Ministers representing EU Member States signed three Declarations to pool efforts and resources to promote international connectivity, incentivise the rollout of clean digital technologies and improve the regulatory environment for start-ups and scale-ups. These tangible commitments will help accelerate Europe's green and digital transformation and will contribute to the vision and goals of Europe's Digital Decade.
Margrethe Vestager, Executive Vice-President for a Europe fit for the Digital Age, said: “The
new commitments made today strengthen our joint ambitions for a
human-centred approach to digitalisation. With several Member states
signing, the declarations consolidate commitments within three areas,
namely connectivity, start-ups and clean digital technologies,
supporting our ambitions towards a more competitive, inclusive and green
Europe.”
Thierry Breton, Commissioner for Internal Market, said: “The
Digital Day is an important avenue for Member States to come together,
around key digital goals. The new commitments that Member States made
today are also evidence of our determination in the EU to work together
for greater digital leadership by 2030.”
Pedro Siza Vieira, Minister for the Economy and Digital Transition of Portugal, said: “The
Portuguese Presidency of the Council aims to play a decisive role as an
accelerator of the digital transition. We believe that the commitments
made today by Member States will help Europe to position itself as a
global digital leader, as defined in the Digital Decade Strategy.”
Hosted by the Commission and the Portuguese Presidency of the Council,
the fourth edition of the Digital Day is bringing together Members of
the European Parliament, Ministers from Member States, industry
executives and several other stakeholders. The participating Member
States made concrete commitments in three key areas, namely
connectivity, start-ups and clean digital technologies.
Connectivity: Europe to reinforce global connectivity networks through its Data gateways
27 European countries signed the Declaration on 'European Data Gateways as a key element of the EU's Digital Decade',
in which they committed to reinforce connectivity between Europe and
its partners in Africa, Asia, the European Neighbourhood and Latin
America. The focus will be on terrestrial and submarine cables,
satellites and network links for increased and secure data exchange. The
EU already has strong data protection standards and high-quality
internal connectivity. By improving its global connectivity networks, it
can become a global, secure and agile data centre.
Startups: Startups and scale-ups to benefit from best practices
25 European countries signed the Declaration on 'EU Startup Nations Standard',
which aims to ensure that all European start-ups and scale-ups benefit
from the best practices adopted by successful startup ecosystems. To
this end, the Commission, together with Member States and industrial
stakeholders, has identified a number of best practices that contribute
to a growth-friendly environment. These include the processing of
applications for visas from third country talent; fiscal treatment of
stock options; and, increasing the amount and diversity of private
capital. The goal is that these practices become the general rule,
central to the EU's transition to a sustainable, digital and resilient
economy.
Green digital transformation: mobilising investments in clean digital technologies
26 European countries signed the Declaration on 'A Green and Digital Transformation of the EU'
to accelerate the use of green digital technologies for the benefit of
the environment. Member States will work together to speed up the
deployment and development of advanced digital technologies, such as 5G
and 6G, fibre optics, high-performance computing and Internet of Things,
as key solutions to achieve climate neutrality and drive the green and
digital transitions in priority sectors, such as energy, transport,
manufacturing, agri-food and construction. Other areas of action include
the promotion of green cloud, Artificial Intelligence (AI) and
blockchain technologies, as well as sustainable hardware, green public
procurement, support for green tech start-ups and SMEs.
In addition, 26 Chief Executive Officers from the ICT sector joined the 'European Green Digital Coalition',
committing on behalf of their companies to significantly reduce their
carbon footprint by 2030, and to become climate neutral by 2040.
Solutions include investing in the development of more energy and
material efficient digital technologies, working with relevant NGOs and
expert organisations to measure and monitor the net environmental impact
of green digital solutions and many more. Finally, they commit to
co-create deployment guidelines of green digital solutions together with
other industry leaders, in order to accelerate the transition to
sustainability of sectors such as energy, transport, building and
agriculture.
Background
The 2021 edition of the Digital Day marks the fourth anniversary of this event. The last edition in 2019 focused on smart and sustainable agriculture, digitising cultural heritage, as well as encouraging women's participation in the digital and technology sectors. Since then these initiatives have progressed significantly:
- The Commission has set up various large-scale pilots and a network of digital innovation hubs, SmartAgriHubs, to drive the digitisation of agriculture in Europe. These include IoF2020, an innovative farmer-centric project promoting the uptake of IoT in agriculture, and DEMETER, which enables the deployment of farmer-driven interoperable platforms.
- In the current EU long-term budget for 2021 - 2027, Europe will further strengthen its efforts through the post-2020 CAP proposals, Horizon Europe and the Digital Europe Programme. With initiatives such as the testing and experimentation of artificial intelligence in agriculture, the Commission will boost the adoption of digital technologies in the sector.
- The DCHE Expert Group has met three times
since the launch of the initiative on digitising cultural heritage, and
considerable progress has been made, particularly with regard to 3D digitisation of tangible cultural heritage.
- The Women in Digital Scoreboard 2020 shows that the gender gap continues to narrow. In May 2019, the MEDIA sub-programme of Creative Europe launched the first edition of ‘Women on the move', including the publication of an overview of good practices. Last year, the Commission also presented its Gender Equality Strategy for 2020-2025.
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