EU International Aid: 12 steps to 2015
EU international Aid is a major link in the chain of worldwide poverty and aid programs.
Today the EU even is the first donor worldwide, providing more than half of development aid and a staggering € 49 billion in 2009.
The twelve point plan presented today aims to support the international community in delivering the Millennium Development Goals by 2015. The action plan is a call to prepare an agreed and strong EU position ahead of the MDG Summit in September and define a set of actions to be implemented at national, regional and international scales.
'If I compare this (sum) with national budgets, this is not really big money. It's really the political will that is necessary to achieve this target,' the EU's commissioner for development aid, Andris Piebalgs, told journalists in Brussels.
The 12 points for EU international Aid
- Make verifiable annual action plans for reaching individual targets
- Improve aid efficiency at the EU scale (saving estimates around 3 to 6 billion a year)
- Do more and better for the poorest
- Target the key sectors for gender, education, health and food security
- Work in partnerships
- Act in coherence with other EU policies for Development from Trade to migration to food and climate change
- Help national fundings to work better
- Strengthen regional integration and trade for growth and jobs
- Support innovative financing with high revenue potential that can benefit the poorest
- Use "fast-start" funding for climate change as a test for aid effectiveness and coherence
- Make development and security work better together
- Support stronger weight of developing countries in the World Bank, IMF and the UN reform for more effective agencies
12 steps to 2015: a sign to act
The twelve point plan is not only an important signal to the world outside Europe, it is also a message to all EU member states to work together more closely and keep their commitments.
It is a major message to all governments: Solidarity and Development Goals are of key importance for the future of the planet, beyond the moral values Europe holds dear.
1st European blogger webmeeting, one voice?
On December 3rd 2009 the first online European blogger meeting took place via Skype. Have you even been in a Skype meeting with a large group? It's like ice skating blindfolded over a half frozen lake. Don't talk with two people at the same time by the way, or your comments get lost in cyberspace.
Joe Litobarski started the idea for the web meeting; two dozen bloggers joined in the conversation. Not a giant wave – no google pun intended – but still, a nice turnup. There are people just waiting for a “European public space” to be created–as long as it is also a fun and interesting place to inhabit.
Valéry-Xavier Lentz stressed that being with a limited group of “bloggers” in reality should be considered more as a community involving both bloggers and readers/ commenters.
Nosemonkey was blunt in summing up his view on the problem of EU blogging: "The EU is boring and we all speak different languages".
Nice nose, dear monkey, but I disagree. Although we speak different languages and have multiple dialects, we DO speak the same language, when it comes to expressing the stories close to our heart and our home, our feelings on democracy, security, health, love, respect etc. And these issues and ideas are far from boring. Despite our differences, we 'Europeans' have an international heart, when it comes to work and play, from football, rugby, bicycle racing, to dance and music, film, literature, travel, food and drink, etc. . Making laws and regulations of course is not always 'hot' and exciting, but still, it is part of a wonderful, complex reality in the making. The Copenhagen Summit for instance has stirred up emotions on the "30 percent vow" throughout the whole EU. And all speak the language of concern, the wish to act and move forward wisely. Bloggingportal.eu was suggested as a natural forum at the blogger meet. Hopefully it will stir debate on how it's not easy being green.


