004, adopted on the basis of Article 57 of the 2003 Act of Accession, must therefore be annulled because
         of its incorrect legal basis.
      
      (see paras 35-37, 54)
      2.        As regards Community measures adopted after the date of signature of the 2003 Treaty on the accession of the Czech Republic,
         the Republic of Estonia, the Republic of Cyprus, the Republic of Latvia, the Republic of Lithuania, the Republic of Hungary,
         the Republic of Malta, the Republic of Poland, the Republic of Slovenia and the Slovak Republic to the European Union, that
         Treaty and the 2003 Act of Accession contain no provision of general application intended to permit the adoption of transitional
         derogations in favour of the new Member States. However, once the 2003 Treaty of Accession was signed, and subject to the
         application of the particular procedures for which that Treaty provides for the purposes of deciding on certain types of transitional
         measures, there is no objection in principle to Community measures adopted after that signature and before the entry into
         force of the Treaty of Accession and containing temporary derogations in favour of a future acceding State being adopted directly
         on the basis of the provisions of the EC Treaty. 
      
      Such derogations, which are intended to apply only subject to and on the date of actual entry into force of the 2003 Treaty
         of Accession, cannot disregard either the second and third paragraphs of Article 249 EC and Article 299 EC, under which the
         acts adopted by the institutions apply to the Member States, or Article 2(2) and (3) of the 2003 Treaty of Accession. 
      
      First, such specific provisions, like, moreover, the acts in which they are included and/or from which they derogate, will
         apply to the acceding States only on the date on which their accession takes effect, when they acquire the status of Member
         States.
      
      Second, the fact that Article 2(2) of the 2003 Treaty of Accession provides that the Treaty is not to enter into force until
         1 May 2004 and that Article 2(3) provides that, notwithstanding that principle, certain provisions of that Treaty may be applied
         earlier does not affect the possibility of provision being made, in acts adopted not under that Treaty but on the basis of
         the EC Treaty itself, for the conditions under which such acts adopted between the signature of the Treaty of Accession and
         its entry into force will apply to the future Member States once accession has taken place.
      
      Lastly, the application of the normal legislative procedure provided for by the EC Treaty in respect of derogations adopted
         in favour of new Member States during the period between the date of signature of the 2003 Treaty of Accession and the date
         when the accession takes effect is confirmed by the existence of mechanisms specific to the accession process allowing those
         new States the opportunity to assert their interests where necessary, such as the information and consultation procedure.
      
      (see paras 38-42, 46)
      3.        The aim of Regulation No 1223/2004, which introduced temporary derogations in favour of the Republic of Slovenia with respect
         to the application of Regulation No 1228/2003 on conditions for access to the network for cross-border exchanges in electricity,
         annulled by the Court, was to allow certain Slovenian energy-intensive industries to restructure and certain electricity producers
         to comply with Community acquis applicable to electricity production. On grounds of legal certainty and, in particular, the
         need to avoid serious negative consequences for the undertakings concerned resulting from the doubt cast on and discontinuity
         of that transitional derogation system provided for under the regulation to that end, the effects of that regulation must
         be maintained until such time as a new act has been adopted within a reasonable period on an appropriate legal basis, as a
         consequence of this judgment, without however prolonging those effects beyond 1 July 2007, the date on which that derogation
         system would have expired.
      
      (see paras 58-59)
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT (Grand Chamber)
      28 November 2006 (*)
      
      (Regulation (EC) No 1228/2003 – Conditions for access to the network for cross‑border exchanges in electricity – Regulation (EC) No 1223/2004 – Temporary derogations in favour of Slovenia – Legal basis)
      In Case C‑414/04,
      ACTION for annulment under Article 230 EC, brought on 23 September 2004,
      European Parliament, represented by A. Baas and U. Rösslein, acting as Agents, with an address for service in Luxembourg,
      
      applicant,
      supported by
      Commission of the European Communities, represented by J. Sack and P. Van Nuffel, acting as Agents, with an address for service in Luxembourg,
      
      intervener,
      v
      
      Council of the European Union, represented by A. Lopes Sabino and M. Bishop, acting as Agents,
      
      defendant,
      supported by
      Republic of Estonia, represented by L. Uibo, acting as Agent,
      
      Republic of Poland, represented by M. Węglarz, T. Nowakowski and T. Krawczyk, acting as Agents,
      
      interveners,
      THE COURT (Grand Chamber),
      composed of V. Skouris, President, P. Jann, C.W.A. Timmermans, A. Rosas, K. Lenaerts, P. Kūris and E. Juhász, Presidents of
         Chambers, K. Schiemann (Rapporteur), J. Makarczyk, G. Arestis, A. Borg Barthet, A. Ó Caoimh and L. Bay Larsen, Judges,
      
      Advocate General: L.A. Geelhoed,
      Registrar: L. Hewlett, Principal Administrator,
      having regard to the written procedure and further to the hearing on 15 March 2006,
      after hearing the Opinion of the Advocate General at the sitting on 1 June 2006,
      gives the following
      Judgment
      1        By its action, the European Parliament seeks the annulment of Council Regulation No 1223/2004/EC of 28 June 2004 amending
         Regulation (EC) No 1228/2003 of the European Parliament and of the Council as regards the date of application of certain provisions
         to Slovenia (OJ 2004 L 233, p. 3, hereinafter ‘the contested regulation’).
      
      2        The Treaty concerning the accession to the European Union of ten new Member States, including the Republic of Slovenia, was
         signed on 16 April 2003 (OJ 2003 L 236, p. 17, hereinafter ‘the 2003 Treaty of Accession’). As provided by Article 1(2) of
         that Treaty, the conditions of that admission and the adjustments to the Treaties on which the European Union is founded,
         entailed by such admission, are set out in the Act annexed to that Treaty and form an integral part of it (hereinafter ‘the
         2003 Act of Accession’).
      
      3        Regulation (EC) No 1228/2003 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 26 June 2003 on conditions for access to the
         network for cross-border exchanges in electricity (OJ 2003 L 176, p. 1) was adopted on the basis of Article 95 EC.
      
      4        For the purposes of delaying, on a temporary basis, the application of certain provisions of Regulation No 1228/2003 as regards
         the Republic of Slovenia, the Council of the European Union adopted the contested regulation. It was adopted on the basis
         of Article 57 of the 2003 Act of Accession. 
      
      5        In support of its action the European Parliament submits, first, that the contested regulation could not be validly adopted
         on the basis of the said Article 57 and, second, that it does not comply with the duty to state reasons laid down in Article
         253 EC.
      
      6        By orders of the President of the Court of 21 December 2004 and 9 March 2005, the Commission of the European Communities,
         the Republic of Estonia and the Republic of Poland were given leave to intervene in these proceedings, the Commission in support
         of the Parliament and the two Member States in support of the Council.
      
       Legal background
       The 2003 Treaty of Accession
      7        Article 2(2) and (3) of the 2003 Treaty of Accession provides:
      
      ‘2.      This Treaty shall enter into force on 1 May 2004 … .
      3.      Notwithstanding paragraph 2, the institutions of the Union may adopt before accession the measures referred to in Articles
         6(2) second subparagraph, 6(6) second subparagraph, … 38, 39, 41, 42 and 55 to 57 of the Act of Accession, Annexes III to
         XIV to that Act … . These measures shall enter into force only subject to and on the date of the entry into force of this
         Treaty.’
      
      8        Article 20 of the 2003 Act of Accession provides: 
      
      ‘The acts listed in Annex II to this Act shall be adapted as specified in that Annex.’
      9        Article 21 of the 2003 Act of Accession reads:
      
      ‘The adaptations to the acts listed in Annex III to this Act made necessary by accession shall be drawn up in conformity with
         the guidelines set out in that Annex and in accordance with the procedure and under the conditions laid down in Article 57.’
         
      
      10      Article 24 of the 2003 Act of Accession provides:
      
      ‘The measures listed in Annexes V, VI, VII, VIII, IX, X, XI, XII, XIII and XIV to this Act shall apply in respect of the new
         Member States under the conditions laid down in those Annexes.’
      
      11      Article 55 of the 2003 Act of Accession provides: 
      
      ‘At the duly substantiated request of one of the new Member States, the Council, acting unanimously on a proposal from the
         Commission, may, before 1 May 2004, take measures consisting of temporary derogations from acts of the institutions adopted
         between 1 November 2002 and the date of signature of the Treaty of Accession.’
      
      12      Article 57 of the 2003 Act of Accession states: 
      
      ‘1.      Where acts of the institutions prior to accession require adaptation by reason of accession, and the necessary adaptations
         have not been provided for in this Act or its Annexes, those adaptations shall be made in accordance with the procedure laid
         down by paragraph 2. Those adaptations shall enter into force as from accession.
      
      2.      The Council, acting by a qualified majority on a proposal from the Commission, or the Commission, according to which of these
         two institutions adopted the original acts, shall to this end draw up the necessary texts.’
      
      13      It must be pointed out directly that although the French version of Article 57 suggests that adaptations thereunder must be
         made prior to accession – ‘avant l’adhésion’ – that temporal restriction is not in fact, as is clear from the other language
         versions of that provision, placed on recourse to Article 57 but on the date of the acts to be amended (see, to that effect,
         in respect of the identical provision in the Act concerning the conditions of accession of the Republic of Austria, the Republic
         of Finland and the Kingdom of Sweden and the adjustments to the Treaties on which the European Union is founded (OJ 1994 C 241,
         p. 21, hereinafter ‘the 1994 Act of Accession’), Case C‑259/95 Parliament v Council [1997] ECR I‑5303, paragraphs 12 to 22).
      
      14      By an exchange of letters annexed to the final act of the 2003 Treaty of Accession, the European Union and the new Member
         States agreed on an ‘information and consultation procedure for the adoption of certain decisions and other measures to be
         taken during the period preceding accession’ (hereinafter ‘the information and consultation procedure’) which requires, among
         other things: 
      
      ‘1.      In order to ensure that the [acceding States] are kept adequately informed, any proposal, communication, recommendation or
         initiative which might lead to decisions by the institutions or bodies of the European Union shall be brought to the knowledge
         of the acceding States after being transmitted to the Council.
      
      2.      Consultations shall take place pursuant to a reasoned request by an acceding State, which shall set out expressly therein
         its interests as a future member of the Union and its observations.
      
      …
      4.      Consultations shall take place within an Interim Committee composed of representatives of the Union and of the acceding States.
      …
      8.      If serious difficulties remain after consultations, the matter may be raised at ministerial level at the request of an acceding
         State.
      
      …’
       Regulation No 1228/2003
      15      Regulation No 1228/2003 aims, as stated in Article 1, at setting fair rules for cross-border exchanges in electricity, thus
         enhancing competition within the internal electricity market, taking into account the specificities of national and regional
         markets.
      
      16      Article 6(1) of that regulation is worded as follows: 
      
      ‘Network congestion problems shall be addressed with non-discriminatory market based solutions which give efficient economic
         signals to the market participants and transmission system operators involved. Network congestion problems shall preferentially
         be solved with non transaction based methods, i.e. methods that do not involve a selection between the contracts of individual
         market participants.’
      
      17      Article 2(2)(c) of that regulation provides that ‘“congestion” means a situation in which an interconnection linking national
         transmission networks, cannot accommodate all physical flows resulting from international trade requested by market participants,
         because of a lack of capacity of the interconnectors and/or the national transmission systems concerned’. 
      
      18      Entitled ‘Guidelines on the management and allocation of available transfer capacity of interconnections between national
         systems’, the annex to that same regulation states, under the heading ‘General’: 
      
      ‘1.      Congestion management method(s) implemented by Member States shall deal with short-run congestion in a market-based, economically
         efficient manner whilst simultaneously providing signals or incentives for efficient network and generation investment in
         the right locations.
      
      2.      The [Transmission System Operators] or, where appropriate, Member States, shall provide non-discriminatory and transparent
         standards, which describe which congestion management methods they will apply under which circumstances. These standards,
         together with the security standards, shall be described in publicly available documents. 
      
      3.      Different treatment of the different types of cross-border transactions, whether they are physical bilateral contracts or
         bids into foreign organised markets, shall be kept to a minimum when designing the rules of specific methods for congestion
         management. The method for allocating scarce transmission capacity must be transparent. Any differences in how transactions
         are treated must be shown not to distort or hinder the development of competition. 
      
      4.      Price signals that result from congestion management systems shall be directional. 
      …’
      19      Article 15 of that regulation provides that it would apply from 1 July 2004.
      
       The contested regulation
      20      Having learned, in the framework of the information and consultation procedure, of the Commission’s proposal on the basis
         of which Regulation No 1228/2003 was adopted, and availing itself of Article 57 of the 2003 Act of Accession, the Republic
         of Slovenia, by letter of 23 June 2003, lodged a request with the Commission seeking to obtain a transitional period running
         until 1 July 2007 as regards the application of the provisions of that future regulation. The regulation was adopted on 26
         June 2003. 
      
      21      At the end of bilateral discussions between the Commission and the Republic of Slovenia, the latter, on 19 November 2003,
         provided the Commission with further explanations of the reasons underlying its request for transitional derogation.
      
      22      It was in those circumstances that the Commission, on 27 April 2004, formulated a proposal for a regulation aimed at delaying,
         on a transitional basis, the application of certain provisions of Regulation No 1228/2003 to the Republic of Slovenia (COM/2004/309
         final). That proposal was based on Article 95 EC.
      
      23      Although ratifying that proposal, the terms of which are substantially reproduced, the contested regulation was adopted by
         the Council, on 28 June 2004, on the basis of Article 57 of the 2003 Act of Accession.
      
      24      The Parliament was informed of that adoption by the Secretary‑General of the Council by a letter of 9 July 2004 which stated
         that ‘[in view] of the link between the Treaty of Accession and [this] proposal … and in view of the need to adopt [this]
         measure in time, and in any event before 1 July 2004, … the date from which Regulation No 1228/2003 is to apply, the Council
         decided to use Article 57 of the [2003 Act of Accession] as the legal basis … , a basis which does not require the participation
         of the European Parliament in the legislative process’.
      
      25      Article 1 of the contested regulation provides for the addition to Article 15 of Regulation No 1228/2003 of a new paragraph
         worded as follows:
      
      ‘As regards interconnections between Slovenia and neighbouring Member States, Article 6(1), as well as rules 1 to 4 contained
         in the chapter entitled “General” of the Annex, shall apply from 1 July 2007. This paragraph shall apply only to the interconnection
         capacity which is allocated by the Slovenian transmission system operator and only insofar as such capacity does not exceed
         half of the total available interconnection capacity.’ 
      
      26      Recitals 5 to 7 in the preamble to the contested regulation state:
      
      ‘(5)      Slovenia has demonstrated that without a transitional period certain Slovenian energy-intensive industries would be adversely
         affected by higher prices for electricity imported from Austria and certain electricity producers by lower incomes from export
         sales to Italy. That situation would impede the ongoing efforts of the industries concerned to restructure and respectively
         comply with Community acquis applicable to electricity production.
      
      (6)      The reasons provided by Slovenia justify a derogation. Furthermore, due to the small interconnection capacity of the two interconnections
         concerned and given that that situation is unlikely to change before 1 July 2007, the practical impact on the internal market
         of such a derogation will be very small.
      
      (7)      The derogation should be limited to what is strictly necessary in view of the Slovenian request. It should, therefore, only
         cover the part of the interconnection capacity allocated by the Slovenian transmission system operator and apply only insofar
         as such capacity does not exceed half of the total capacity available.’
      
       The action
      27      The Parliament relies on two pleas in law in support of its action, alleging, first, that the legal basis of the contested
         regulation is incorrect and, second, breach of the duty to state reasons. 
      
       The first plea in law 
      28      By its first plea in law, the Parliament submits that the contested regulation, which establishes transitional derogations
         as regards the application of Regulation No 1228/2003, could not validly be adopted on the basis of Article 57 of the 2003
         Act of Accession and that it should have been adopted in accordance with the ordinary legislative procedure prescribed by
         the EC Treaty, namely, in this case, on the basis of Article 95 EC which served as the legal basis for the adoption of Regulation
         No 1228/2003. Article 57 in fact allows only adaptations intended to enable acts of the institutions to apply fully to the
         acceding States and not the grant of transitional derogations from them.
      
      29      In that regard, it is appropriate to observe that, as the Parliament pointed out, it follows from the wording of Article 57
         of the 2003 Act of Accession that that provision authorises the adoption of ‘adaptations’ which are made ‘necessary’ by reason
         of accession but which were not provided for in the Act of Accession or its annexes.
      
      30      As the Commission rightly argued, it is clear from Articles 20 and 21 of the 2003 Act of Accession, which together make up
         Title I, entitled ‘Adaptations to acts adopted by the institutions’, of Part Three of that act, itself entitled ‘Permanent
         provisions’, that the ‘adaptations’ to which those articles refer correspond, in principle, to amendments necessary to ensure
         the full applicability of acts of the institutions to the new Member States and which are intended, with that in view, to
         supplement those acts in the long term.
      
      31      Such ‘adaptations’, do not, on the other hand, usually cover temporary derogations from the application of Community acts,
         which are, for their part, the subject of Article 24 of the 2003 Act of Accession in Title I, entitled ‘Transitional measures’,
         of Part Four of that act, entitled ‘Temporary provisions’.
      
      32      There is nothing to suggest that the term ‘adaptation’ should be given a different meaning depending on whether it is used
         in the context of Articles 20 and 21 of the 2003 Act of Accession or of Article 57 of that act. Article 21 moreover itself
         refers to the provisions of Article 57 as regards the procedure for, and the conditions governing, the drawing up of the adaptations
         for which that article provides, whilst Article 57 which refers to adaptations which have ‘not been provided for in this Act
         or its Annexes’ suggests, for its part, that the adaptations to be adopted on the basis of that provision are of the same
         type as those for which, in particular, Articles 20 and 21 of that act provide.
      
      33      Furthermore, the grant of temporary derogations in view of the prospect of imminent accession is, as correctly pointed out
         by the Parliament and the Commission, the specific subject of another provision of the 2003 Act of Accession, namely Article
         55, and it is, in that regard, difficult to imagine that the signatories to that act intended to lay down two distinct provisions
         for the purpose of enabling the adoption of the same measure.
      
      34      That is all the more true as Article 55 makes the grant of such temporary derogations subject to conditions markedly more
         restrictive than those which Article 57 prescribes for the adoption of adaptation measures. First, Article 55 authorises derogations
         only as regards Community acts which were adopted between 1 November 2002 (the date on which the accession negotiations were
         concluded) and 16 April 2003 (the date of signature of the 2003 Treaty of Accession). Second, such grant is subject to the
         requirement of unanimity within the Council.
      
      35      It follows from the foregoing that the measures which can be adopted on the basis of Article 57 of the 2003 Act of Accession
         are limited, in principle, to adaptations intended to render earlier Community measures applicable in the new Member States,
         to the  exclusion of all other amendments (see, by way of analogy, in respect of the identical provision contained in the
         1994 Act of Accession, Parliament v Council, cited above, paragraphs 14 and 19), and, particularly, to the exclusion of temporary derogations.
      
      36      It follows that temporary derogations such as those enacted by the contested regulation in favour of the Republic of Slovenia,
         whose sole object and purpose is to delay temporarily the effective application of the Community act concerned as regards
         a new Member State, cannot be described as ‘adaptations’ within the meaning of Article 57 of the 2003 Act of Accession. 
      
      37      As to the circumstance that a certain number of measures establishing derogations of the type of those provided for by the
         contested regulation are said to have been adopted on the basis of the article of the 1994 Act of Accession corresponding
         to Article 57 of the 2003 Act of Accession, that cannot, contrary to the submissions of the Council and the Polish Government,
         have any effect on the scope of the latter provision. In fact, it is settled case‑law that what is merely Council practice
         cannot derogate from the rules laid down in the EC Treaty, and cannot therefore create a precedent binding on the Community
         institutions with regard to the correct legal basis (see, in particular, Case C‑84/94 United Kingdom v Council [1996] ECR I‑5755, paragraph 19). 
      
      38      It follows from the above reasoning that, as regards Community measures adopted after the date of signature of the 2003 Treaty
         of Accession, that Treaty and the 2003 Act of Accession contain no provision of general application intended to permit the
         adoption of transitional derogations in favour of the new Member States and that Article 57 of that act cannot, in principle,
         be used for that purpose. 
      
      39      Contrary to the Council’s submission, it does not, however, follow that there is a legal vacuum. Once the 2003 Treaty of Accession
         was signed, and subject to the application of the particular procedures for which that Treaty provides for the purposes of
         deciding on certain types of transitional measures, such as, for example, those established by Articles 41 or 42 of the 2003
         Act of Accession, there is no objection in principle to Community measures adopted after that signature and before the entry
         into force of the 2003 Treaty of Accession and containing temporary derogations in favour of a future acceding State being
         adopted directly on the basis of the provisions of the EC Treaty. 
      
      40      Such derogations, which are intended to apply only subject to and on the date of actual entry into force of the 2003 Treaty
         of Accession, cannot, contrary to the Council’s submission, disregard either the second and third paragraphs of Article 249
         EC and Article 299 EC, under which the acts adopted by the institutions apply to the Member States, or Article 2(2) and (3)
         of the 2003 Treaty of Accession. 
      
      41      First, such specific provisions, like, moreover, the acts in which they are included and/or from which they derogate, will
         apply to the acceding States only on the date on which their accession takes effect, when they acquire the status of Member
         States.
      
      42      Second, the fact that Article 2(2) of the 2003 Treaty of Accession provides that the Treaty is not to enter into force until
         1 May 2004 and that Article 2(3) provides that, notwithstanding that principle, certain provisions of that Treaty may be applied
         earlier does not affect the possibility of provision being made, in acts adopted not under that Treaty but on the basis of
         the EC Treaty itself, for the conditions under which such acts adopted between the signature of the Treaty of Accession and
         its entry into force will apply to the future Member States once accession has taken place.
      
      43      Rather, as regards acts that must be thus adopted during the period between the date of signature of the Treaty of Accession
         and the date when the accession takes effect, the Community institutions are fully aware of the imminent accession of new
         Member States whilst the latter have the opportunity to assert their interests where necessary, in particular through the
         information and consultation procedure (see, to that effect, Joined Cases 39/81, 43/81, 85/81 and 88/81 Halyvourgikiand Helleniki Halyvourgia v Commission [1982] ECR 593, paragraph 10).
      
      44      It is therefore, in principle, in the framework of that procedure and by making use of the observer status which they have
         in the Council, with the opportunities for dialogue and cooperation which those special mechanisms afford them, that the future
         Member States may, once informed of the future adoption of new Community acts, assert their interest in obtaining the necessary
         transitional derogations; these might be needed, for example, because it would be impossible to ensure immediate application
         of those acts on accession, or because of major socio‑economic problems to which such application might give rise. 
      
      45      It is by means of those mechanisms that the special interests thus invoked can, in particular, be appropriately balanced against
         the general interest of the Community and that the considerations relating to the principles of equality, good faith and solidarity
         among current and future Member States cited by the Polish Government will, where appropriate, be called into play.
      
      46      The existence of those mechanisms, specific to the accession process underway, confirms therefore that it is, in principle,
         by means of the ordinary legislative procedure under the Treaty and not in the framework of the special procedure under Article
         57 of the 2003 Act of Accession that a measure such as the contested regulation should have been adopted.
      
      47      Likewise, the Court cannot accept the Council’s argument concerning the urgent nature of the adoption of the contested regulation
         on the basis of Article 57 prior to the entry into force of Regulation No 1228/2003 from which it derogates, rather than by
         following the legislative co‑decision procedure which takes much longer, in order to avoid creating legal uncertainty and
         adversely affecting the legitimate interests of operators on the Slovenian electricity market.
      
      48      First, as has been pointed out in paragraphs 43 to 45 of this judgment, when the Community envisaged the adoption of a legislative
         act during the period between signature of the 2003 Treaty of Accession and its entry into force, the information and consultation
         procedure could lead to the grant of possible transitional derogations in favour of an acceding State as regards application
         of the provisions of the act the adoption of which was so envisaged.
      
      49      On that point, none of the parties has provided evidence to suggest that the information and consultation procedure was not
         properly followed and that the Slovenian Government was not in a position to assert its interests as regards the proposal
         for a regulation which led to the adoption of Regulation No 1228/2003, as provided for by that procedure (see, by way of analogy,
         Halyvourgiki and Helleniki Halyvourgia v Commission, cited above, paragraph 15). 
      
      50      Second, and as the Parliament observed, once a Commission proposal is before it, the Council has, where appropriate, the opportunity
         to draw the Parliament’s attention to the possible urgency of adopting a particular measure. The co‑decision procedure under
         Article 251 EC in no way precludes a relatively rapid adoption of a legislative text, particularly if there are no significant
         differences of opinion between the Parliament and the Council.
      
      51      As to the legal uncertainty which could arise from the lapse of time inherent in the ordinary legislative procedure, this
         could be remedied, as the Commission rightly maintained, only by giving possible retrospective effect to the requested transitional
         derogation should it be granted.
      
      52      It follows, in that regard, from the Court’s case‑law that although the principle of legal certainty precludes, in general,
         a Community measure from taking effect from a point in time before its publication, it may exceptionally be otherwise where
         the purpose to be achieved so demands and where the legitimate expectations of those concerned are duly respected (see Case
         C‑331/88 Fedesa and Others [1990] ECR I‑4023, paragraph 45, and Parliament v Council, paragraph 21).
      
      53      It is also appropriate to point out that it is of course possible, as the Polish Government in particular maintained, that
         the lack of a general provision in the 2003 Act of Accession enabling transitional derogations to be granted as regards the
         application to the new Member States of acts adopted between the date of signature of the 2003 Treaty of Accession and that
         of its entry into force and the mere existence, for such purposes, of the information and consultation procedure appear in
         retrospect to have been insufficient. It is also possible that that circumstance gave rise to the fact that Article 55 of
         the Act concerning the conditions of accession to the European Union of the Republic of Bulgaria and of Romania and the adjustments
         to the Treaties on which the European Union is founded (OJ 2005 L 157, p. 203), cited by various parties, the purpose of which
         is similar to that of Article 55 of the 2003 Act of Accession, provides expressly that the power of the Council to adopt temporary
         derogations extends also to acts of the institutions adopted between the date of signature of the Treaty of Accession and
         that of the accession itself. However, the possible imperfections which the 2003 Act of Accession harbours in that regard
         cannot authorise recourse to an incorrect legal basis.
      
      54      Having regard to all the foregoing, the Parliament’s action must be upheld and the contested regulation annulled.
      
       The second plea in law
      55      Since the contested regulation must be annulled because of its incorrect legal basis, there is no need to consider the second
         plea in law, alleging failure to state reasons.
      
       The temporal effects of the annulment
      56      Citing the second paragraph of Article 231 EC and the need to avoid a situation of uncertainty for the economic operators
         and investors in the electricity sector in Slovenia and for the workers concerned, the Council, supported to that effect by
         the Estonian Government and by the Commission, requested the Court, should it annul the contested regulation, to maintain
         its effects until a new regulation is adopted.
      
      57      Stressing that its action does not concern the substantive justification for the Republic of Slovenia’s request for a derogation,
         but solely the legal basis on which the contested regulation was adopted, the Parliament indicated that it did not wish to
         express a view on the Council’s request.
      
      58      In that regard, it is clear both from the Commission’s proposal which led to the Council’s adoption of the contested regulation
         and from recital 5 in the latter’s preamble in that that regulation was adopted because the Republic of Slovenia had, in the
         view of those institutions, demonstrated that, if Regulation No 1228/2003 were fully and immediately applied and the transitional
         period requested by that new Member State were not granted, the ongoing efforts of certain Slovenian energy-intensive industries
         and certain electricity producers to restructure and comply respectively with Community acquis applicable to electricity production
         would be seriously impeded. Recitals 6 and 7 in the preamble to the contested regulation point out, furthermore, that the
         derogation granted for those purposes to the Republic of Slovenia was to be limited to what was strictly necessary in view
         of that new Member State’s request and that it would have only a small impact on the internal market.
      
      59      In those circumstances, the Court considers that, on grounds of legal certainty and, in particular, the need to avoid serious
         negative consequences for undertakings whose restructuring or compliance with the Community acquis applicable to electricity
         production it was the contested regulation’s aim to facilitate – such consequences resulting from the doubt cast on and discontinuity
         of that transitional derogation system provided for under the regulation to that end – the effects of that regulation must
         be maintained until such time as a new act has been adopted within a reasonable period on an appropriate legal basis, as a
         consequence of this judgment, without however prolonging those effects beyond 1 July 2007, the date on which that derogation
         system would have expired.
      
       Costs
      60      Under Article 69(2) of the Rules of Procedure, the unsuccessful party is to be ordered to pay the costs, if they have been
         applied for in the successful party’s pleadings. Since the Parliament has applied for costs and the Council has been unsuccessful,
         the Council must be ordered to pay the costs. In accordance with the first subparagraph of Article 69(4) of those Rules, the
         Republic of Poland, the Republic of Estonia and the Commission, which intervened in the proceedings, must bear their own costs.
      
      On those grounds, the Court (Grand Chamber) hereby:
      1.      Annuls Council Regulation (EC) No 1223/2004 of 28 June 2004 amending Regulation (EC) No 1228/2003 of the European Parliament
            and of the Council as regards the date of application of certain provisions to Slovenia;
      2.      Maintains the effects of Regulation No 1223/2004 until the adoption, within a reasonable period, of a new regulation founded
            on an appropriate legal basis, without however prolonging those effects beyond 1 July 2007;
      3.      Orders the Council of the European Union to pay the costs;
      4.      Orders the Republic of Poland, the Republic of Estonia and the Commission of the European Communities to bear their own costs.
      [Signatures]
      * Language of the case: French.