Σελίδες

Σάββατο 11 Οκτωβρίου 2025

COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION,update

 

 
 General Secretariat of the Council
 
10/10/2025 18:27 | Press release |

Forward look: 13 - 26 October 2025

 

Overview of the main topics and events at the Council of EU and European Council for the coming fortnight.

Justice and Home Affairs Council (Justice), 13 October 2025

Justice ministers will gather in Luxembourg to discuss rule of law developments in the field of justice, the future of Eurojust and the fight against Russia’s impunity regarding crimes committed in connection with the war in Ukraine.

Justice and Home Affairs Council (Home Affairs), 14 October 2025

Ministers of home affairs will hold an exchange about a draft law on a common system of returning illegally staying third country nationals, discuss the future of Frontex and hold a policy debate on the Union Civil Protection Mechanism and health emergency preparedness and response.

Foreign Affairs Council (Defence), 15 October 2025

The Foreign Affairs Council with defence ministers will exchange views on defence readiness.

Employment, Social Policy, Health and Consumer Affairs Council (Employment and social policy), 17 October 2025

EU equality ministers will meet in Luxembourg to discuss violence against women and domestic violence, discrimination against LGBTIQ persons, social inclusion of persons with disabilities, and ways to advance disability rights in the EU.

Foreign Affairs Council, 20 October 2025

The Council will exchange views on the Russian aggression against Ukraine, after a short intervention of the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine Andrii Sybiha via videoconference. They will then hold discussions on EU–Indo-Pacific relations and the situation in the Middle East. They will also be informed about current affairs.

Transport, Telecommunications and Energy Council (Energy), 20 October 2025

EU energy ministers will seek to agree on the REPowerEU regulation to phase out Russian gas and oil imports. Ministers will also exchange views on the role of electrification in EU’s clean transition and on energy security and resilience in Ukraine and Moldova.

Environment Council, 21 October 2025

Ministers will seek to adopt two sets of Council conclusions: on the preparations for COP30 on climate change; and on the European water resilience strategy. At the same meeting, environment ministers will also exchange views on the environmental aspects of the European ocean pact.

General Affairs Council, 21 October 2025

Ministers for EU affairs will hold a policy debate on the EU’s Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF) 2028-2034 and take note of a progress report on omnibus simplification legislative packages. Ministers will also continue preparations for the October European Council and hold a hearing on the Article 7 procedure concerning Hungary. Over a working lunch, ministers will discuss the Commission’s upcoming proposal on the European Democracy Shield.

European Council, 23-24 October 2025

EU leaders will discuss Ukraine, Middle East, European defence and security, competitiveness and twin transition, housing, and migration.

Other meetings


 

 

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 Council of the EU
 
10/10/2025 12:59 | Press release |

Economic governance: Council approves Germany’s fiscal expenditure path and its flexibility to increase defence spending

 

The Council today adopted a recommendation endorsing the maximum net expenditure path for Germany over the next five years, as well as the requested extension of the fiscal adjustment period to seven years, as laid out in its national medium-term fiscal-structural plan.

At the same time, the Council activated the national escape clause under the stability and growth pact (SGP) for Germany to help it transition to higher defence spending at national level while ensuring debt sustainability. 

Net expenditure path

The medium-term fiscal-structural plans are a cornerstone of the EU’s new economic governance framework. The plans contain member states’ fiscal trajectory, together with envisaged reforms and investments. They contribute to strengthening member states' debt sustainability and promoting sustainable and inclusive growth.

The net expenditure paths as set by the Council constitute the most important operational indicator for fiscal surveillance at EU level. This budgetary constraint will frame Germany’s national fiscal policies for the next five years and help determine whether it is maintaining healthy finances.

National escape clause

The clause covers a period of four years and a maximum of 1.5% of GDP in flexibility. In practice, this activation means that a new excessive deficit procedure would not be opened for Germany, even if it runs a government deficit exceeding the 3% reference value set in the Treaties, provided that this excess is due to increased defence spending.

For all other expenses, member states remain bound by the budgetary rules and must remain committed to the implementation of the revised economic governance framework irrespective of the clause’s activation.

15 other EU member states - Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czechia, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Greece, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Portugal, Slovakia and Slovenia – have also had their requests to activate the national escape clause approved.

The use of this flexibility should contribute substantially to bolstering the defence and security capabilities of the European Union and the protection of citizens. It will also reinforce the EU’s overall defence readiness, reduce strategic dependencies, address critical capability gaps and strengthen the European defence technological and industrial base.

 

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