CELEX: 52013PC0247
Language: en
Date: 2013-05-02
Title: Proposal for a REGULATION OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL amending Regulation (EU) No 691/2011 on European environmental economic accounts

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		52013PC0247
		
			Proposal for a REGULATION OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL amending Regulation (EU) No 691/2011 on European environmental economic accounts /* COM/2013/0247 final - 2013/0130 (COD) */
			
				
		
		
			
			   	EXPLANATORY MEMORANDUM
1.           CONTEXT OF THE PROPOSAL
Regulation (EU) No 691/2011 on European
environmental economic accounts was adopted on 6 July 2011. It covers three
modules: air emissions accounts, environmental taxes and material flow
accounts. 
Article 10 of the Regulation contains a
list of possible new modules to be introduced later based on Commission
proposals. The first three of the new modules listed in Article 10 are covered
by this draft amending Regulation: environmental protection expenditure,
environmental goods and services sector and energy accounts. 
Users put much emphasis on analysis and
applications of environmental accounts in modelling and outlooks, both for
preparing policy proposals and reporting on policy implementation and impacts.
The new modules will allow expanding the integrated datasets available for such
applications and analysis. 
Article 4 of the Regulation foresees pilot
studies to be carried out by Member States on a voluntary basis to test the
feasibility of introducing new modules. Several such pilot studies have been
completed clearly demonstrating the feasibility of the three new modules.
Environmental accounting uses existing data
for compiling the accounts. No new data collection is necessary for
implementing the new modules. Better use of information from existing data
collection instruments will be made.
The United Nations
Statistical Commission has adopted the System of Environmental-Economic
Accounting (SEEA) as an international statistical standard at its 43rd session in February
2012. The new modules proposed are fully in line with the SEEA.
The proposed amending Regulation is in line
with the revised European Strategy for Environmental Accounting (ESEA 2008). It
will ensure that NSIs (National Statistical Institutes) can expand their work
on environmental accounting, with the main objective of providing harmonised
and timely data of good quality.
2.           RESULTS OF CONSULTATIONS
WITH THE INTERESTED PARTIES AND IMPACT ASSESSMENTS
The proposal has been discussed, in the
framework of the European Statistical System, with data producers and users on
a technical level through written consultations, in task forces, in the
relevant working groups on Environmental Accounts and on Environmental
Expenditure Statistics in March 2012, and with the directors for environmental
statistics and accounts in April and November 2012.
3.           LEGAL ELEMENTS OF THE
PROPOSAL
The objective of this proposed amending act
is to ensure international comparability of environmental economic accounts by extending
the coverage of Regulation 691/2011 to further modules as listed in Article 10
of that Regulation.
The proposed act concerns
an EEA matter and should therefore extend to the European Economic Area.
4.           BUDGETARY IMPLICATION
The proposal has no new implication for the
Union budget.
2013/0130 (COD)
Proposal for a
REGULATION OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT
AND OF THE COUNCIL
amending Regulation (EU) No 691/2011 on
European environmental economic accounts
(Text with EEA relevance)
THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE
COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION,
Having regard to the Treaty on the
Functioning of the European Union, and in particular Article 338(1) thereof,
Having regard to the proposal from the
European Commission,
After transmission of the draft legislative
act to the national parliaments,
Acting in accordance with the ordinary
legislative procedure,
Whereas:
(1)       Decision No xxx of the European Parliament and of the
Council of xxx 2013 laying down the Seventh
Community Environment Action Programme[1]
provides that sound information on the key trends, pressures and drivers for
environmental change is essential for the development of effective policy, its
implementation, and the empowerment of citizens more generally. Instruments
should be developed with a view to enhancing public awareness of the
environmental effects of economic activity. 
(2)       Article 10 of Regulation (EU)
No 691/2011 invites the Commission to report on the implementation of this
Regulation to the European Parliament and the Council and, if appropriate, to
propose the introduction of new environmental economic accounts modules, such
as Environmental Protection Expenditure and Revenues (EPER)/Environmental
Protection Expenditure Accounts (EPEA), Environmental Goods and Services Sector
(EGSS) and Energy Accounts. 
(3)       These three new modules
contribute directly to the Union's policy priorities of green growth and
resource efficiency by providing important information on indicators such as
market output and employment in the EGSS, national envirionmental protection
expenditure and the use of energy in a detailed NACE breakdown.
(4)       The United
Nations Statistical Commission adopted the System of
Environmental-Economic Accounting (SEEA) central framework as an international
statistical standard at its 43rd session in February 2012. The new modules proposed are fully in line with
the SEEA.
(5)       The European Statistical
System Committee has been consulted,
(6)       Regulation (EU) No
691/2011 should therefore be amended accordingly,
HAVE ADOPTED THIS REGULATION:
Article 1
Regulation (EU) No 691/2011 is amended as
follows:
1.     
In Article 2, the following points are added:
‘(4) ‘environmental
protection expenditure’ means the economic resources
devoted by resident units to environmental protection. Environmental protection
includes all activities and actions which have as their main purpose the
prevention, reduction and elimination of pollution as well as any other
degradation of the environment. This includes measures taken in order to
restore the environment after it has been degraded. Activities
which, while beneficial to the environment, primarily satisfy technical needs
or the internal requirements for hygiene or security of an enterprise or other
institution are excluded;
(5) ‘environmental goods and services sector’
means those production activities of a national
economy that generate environmental products. Environmental products are
products that have been produced for the purpose of environmental
protection and resource management. Resource management includes the preservation, maintenance and enhancement of the stock of
natural resources and hence safeguarding against depletion;
(6) ‘physical energy
flow accounts’ means consistent compilations of the physical energy flows into
national economies, the flows within the economy and the outputs to other
economies or to the environment.’
2.     
In Article 3(1), the following points are added:
‘(d) a module for
environmental protection expenditure accounts, as set out in Annex IV;
(e) a module for environmental goods and services sector accounts,
as set out in Annex V;
(f) a module for
physical energy flow accounts, as set out in Annex VI.’
3.     
Article 8(2) is replaced by the following:
‘2.      For
the purposes of obtaining a derogation under paragraph 1 for Annexes I, II
and III, the Member State concerned shall present a duly justified request
to the Commission by 12 November 2011. For the purposes of obtaining a
derogation under paragraph 1 for Annexes IV, V and VI, the Member State concerned shall present a duly justified request to the Commission by […[2].]’
4.     
The Annex to this Regulation is added as Annexes
IV, V and VI to Regulation (EU) No 691/2011.
Article 2
This Regulation shall enter into force on
the twentieth day following that of its publication in the Official Journal
of the European Union.
This
Regulation shall be binding in its entirety and directly applicable in all
Member States.
Done at Brussels, 
For the European Parliament                       For
the Council
The President                                                 The
President
ANNEX 
‘ANNEX IV
MODULE FOR
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION EXPENDITURE ACCOUNTS
Section 1
OBJECTIVES
Environmental
protection expenditure accounts present data, in a way that is fully compatible
with the data reported under ESA, on the expenditure
for environmental protection, i.e. the economic resources devoted by resident
units to environmental protection. The accounts
allow compiling the national expenditure for
environmental protection (EP) which is defined as the sum of uses of EP
services by resident units, gross fixed capital formation (GFCF) for EP
activities, and transfers for EP which are not a counterpart of previous items,
less financing by the rest of the world.
The environmental protection expenditure accounts should
make use of the already existing information from the national accounts (production and generation of income accounts; GFCF by NACE, supply
and use tables; data according to the classification
of functions of government), structural business statistics, business register
and other sources.
This Annex
defines the data to be collected, compiled, transmitted and evaluated for
environmental protection expenditure accounts by the Member States.
Section 2
COVERAGE
Environmental
protection expenditure accounts have the same system boundaries as ESA and show
environmental protection expenditure for principal, secondary and ancillary
activities. The following sectors are covered:
–              
general government (including Non-Profit
Institutions serving Households) and corporations as institutional sectors
producing EP services. Specialist producers produce EP services as their
principal activity,
–              
households, general government and corporations
as consumers of EP services,
–              
the rest of the world as beneficiary or origin
of transfers for environmental protection.
Section 3
LIST OF CHARACTERISTICS
Member States shall produce environmental protection
expenditure accounts according to the following characteristics which are
defined in accordance with ESA: 
–              
output
of environmental protection services. Market output, non-market output and
output of ancillary activities are distinguished,
–              
intermediate consumption of environmental
protection services by specialist producers,
–              
imports and exports of environmental protection
services,
–              
VAT and other taxes less subsidies on products
on environmental protection services,
–              
gross fixed capital formation and acquisitions less disposals of non-financial
non-produced assets for the production of environmental protection
services,
–              
final consumption of environmental protection
services,
–              
environmental protection transfers
(received/paid). 
All data shall be reported in million national currency. 
Section 4
FIRST REFERENCE YEAR; FREQUENCY AND TRANSMISSION
DEADLINES
1. Statistics shall be compiled and transmitted on a yearly
basis. 
2. Statistics shall be transmitted within 24 months of the
end of the reference year. 
3. In order to meet user needs for complete and timely
datasets, the Commission (Eurostat) shall produce, as soon as sufficient
country data becomes available, estimates for the EU-27 totals for the main
aggregates of this module. The Commission (Eurostat) shall, wherever possible,
produce and publish estimates for data that have not been transmitted by Member
States within the deadline specified in point 2. 
4. The first reference year is the year in which this
Regulation enters into force. 
5. In
the first data transmission, Member States shall include annual data from 2013
to the first reference year. 
6. In each subsequent data transmission to the Commission,
Member States shall provide annual data for the years n-3, n-2, n-1 and n,
where n is the reference year.
Section 5
REPORTING TABLES
1. For the characteristics referred to in Section 3, data
shall be reported in a breakdown by:
–              
types of producers/consumers of environmental
protection services as defined in section 2,
–              
classes of the classification of environmental protection
activities (CEPA) aggregated as follows:
For general government non-market activities
and for environmental protection transfers:
–              
CEPA 2
–              
CEPA 3
–              
Sum of CEPA 1 + 4 + 5 + 7
–              
CEPA 6
–              
Sum of CEPA 8 + 9 
For ancillary activities of corporations:
–              
CEPA 1
–              
CEPA 2
–              
CEPA 3
–              
Sum of CEPA 4 + 5 + 6 + 7 + 8 + 9
For corporations as secondary and specialised
producers:
–              
CEPA 2
–              
CEPA 3
–              
CEPA 4
For households as consumers:
–              
CEPA 2
–              
CEPA 3
–              
The following NACE codes for the ancillary
production of EP services: NACE Rev. 2 B, C, D, division 36. Data for section C
shall be presented by divisions. Divisions 10-12, 13-15 and 31-32 shall be
grouped together. Member States which according to Regulation (EC) No 295/2008[3] of the European Parliament and
of the Council (as regards the definitions of characteristics, the technical
format for the transmission of data, the double reporting requirements for NACE
Rev. 1.1 and NACE Rev. 2 and derogations to be granted for structural business
statistics) are not obliged to collect environmental protection expenditure
data for one or more of these NACE codes do not need to provide data for these
NACE codes.
2. The CEPA classes referred to in
paragraph 1 are as follows:
CEPA 1 - Protection of ambient air and climate
CEPA 2 - Wastewater management
CEPA 3 - Waste management
CEPA 4 - Protection and remediation of soil,
groundwater and surface water
CEPA 5 - Noise and vibration abatement
CEPA 6 - Protection of biodiversity and
landscapes
CEPA 7 - Protection against radiation
CEPA 8 – Environmental research and development

CEPA 9 - Other environmental protection
activities.
Section 6
MAXIMUM DURATION OF THE TRANSITIONAL PERIODS
For the implementation of the provisions of
this Annex, the maximum duration of the transitional period is 2 years from the
first transmission deadline.
Annex V
MODULE FOR THE
ENVIRONMENTAL GOODS AND SERVICES SECTOR
Section 1
OBJECTIVES
Statistics on environmental goods and services record and
present data on national economies’ production activities that generate
environmental products in a way that is fully compatible with the data reported
under ESA.
This Annex
defines the data to be collected, compiled, transmitted and evaluated for
environmental goods and services by the Member States.
Section 2
COVERAGE
The environmental goods and services sector has the same
system boundaries as ESA and consists of all
environmental goods and services that are created within the production
boundary. ESA defines production as the activity carried out under the control
and responsibility of an institutional unit that uses inputs of labour, capital
and goods and services to produce goods and services.
Environmental goods and services fall within the following
categories: environmental specific services, environmental sole purpose
products (connected products), adapted goods and environmental technologies. 
Section 3
LIST OF CHARACTERISTICS
Member States shall produce statistics on the environmental
goods and services sector according to the following characteristics:
–              
market output, of which:
–              
exports
–              
value added of market activities
–              
employment of market activities.
All data shall be reported in million national currency,
except for the characteristic ‘employment’ for which the reporting unit should
be full time equivalent.
Section 4
FIRST REFERENCE
YEAR; FREQUENCY AND TRANSMISSION DEADLINES
1. Statistics shall be compiled and transmitted on a yearly
basis.
2. Statistics shall be transmitted within 24 months of the
end of the reference year.
3. In order to meet user needs for complete and timely
datasets, the Commission (Eurostat) shall produce, as soon as sufficient
country data becomes available, estimates for the EU-27 totals for the main
aggregates of this module. The Commission (Eurostat) shall, wherever possible,
produce and publish estimates for data that have not been transmitted by Member
States within the deadline specified in point 2.
4. The first reference year is the year in which this
Regulation enters into force.
5. In the first data transmission, Member States shall
include annual data from 2013 to the first reference year.
6. In each subsequent data transmission to the Commission,
Member States shall provide annual data for the years n-3, n-2, n-1 and n,
where n is the reference year.
Section 5
REPORTING TABLES
1. For the characteristics referred to in Section 3, data
shall be reported cross-classified by:
–              
classification of economic activities, NACE Rev.
2 (A*21 aggregation level as set out in ESA),
–              
classes of the classification of environmental
protection activities (CEPA) and the classification of resource management
activities (CReMA) grouped as follows:
–              
CEPA 1
–              
CEPA 2
–              
CEPA 3
–              
CEPA 4
–              
CEPA 5
–              
CEPA 6
–              
Sum of: CEPA 7, CEPA 8 and CEPA 9
–              
CReMA 10
–              
CReMA 11
–              
CReMA 13
–              
CReMA 13A
–              
CReMA 13B
–              
CReMA 13C
–              
CReMA 14
–              
Sum of: CReMA 12, CReMA 15 and CReMA 16
2. The CEPA classes referred to in
paragraph 1 are as set out in Annex IV. The CReMA classes referred to in
paragraph 1 are as follows:
CReMA 10 – Management of water 
CReMA 11 – Management of forest resources
CReMA 12 – Management of wild flora and fauna
CReMA 13 – Management of energy resources
CReMA 13A – Production of energy from renewable
resources
CReMA 13B – Heat/energy saving and management
CReMA 13C – Minimisation of the use of fossil
energy as raw materials
CReMA 14 – Management of minerals
CReMA 15 – Research and development activities
for resource management
CReMA 16 – Other resource management activities
Section 6
MAXIMUM DURATION OF THE TRANSITIONAL PERIODS
For the implementation of the provisions of
this Annex, the maximum duration of the transitional period is 2 years from the
first transmission deadline.
Annex VI
MODULE FOR PHYSICAL ENERGY FLOW ACCOUNTS
Section 1
OBJECTIVES
Physical energy flow
accounts present data on the physical flows of energy expressed in terajoules in
a way that is fully compatible with the concepts, principles, and data reported
under the European System of Accounts (ESA). They record energy data in
relation to the economic activities of resident units of national economies in
a breakdown by economic activity. They present the supply and use of natural
energy inputs, energy products and energy residuals. Economic activities
comprise production, consumption, and accumulation.
Section 2
COVERAGE
Physical energy flow
accounts have the same system boundaries as ESA and are also based on the
residence principle.
In accordance with ESA,
a unit is said to be a resident unit of a country when it has a centre of
economic interest in the economic territory of that country, that is, when it
engages for an extended period (1 year or more) in economic activities in that
territory.
Physical energy flow
accounts record physical energy flows arising from the activities of all
resident units, regardless of where these flows actually occur geographically.
Physical energy flow
accounts record the physical flows of energy from the environment to the
economy, within the economy, and from the economy back to the environment.
Section 3
LIST OF
CHARACTERISTICS
Member States shall produce physical energy flow accounts
according to the following characteristics: 
–              
the physical energy flows grouped into three
generic categories:
–              
(i) natural energy inputs,
–              
(ii) energy products, 
–              
(iii) energy residuals.
–              
the origin of the physical energy flows, grouped
into five categories: production, consumption, accumulation, rest of the world
and environment,
–              
the destination of the physical flows, grouped
into the same five categories as the origin of the physical energy flows.
All data shall be reported in terajoules.
Section 4
FIRST REFERENCE YEAR; FREQUENCY AND TRANSMISSION
DEADLINES
1. Statistics shall be compiled and transmitted on a yearly
basis. 
2. Statistics
shall be transmitted within 18 months of the end of the reference year. 
3. In order to meet user needs for complete and timely
datasets, the Commission (Eurostat) shall produce, as soon as sufficient
country data becomes available, estimates for the EU-27 totals for the main
aggregates of this module. The Commission (Eurostat) shall, wherever possible,
produce and publish estimates for data that have not been transmitted by Member
States within the deadline specified in point 2.
4. The first reference year is the year in which this
Regulation enters into force. 
5. In
the first data transmission, Member States shall include annual data from 2013
to the first reference year. 
6. In each subsequent data transmission to the Commission,
Member States shall provide annual data for the years n-3, n-2, n-1 and n,
where n is the reference year.
Section 5
REPORTING TABLES
1. For the characteristics referred to in Section 3, the
following data shall be reported:
–              
Supply table for energy flows in physical units.
This table records the supply of natural energy inputs, energy products, and
energy residuals (row-wise) by origin, i.e. ‘supplier’ (column-wise).
–              
Use table for energy flows. This table records
the use of natural energy inputs, energy products, and energy residuals
(row-wise) by destination, i.e. ‘user’ (column-wise).
–              
Table of emission-relevant use of energy flows.
This table records the emission-relevant use of natural energy inputs and
energy products (row-wise) by the using and emitting unit (column-wise).
–              
Key energy indicator ‘total
energy consumption by resident units’' in a
breakdown by industries and households.
–              
Bridge table showing the various elements which make
up the difference between the key energy indicator ‘total
energy use by resident units’ and the common
key energy indicator as presented by European energy statistics ‘gross inland energy consumption’.
2. The supply and use tables of energy
flows (including emission-relevant flows) have a common layout in terms of rows
and columns.
3. The columns denote the origins (supply) or
destinations (use) of the physical flows. The columns are grouped into five categories:
–              
‘Production’ relates to the production of goods and services.
Production activities are classified according to NACE Rev. 2 and data is
reported in A*64 aggregation level.
–              
‘Consumption’ activities are presented in one column for private
households' final consumption.
–              
‘Accumulation’ refers to the changes in stocks of energy products
within the economy. 
–              
‘Rest
of the world’ records the flows of imported
and exported products. 
–              
‘Environment’ records the origin of natural input flows and the
destination of residual flows.
4. The rows describe the type of physical
flows classified as in first bullet point of section 3.
5. The classification of natural energy
inputs, energy products, and energy residuals is as follows:
–              
Natural energy inputs are grouped into non-renewable natural energy inputs and renewable
natural energy inputs. 
–              
Energy products
are grouped according to the classification of products by activity (CPA) and
the classification used in European energy statistics.
–              
Energy residuals include
waste (without monetary value); losses during extraction/abstraction,
distribution/transport, transformation/conversion and storage; as well as
balancing items to balance the supply and use tables.
6. The ‘bridge’ from the residence principle indicator to the
territory based indicator is presented for the entire national economy (no
breakdown by industries) and is obtained as follows:
total energy use by resident units
– energy use by resident units abroad
+ energy use by non-residents on the
territory
= gross inland energy consumption (territory
based)
Section 6
MAXIMUM DURATION OF THE TRANSITIONAL PERIODS
For the implementation of the provisions of
this Annex, the maximum duration of the transitional period is 2 years from the
first transmission deadline.’
[1]               OJ L xxx.
[2]               OJ: please
insert date - three months after the entry into force of this amending Regulation.
[3]               OJ L 97, 9.4.2008, p. 13-59.