Emergency autonomous trade measures for Tunisia
The European Parliament adopted by 500 votes to 107, with 42 abstentions, a legislative resolution on the proposal for a regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on the introduction of emergency autonomous trade measures for the Republic of Tunisia.
The matter was referred back to committee at the 25.2.2016 plenary sitting.
With a view to supporting the Tunisian economy following the terrorist attack of 26 June 2015 near Sousse, the proposal seeks to offer a temporary, zero-duty tariff quota of 35 000 tonnes per year (70 000 tonnes in total) for exports of olive oil from Tunisia to the EU, in the form of an autonomous trade measure, and to do this without increasing the overall volume of imports. This tariff-rate quota will be available for a period of two years, from 1 January 2016 to 31 December 2017, and will enter into force as soon as the current duty-free tariff quota of 56 700 tonnes laid down in the EU-Tunisia association agreement has been exhausted.
Parliaments position, adopted at first reading following the ordinary legislative procedure, amended the Commission proposal as follows:
Preferential arrangements: Parliament considered that an annual duty free import tariff quota of 35 000 tons for calendar years 2016 and 2017 should be opened for imports into the Union of untreated olive oil originating in Tunisia where such virgin olive oil is wholly obtained in Tunisia and transported directly from Tunisia to the Union.
Mid-term review: Parliament called on the Commission to conduct an assessment of the impact of this Regulation on the Union olive oil market at mid-term following its entry into force and present the conclusions of that assessment to the European Parliament and to the Council. If it is found that the Union olive oil market is affected by the provisions of this Regulation, the Commission shall be empowered to adopt an implementing act in order to introduce corrective measures aiming to restore the situation on that market.