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Hungarian participation in the 2000-2006 I NTERREG programmes and prospects for transnational co-operation in South-East Europe 2007-2013 Szeged, 16 April 2007. Béla HEGYESI Interreg Directorate V Á TI Budapest. The INTERREG Initiative (2000-2006) Main objectives.
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Hungarian participation in the 2000-2006 INTERREG programmesand prospects for transnational co-operation in South-East Europe 2007-2013 Szeged, 16 April 2007. Béla HEGYESI Interreg Directorate VÁTI Budapest
The INTERREG Initiative (2000-2006)Main objectives • economicand social cohesion • balanced and sustainable development of the Europeanterritory • territorial integration with candidate and other neighbouring countries
INTERREG III INTERREG IIIA INTERREG IIIB INTERREG IIIC cross-borderco-operation transnationalco-operation interregionalco-operation INTERREG III
INTERREG IIIACross-border co-operation • Cross-border projects • 1 programme / border (53 programmes in EU15) • Individual priorities
INTERREG IIIA programmes in Hungary • „EU-Internal” (bilateral) programme: • Austria-Hungary Interreg IIIA Programme • New „EU internal-external” trilateral Neighbourhood Programmes • Hungary-Slovakia-Ukraine Neighbourhood Programme(INTERREG-TACIS) • Slovenia-Hungary-Croatia Neighbourhood Programme (INTERREG-CARDS) • New „EU-external” trilateral cross-border programme: • Hungary-Romania and Hungary –Serbia Montenegro Cross Border Program • (INTERREG-PHARE-CARDS)
INTERREG IIIA program budget – „Hungarian” ERDF contribution
INTERREG IIIA – general principles • One border - one program - one single account (internal programs) – one single secretariat • Geniue cross border programming and implementation • „Bottom up” project development: projects are initiated by the „border region” • Joint institutions and procedures
INTERREG IIIB 13 transnational co-operation areas
INTERREG IIIB CADSES • Project size: 1.5 – 2 MEUR • Projects addressing transnational issues • Minimum: 2 partners from 2 countries • Average: 10-12 partners from 5-6 countries per project • Lead partner principle
Ideas on strategic transnationality According to experience gained in transnational co-operation programmes, strategic transnational projects: • show additional benefits to the outcomes of the project – resulting from working together in an international context, in a specific area; • are focused on a problem not localized in one state/region but one that is typical of a larger area • target core development priorities of the Partner States; • involve most of the Partner States; • use integrated (multidisciplinar) approach when seeking for relevant solutions for the whole area – analyze possibilities from different aspects; • prepare large-scale future development investments, thus the involvement of national institutions and future national decision-making bodies is inevitable for the success of the project; • target issues where significant development at the level of the programme area is possible only through co-operation between Partner States.
Hungarian CADSES paprticipation • Full membership since 1998 (Interreg IIC) • 2 MEUR Phare assistance supporting Hungarian partners in 2002-2003 • Hungarian chairmanship in 2004 • Highest number of project-partners from the new member states (1998-2006) • CADSES countries’ decision of having programme management bodies for the new „South-CADSES” programme in Budapest for 2007-2013
Future of CADSES • CADSES will be divided (different development needs in the Central European Space (CES) and the South-East European Space (SEES)) • Parallel programming of the new spaces in 2006 (synergies to make advantage of) • Lessons learned in CADSES + new challenges to meet
Proposed SEE eligible area • EU 27 Member States: Austria, Bulgaria, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Slovakia, Slovenia, Romania • Non-EU-member States: Albania, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia, Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM), Serbia, Montenegro, Moldova, Turkey, Ukraine (Italy, Moldova, Ukraine and Turkey do not participate with its whole territory.)
Global programme objective Developing transnational partnerships on matters of strategic importance to improve the territorial, economic and social integration process and to contribute to cohesion, stability andcompetitiveness
Specific programme objectives • Facilitation of innovation, entrepreneurship, knowledge economy and information society by trans-national action • Improvement of the attractiveness of regions and cities taking into account sustainable development, physical and knowledge accessibility and environmental quality by integrated approaches and trans-national action • Foster integration by supporting balanced capacities for transnational territorial cooperation on all levels.
Priority axes and budget share • P1: Facilitation of innovation and entrepreneurship (21%) • P2: Protection and improvement of the environment (25%) • P3: Improvement of the accessibility (23%) • P4: Development of transnational synergies for sustainable growth areas (25%) • P5: Technical assistance to support implementation and capacity building (6%)
Priority 1 - Facilitation of innovation and entrepreneurship Areas of intervention • 1.1 Develop technology & innovation networks in specific fields • 1.2 Develop the enabling environment for innovative entrepreneurship • 1.3 Enhance the framework conditions and pave the way for innovation
Priority 2 - Protection and improvement of the environment Areas of intervention • 2.1 Improve integrated water management and flood risk prevention • 2.2 Improve prevention of environmental risks • 2.3 Promote co-operation in management of natural assets and protected areas • 2.4 Promote energy and resource efficiency
Priority 3 – Improvement of the accessibility Areas of intervention • 3.1 Improve coordination in promoting, planning and operation for primary and secondary transportation networks • 3.2 Develop strategies to tackle the “digital divide” • 3.3 Improve framework conditions for multi-modal platforms
Priority 4 - Development of transnational synergies for sustainable growth areas Areas of intervention • 4.1 Tackle crucial problems affecting metropolitan areas and regional systems of settlements • 4.2 Promote a balanced pattern of attractive and accessible growth areas • 4.3 Promote the use of cultural values for development
Implementation principles • Visible and concrete cooperation projects • Joint concrete actions with a result-oriented approach • Clear transnational focus on the SEE area • Joint implementation activities will be preferred to networking and exchange of experience • Active project development beyond open call procedure • Qualitative partnership • Concrete actions preparing investment and delivering concrete examples of small-scale investment • Better transfer of project results; higher project budget for dissemination and capitalisation
Programme management structure • Managing Authority (MA) National Development Agencyof Hungary • Certifying Authority (CA) Ministry of Finance of Hungary • Audit Authority (AA) Government Control Office Hungary • Joint Technical Secretariat (JTS) Monitoring Committee (MC) • SEES Contact Points (SCP) National Committees (NC)
Financial provisions • ERDF budget: €206. 691,645M • National public funding: € 38.420,329M • Total budget: €245.111,974M • Co-financing rate: 85% (Axes); 75% (TA)
CES – SEES cooperation:application of the 20% rule for involving actors from other transnational programs ERDF may finance expenditure incurred in other transnational co-operation areas up to a limit of 20% of the amount of its contribution to the SEES programme.
Involvement of non-member states It is the most crucial element of the SEES programme • Harmonisation of IPA (Instrument for Pre-Accession) funds with ERDF • Application of the 10% rule for external partner countries (ERDF may finance expenditure incurred on the territory of countries outside the European Community up to a limit of 10% of the amount of its contribution to the SEES programme): This kind of extension of the eligible ERFA program area might affect Moldova, relevant regions of Ukraine and the concerned accession and pre-accession countries of the program area.
INTERREG IIICInterregional co-operation aims • to improve the effectiveness of policies and instruments for regional development and cohesion • through large-scale information and know-how exchangeand sharing of experience among European regions
IIIC Co-operation Area • entire EU territory including insular and outermost regions • Norway, Switzerland • accession and candidate countries • MEDA countries • other interested countries
North East South West INTERREG IIIC Programme Zones Joint Technical Secretariats North: Rostock, Germany East: Vienna, Austria South: Valencia, Spain West: Lille, France
LEAD PARTNER Regional Partner Regional Partner minimum of three different countries at least two must be Member States Project 1 Project 3 Project 2 Lead participant Lead participant Lead participant Pt Pt Pt Pt Pt Pt Pt Pt Pt Regional Framework Operation large-scale regional co-operation comprising various sub-projects RFO Strategy
Individual Project co-operation activities addressingonly one specific topic Lead Partner minimum of three different countries at least two must be Member States Project Partner Project Partner
Network co-operation activities mainly directed at structured exchange of experience Partner Partner Lead Partner minimum of five different countries Partner Partner at least three must be Member States
Future of INTERREG IIIC • Cenralised programme management (no zones): • MA and JTS in Bruseels • Supporting offices in Lille and Valencia • Focused topics: innovation and knowledge based economy + environment and risk prevention
VATI Hungarian Puplic Nonprofit Company for Regional Development and Town Planning Interreg Directorate 1016 Budapest, Gellérthegy u. 30-32. Hegyesi Béla Tel.: +36 1 224 32 74 www.interreg.hu E-mail: hegyesi@vati.hu