EU Engagement in South Africa

Published: 27 September 2010 y., Monday

Pietų Afrikos vėliava
South Africa, with approximately 50 million inhabitants, has the 25th largest population in the world, and occupies a position of geo-strategic importance in the Southern hemisphere. South Africa is the only African member of the G20 and the EU's largest trading partner in Africa.

The EU-South Africa strategic partnership

A strong relationship has evolved between the European Union and South Africa since the birth of South African democracy in 1994.

This relationship is underpinned by the Trade, Development and Cooperation Agreement (TDCA) signed in 1999, which provides the legal basis for close relations on trade, development, economic cooperation and political dialogue.

The significance of South Africa for the EU was consolidated with the establishment of a Strategic Partnership in 2007. The Strategic Partnership has two main pillars: (i) enhanced political dialogue on issues of shared interest like climate change, the global economy, bilateral trade, and peace and security matters and (ii) policy dialogues and sectoral cooperation on a broad range of areas (e.g. environment, science & technology, transport, space, etc.).

The first EU-South Africa Summit was held during the French Presidency of the EU, in Bordeaux, on 25th July 2008.

The second Summit took place during the Swedish Presidency of the EU, in Kleinmond, South Africa on 11 September 2009.

Recent meetings include the EU-South Africa Ministerial meeting, co-chaired by the High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy / Vice-President of the European Commission Baroness Catherine Ashton and Commissioner for Development Andris Piebalgs on 11 May 2010, and a visit of Commissioner for Climate Action Connie Hedegaard to South Africa on 26-28 June

Development cooperation

EU development co-operation with South Africa is financed from the Community budget (Development Cooperation Instrument). It has been operational since 1995, and since then yearly financial commitments have averaged €125 million.

For the financial perspectives 2007-2013, the indicative amount assigned by the EU to co-operation with South Africa is €980 million, i.e. €140 million a year.

The EU is the most important donor to South Africa by far: the Commission and EU Member States together provide approximately 70% of the total cooperation funds received by South Africa.

Trade cooperation

The EU as a whole is by far South Africa's largest trading partner: It accounted for 28% of the value of total South African trade flows in 2009.

EU-South African trade flows represented more than €36 billion in 2008, and more than €25 billion in 2009 - the decrease being largely imputable to the global economic downturn.

The EU is South Africa's main destination for exports, with a share of 23% of total South African exports in 2009.

The EU is also the main source of South Africa's imports, with a share of 32% of total South African imports in 2009.

EU-South Africa Joint Cooperation Council

On 15 September 2010, the EU-South Africa Joint Cooperation Council (the body that oversees the overall implementation of the Trade and Development Cooperation Agreement - TDCA) met on 15 September in Pretoria. It had previously met in Brussels in July 2009, in order to take stock of progress in implementing the TDCA and also to discuss the way forward on the wide range of areas where policy dialogues and cooperation have been established in the context of the EU-South Africa Strategic Partnership.

Šaltinis: europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Deadly UK chopper crash

Scotland's second North Sea helicopter crash in weeks involved the same company and the same brand of aircraft. more »

Angry London protests ahead of G20

London's historic financial district became a flashpoint for people upset at the banking system's role in fuelling the current global economic crisis. more »

Obama, Medevev pledge cooperation

Obama said he and Medvedev had begun what he called "constructive dialogue" on issues from nuclear proliferation to counter-terrorism to economic stability. more »

Pirates attack NATO naval ship

Seven Somali pirates got more than what they bargained for on Monday when they tried to capture this vessil. more »

Man kills eight at US care home

Eight people dead - seven of them elderly patients- at the care home at the centre of the latest American shooting. more »

Spaniards rally against abortion law

Hundreds of people took to the streets of the Spanish capital protesting against government reforms to abortion laws. more »

A closer and deeper strategic partnership with the USA

A new transatlantic partnership is needed to strengthen ties between the EU and America now that Barack Obama has taken office, says the European Parliament. more »

MEPs debate the outcome of the Spring European Council with Czech PM Topolánek

MEPs held a debate on Wednesday with the President-in-Office of the EU Council, Czech prime minister Mirek Topolánek, on the outcome of the European Council of 19-20 in Brussels. more »

Obama jokes with astros

U.S. President Barack Obama made a long distance phone call -- but this time to outer space to the crew of the Shuttle Discovery and the International Space Station. more »

Japan cargo plane crash

A FedEx cargo plane landing at Japan's Narita airport skidded off the tarmac in a wind gust, flipping over and bursting into flames, killing its two-man crew. more »