14.12.2006 EN Official Journal of the C 305 E/67

Tuesday 5 September 2006 P6_TA(2006)0330

Rotterdam Convention on the Prior Informed Consent Procedure for certain hazardous chemicals *

European Parliament legislative resolution on the proposal for a Council decision on the conclusion, on behalf of the European Community, of the Rotterdam Convention on the Prior Informed Consent Procedure for certain hazardous chemicals and pesticides in international trade (COM(2006)0250 — C6-0186/2006 — 2006/0080(CNS))

(Consultation procedure)

The ,

— having regard to the proposal for a Council decision (COM(2006)0250) (1),

— having regard to the Rotterdam Convention on the Prior Informed Consent Procedure for certain hazardous chemicals and pesticides in international trade,

— having regard to Article 133 and Article 175(1), in conjunction with the first sentence of the first sub- paragraph of Article 300(2) of the EC Treaty,

— having regard to Article 300(3), first subparagraph, of the EC Treaty, pursuant to which the Council consulted Parliament (C6-0186/2006),

— having regard to Rules 51 and 83(7) of its Rules of Procedure,

— having regard to the report of the Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety and the opinion of the Committee on International Trade (A6-0239/2006),

1. Approves the conclusion of the Convention;

2. Instructs its President to forward its position to the Council and Commission, and the governments and parliaments of the Member States.

(1) Not yet published in OJ.

P6_TA(2006)0331

Special report on interpretation expenditure

European Parliament resolution on the Court of Auditors' Special Report No 5/2005 on interpretation expenditure incurred by the Parliament, the Commission and the Council (2006/2001(INI))

The European Parliament,

— having regard to the Court of Auditors' Special report No 5/2005 on interpretation expenditure incurred by the Parliament, the Commission and the Council, together with the institutions' replies (1),

— having regard to Article 248(4), second subparagraph, Article 276(3) and Article 280(5) of the EC Treaty,

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

— having regard to the report of the Committee on Budgetary Control (A6-0261/2006),

(1) OJ C 291, 23.11.2005, p. 1. C 305 E/68 Official Journal of the European Union EN 14.12.2006

Tuesday 5 September 2006 Respect for multilingualism

1. Considers that multilingualism is one of the key features of the European Union, which highlights cultural and linguistic diversity and ensures equal treatment of EU citizens;

2. Considers that multilingualism guarantees citizens' right to communicate with the EU institutions in any of its official languages, thus enabling them to exercise their right of democratic control;

3. Considers that the linguistic services of the EU institutions facilitate communication, and that, in so doing, the institutions remain open to the citizens of Europe;

4. Considers that the total cost of all the linguistic services of the EU institutions, translation and inter- pretation combined, represent merely 1 % of the total EU budget;

5. Considers that its Rules of Procedure stipulate that Members may speak in the official language of their choice and that interpretation into the other languages is provided; considers that, in addition, the use of official languages is governed by its ‘Code of Conduct on Multilingualism’, updated in 2004;

6. Considers that multilingualism is an expression of the EU's cultural diversity, which must be preserved, and that, therefore, while the increasing number of official languages calls for pragmatic solutions in the preparatory work within the institutions, multilingualism must be guaranteed to ensure the legitimacy and diversity of the European Union;

With regard to all institutions

7. Welcomes with satisfaction the high quality of interpretation in the EU institutions; is furthermore of the opinion that the high quality of interpretation must be continuously evaluated and guaranteed;

8. Notes that the overall cost of interpretation in 2003 was EUR 57 000 000 as regards the Parliament and EUR 106 000 000 as regards the Council, the Commission, the European Economic and Social Com- mittee, the Committee of the Regions and some agencies;

9. Is, however, very concerned that in 2003 approximately 16 % (EUR 25 900 000) of the total interpre- tation costs for that year of EUR 163 000 000 represented costs for services supplied but not used and for stand-by arrangements;

10. Is of the opinion that the Parliament, the Council and the Commission should endeavour to reduce ‘implicit or explicit stand-by duty’, these arrangements accounting for EUR 18 000 000 spent on interpreta- tion services supplied but not used; notes that reserve interpreters should be available for ad hoc meetings with a short request time;

11. Calls on its administration, the Council and the Commission to improve inter-institutional cooperation;

12. Calls on the Parliament and Commission interpretation services, in order to be more efficient, to exchange interpreters and create mixed interpretation teams, and to make possible the use of available interpreters where and when they are requested in order to meet real needs;

13. Calls on the institutions to encourage and facilitate the use of ‘local interpreters’, language combina- tion premitting, and stresses that national administrative provisions must not be an obstacle; notes that a high quality of interpretation must be guaranteed;

14. Considers that the Parliament and the Commission should establish an overview on the official/ freelance ratio per language in time for the 2006 discharge; 14.12.2006 EN Official Journal of the European Union C 305 E/69

Tuesday 5 September 2006 15. Calls on the Commission to reinforce, in coordination with other institutions, cooperation with Member States in training interpreters from their respective countries;

16. Calls on the EU institutions to renegotiate the agreement with the Auxiliary Conference Interpreters (ACI) with regard to travel arrangements, remuneration, inter-institutional cooperation and administrative simplification;

17. Notes the high share of travel and accommodation costs; urges meeting organisers and interpretation services to reduce travel and accommodation costs; calls for better coordination, planning and organisation of travel and accommodation arrangements;

With regard to the Parliament

18. Expects its administration to provide estimates of the average total daily cost of ACIs and permanent interpreters in time for the 2005 discharge report;

19. Notes that the full cost for an interpretation day is almost 30 % higher in Parliament than in the Council or the Commission, one reason being that very few local interpreters can be used during Strasbourg sessions, which increases Parliament's interpretation costs in Strasbourg by 13 %;

20. Notes its refusal to take part in an evaluation with a view to creating an inter-institutional office providing interpretation services to all EU institutions, this having been considered by the Bureau on 4 September 2005 as being incompatible with the interests of Parliament;

21. Calls on its administration to continue to establish meaningful ‘session reports’, i.e. reports from the head of an interpretation team about the active and passive use of languages during group, committee and delegation meetings, and to report back on its findings in time for the 2005 discharge procedure;

22. Urges its administration to raise Members' awareness of interpretation costs; asks if it makes best possible use of the language profiles of Members; stresses that this should not lead to a ranking of official EU languages;

23. Recalls that, pursuant to Article 1 of the Code of Conduct on Multilingualism of 19 April 2004, resources should be allocated taking into consideration the users' real needs;

24. Calls on its administration to study how the Council's ‘request system’, the Council of Europe's inter- nal billing system or Unesco's quota system for interpretation could be used by the Parliament;

25. Notes that in 2003 it spent EUR 4 000 000 on interpretation services made available but not used due to late requests or cancellations; asks that last-minute cancellations and last-minute requests be discour- aged; furthermore calls on the interpretation services to be more flexible in their service planning and request system;

26. Calls on its responsible bodies to adapt its calendar of committee, group and plenary session weeks in order to achieve a better balance between needs and available resources;

* **

27. Instructs its President to forward this resolution to the Council, the Commission and the European Court of Auditors.