PROGRAMME OF OPTIONS SPECIFIC TO THE REMOTE AND INSULAR NATURE OF THE CANARY ISLANDS (POSEICAN)
TITLE I
General principles
1. The Poseican programme will be based on the twofold principle that the Canary Islands form an integral part of the Community and that the regional reality, characterized by the special features and constraints specific to the region concerned as distinct from the Community as a whole, must be recognized. 2. Implementation of the measures and operations set out in the Poseican programme will in principle be carried out before 31 December 1992, through the adoption either by the Council or by the Commission, as appropriate, of the necessary legal acts, in accordance with the provisions and procedures laid down in the Treaty. 3.1. The Poseican programme will help attain the general aims of the Treaty by contributing to the achievement of the following specific objectives: - the realistic integration of the Canary Islands into the Community by establishing an appropriate framework for the application of common policies in this area, - the full involvement of the Canary Islands in the dynamic of the internal market by making optimum use of existing Community regulations and instruments, - assisting the Canary Islands to catch up economically and socially, principally through Community financing of the specific measures contained in the Poseican programme. 3.2. The competent national and regional authorities will take into account the specific measures and operations contained in the Poseican programme when drawing up future regional development plans. Within the scope of its powers, the Commission, for its part, will take steps to ensure that the operations conducted under the Poseican programme are consistent with the operations of the Structural Funds and other Community financial instruments. 3.3 The drafting, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of the operations and measures contained in the Poseican programme will be carried out in partnership by the Commission and the national and regional authorities concerned. Efforts will be made to ensure that the Poseican programme operations and those conducted at national and regional levels complement each other as far as possible. 4. The measures and operations contained in the Poseican programme fall within the framework of the inclusion of the Canary Islands in the customs territory of the Community and the extension to these Islands of Community law in force and should enable the specific nature and constraints of the Canary Islands to be taken into account without undermining the integrity and coherence of the Community legal order.
TITLE II
Application of common policies in the Canary Islands
5. Directives or other measures adopted in connection with the internal market and other common policies will have to take account of the special characteristics of the Canary Islands and promote their economic and social development, particularly in the fields of transport and taxation, social matters, research and technological development (without prejudice to the Community framework programme on this topic) and protection of the environment.
TITLE III
Specific measures to mitigate the effects of the exceptional geographical situation
6.1. Within six months from the date on which this Decision takes effect, the Council or the Commission, as appropriate, will adopt the measures laid down in paragraphs 6.2 to 6.7 which are intended to alleviate the impact of the additional costs involved in maintaining supplies of agricultural products resulting from the remote and insular nature of the Canary Islands. 6.2. In the case of essential agricultural products for consumption or processing in the archipelago, this Community action will consist, within the limits of local market requirements, taking into account local production and traditional trade flows and ensuring that the proportion of products supplied by the Community is preserved, in: - exempting from levies and/or customs duties products originating in non-member countries; in this connection special attention will be paid to supplying the Canary Islands from nearby developing countries, - permitting, on equivalent terms, the supply of Community products taken into intervention storage or available on the Community market. The principles underlying the application of this system will be as follows: (a) with regard to the supply of inputs needed to sustain certain processing and/or packaging industries making products for the local market, this system should allow these industries to obtain supplies direct from markets in non-Community or Community countries, up to the amounts stipulated in forecast supply balances, so that the goods produced can meet the requisite specifications, notably as regards quality. In the case of sugar in particular, the system must allow traditional trade flows to be maintained; (b) in the case of supplies of other essential products, in order to ensure that these measures have an impact on the level of production costs and consumer prices, a system will be set up to monitor this impact up to the end-user stage. Should the impact be judged inadequate, the supply of unprocessed cereals may be replaced, in quantities to be determined at the appropriate time, by the equivalent in flour form; (c) in view of the complexity and diversity of supply circuits in the Canary Islands, the Commission will be required to review the operation of the provisions adopted on the basis of the principles set out above with a view to making any adjustments needed. The first review will be carried out at the end of the first year of application of these provisions. To help maintain local cereal production, no co-responsibility levy will be charged. 6.3. Temporary restrictions may be applied, at sensitive times, on a phasing-out basis, to potatoes delivered to the Canary Islands for a period of 10 marketing years. 6.4. Community aid to olive oil consumption will apply to the Canary Islands on the terms in force in the Community as constituted on 31 December 1985. 6.5. To avoid any deflection of trade, products covered by the measures referred to in paragraph 6.2 may not be re-dispatched in an unaltered state to other parts of the Community. Where the products in question are processed in the Canary Islands, this ban shall not apply to the traditional export of Canary Island products to the rest of the Community. 6.6. Imports of raw or other tobaccos for use in the manufacture of tobacco and originating in non-member countries will be exempt from customs duty up to the amount required by the tobacco industry in the Canary Islands to cater for local consumption and existing trade flows in manufactured tobacco and with due account for supply possibilities offered by Community producers and the ACP States. 6.7. To promote the development of stockfarming to meet local market needs, a system of aid for the purchase of breeding animals originating in the Community will be set up. Until such time as local production has developed to a satisfactory level, this system may be accompanied by temporary measures, with a phased reduction in quantities, to facilitate the purchase of animals for fattening (cattle and pigs) and the procurement of certain processed meat-based products (pigmeat, beef/veal or poultry). These measures will combine exemption from levies for the products in question originating in non-member countries and aid for the procurement of such products from other parts of the Community, to give such products access on equivalent terms. The situation will need to be reviewed after the system has been in operation for four years. 7.1. At the request, with supporting documents, of the competent Spanish authorities, specific tariff measures or derogations from the common commercial policy will be considered regarding quantitative restrictions in particular, on a case-by-case basis, for certain sensitive products, as follows: - measures to take account of particular problems in a given sector of local production intended for local consumption or tourism, with a view to maintaining an exemption equivalent to that applied prior to the entry into force of Regulation (EEC) No 1911/91, - measures to allow access for consumer goods such as textiles, clothes, optical and electronic equipment or means of transport. 7.2. The measures referred to in paragraph 7.1 must be carefully tailored to the Canary Islands' domestic market to avoid any deflection of trade. The application of such measures must, in principle, be limited to the transitional period provided for under Article 6 of Regulation (EEC) No 1911/91 for the gradual adoption of the Common Customs Tariff to the Canary Islands. In the year preceding the expiry of this period the Commission will evaluate the measures adopted and review the situation. 8. Inward processing operations carried out in the Canary Islands' free zones will not be subject to the economic conditions attaching to these arrangements.
TITLE IV
Specific measures to support Canary Island products
9. In view of the economic and social importance of bananas for the Canary Islands and the objective of a fair standard of living for producers, the Commission will, without waiting for the adoption of common rules, decide on structural action to assist this sector. With a view to improving the conditions of production and competition, such action will include measures concerning research, harvesting, presentation and processing, transport, storage, marketing and commercial promotion. 10.1. Within six months of the date on which this Decision takes effect, the Council or the Commission, as appropriate, will adopt the measures referred to in points 10.2 to 10.6. 10.2. Measures for the fruit and vegetable and flowers and live plants sectors may take the form of: - temporary aid per hectare for programmes carried out by producers and producer groups or organizations to diversify production and/or improve product quality; these programmes, from which tomato growing would be excluded, should serve to develop tropical products in particular. Additional aid may be granted in cases where these programmes include technical assistance measures, - aid for the marketing of tropical products where the volume of trade does not exceed 10 000 tonnes for each product, under marketing season contracts between Canary Island producers and operators in other parts of the Community, - the funding of an economic analysis and forward planning study of the processed fruit and vegetable sector (particularly tropical fruit and vegetables). 10.3. Other measures to help support domestic product for local consumption may take the form of: - specific aid per hectare for potato-growing, within the limits of the present areas under cultivation, - to satisfy the consumer habits for wines produced in the archipelago, exemption from compulsory distillation and non-application of voluntary distillation laid down by Community legislation and non-application of the grubbing premium, - in the dairy sector, the setting of the quota at a level which will allow reasonable development of production in the Canary Islands without, however, disrupting traditional trade flows, - in the case of animal products for the local market, specific aid for producers' groups or organizations for training and technical assistance programmes, - specific aid to support products of traditional Canary Island stockfarming and intended for local consumption. 10.4. To encourage farmers in the Canary Islands to supply high quality products and to promote the marketing of these products, the Community may finance the design and promotion of a logo. 10.5. Council Directive 77/93/EEC of 21 December 1976 on protective measures against the introduction into the Member States of organisms harmful to plants or plant products (1), as last amended by Directive 90/506/EEC (2), will be adapted to accommodate the specific plant health situation in the Canary Islands. 10.6. Special exceptions may be made, on the basis of duly substantiated requests from the Spanish authorities, to provisions restricting or preventing the granting of certain types of structural aid to reflect the special characteristics of agriculture in the Canary Islands. 11.1. In the case of fishery products, a reinforced system of aid will be established in favour of producers' organizations, which must be set up within five years of the date on which Council Regulation (EEC) No 1911/91 enters into force; this aid will apply for five years following the date on which these organizations are recognized. 11.2. In view of the special situation of the sardine market and the problem of the price of this product in the Canary Islands, a conversion factor specific to sardines marketed within the Canary Islands will be applied in accordance with Article 12 (2) of Council Regulation (EEC) No 3796/81 of 29 December 1981 on the common organization of the market in fishery products (3), as last amended by Regulation (EEC) No 2886/89 (4). Within two years of the introduction of the market organization in the Canary Islands, the Commission will investigate the possibility of applying arrangements to bring prices into line. As the Community price system can only apply if the products put on sale are accessible to all the operators concerned, Spain and the Community will take the necessary steps to ensure that the sardine marketing structures in the Canary Islands are adapted to meet this condition. 11.3. The Community will endeavour, within the scope of its powers in international trade, to obtain improvements from its partners in order to facilitate Community exports of cephalopods to the countries concerned.
TITLE V
Final provision
12. The Commission will report annually to the European Parliament and the Council on progress in the implementation of the Poseican programme and, where appropriate, propose any adjustment measures that are necessary to achieve the objectives defined in Title I.
(1) OJ No L 26, 31. 1. 1977, p. 20. (2) OJ No L 16, 22. 1. 1991, p. 29. (3) OJ No L 379, 31. 12. 1981, p. 1. (4) OJ No L 282, 2. 10. 1989, p. 1.