JUNE 15, 2021
Towards a Renewed Transatlantic Partnership
1.
The United
States and the European Union represent 780 million people who share democratic
values and the largest economic relationship in the world. We have a chance and
a responsibility to help people make a living and keep them safe and secure,
fight climate change, and stand up for democracy and human rights. We laid the
foundations of the world economy and the rules-based international order after
World War II based on openness, fair competition, transparency, and accountability.
Some of the rules need an update: to protect our health, our climate and
planet, to ensure democracy delivers and technology improves our lives.
2.
We, the leaders
of the European Union and the United States, met today to renew our
Transatlantic partnership, set a Joint Transatlantic Agenda for the
post-pandemic era, and commit to regular dialogue to take stock of progress.
3.
Together, we
intend to: (i) end the COVID-19 pandemic, prepare for future global health
challenges, and drive forward a sustainable global recovery; (ii) protect our
planet and foster green growth; (iii) strengthen trade, investment, and
technological cooperation; and (iv) build a more democratic, peaceful, and
secure world. We are committed to uphold the rules-based international order
with the United Nations at its core, reinvigorate and reform multilateral
institutions where needed, and cooperate with all those who share these
objectives.
I. End the COVID-19 pandemic, prepare for future global health challenges, and
drive forward a sustainable global recovery
4.
Ending the
COVID-19 pandemic through global cooperation is our first priority. We promote
equitable and affordable access and delivery of safe and effective COVID-19
vaccines, diagnostics, and therapeutics through the Access to COVID-19 Tools
Accelerator. We commit to continuing to support the COVAX Facility and
encourage more donors to make 2 billion vaccine doses available worldwide by
late 2021. We aspire to vaccinate at least two thirds of the world’s population
by the end of 2022.
5.
A Joint U.S.-EU
COVID Manufacturing and Supply Chain Taskforce has been established to deepen
cooperation and identify and resolve issues around expanding vaccine and
therapeutics production capacity, including by building new production facilities,
maintaining open and secure supply chains, avoiding any unnecessary export
restrictions, and encouraging voluntary sharing of know-how and technology on
mutually-determined terms including through the ACT-A. We are committed to
strengthen global health security, pandemic preparedness, and response to
health emergencies and future outbreaks. We plan to leverage our strengths to
help countries build the capacities to prevent, detect, and respond to
infectious disease threats. We intend to work together with like-minded
countries this year to explore options towards sustainable global health and
health security financing, supported by strengthened global accountability,
tracking and allocation of global health security financing, including the
Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness and Response (IPPPR) recommendation
toward a Global Health Threats Council.
6.
We resolve to
reinforce cooperation to reform the World Health Organization (WHO), including
advancing sustainable financing and improving its internal operations. We
welcome the “Rome Declaration” principles endorsed at the G20 Global Health
Summit and the outcomes of the World Health Assembly, including the
establishment of a Working Group on Strengthening WHO Preparedness and Response
to Health Emergencies that will prioritize the assessment of the benefits of
developing a WHO convention, agreement, or other international instrument on
pandemic preparedness and response and provide a report to be considered at the
special session of the Health Assembly in November 2021. We will continue to
engage in health research initiatives, including to develop medical
countermeasures in a much shorter period of time, to support the regional surge
capacity to produce them, and to facilitate trade in essential medical goods.
We call for progress on a transparent, evidence-based, and expert-led
WHO-convened phase 2 study on the origins of COVID-19, that is free from
interference, and we commit to working together toward the development and use
of a swift and independent means for investigating such outbreaks in the
future.
7.
We welcome G7
discussions to build back better for the world—orienting development finance
tools toward the range of challenges faced by developing countries, including
in resilient infrastructure and technologies, addressing the impact of climate
change, health systems and security, developing digital solutions, and
advancing gender equality and education. We intend to jointly drive forward a
sustainable and inclusive global recovery, in line with the UN 2030 Agenda for
Sustainable Development that leaves no one behind and prioritizes the most
vulnerable and marginalized, protects our climate and planet, protects human
rights, empowers women and girls and creates decent jobs. We will enhance our
cooperation on sustainable connectivity and high-quality infrastructure. We
intend to continue providing assistance to countries in need, address debt
vulnerabilities, and stimulate domestic reforms and increased private
investment. To address the problem of unsustainable debts faced by many
countries in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, we plan to promote the
swift and transparent implementation of the G20 Common Framework for debt
treatment and explore innovative instruments such as debt swaps. Recognizing
the increase in food insecurity and malnutrition projected, including as a
result of the pandemic, we commit to building resilient food systems.
8. We resolve to support efforts to ensure safe and
secure global mobility. We will establish a joint U.S.-EU Experts’ Working
Group to exchange information and expertise to reinitiate safe and sustainable
travel between the EU and the United States. We welcome progress made by the
United States and the EU toward additional EU member states meeting the requirements
necessary for visa-free travel to the United States and intend to continue our
dialogue towards visa waiver travel.
II. Protect our planet and foster green growth
9.
Climate change,
environmental degradation, and the loss of biodiversity are mutually-reinforcing,
extraordinary threats to humanity. We plan to continue and strengthen our
cooperation to tackle climate change, environmental degradation and the loss of
biodiversity, promote green growth, protect our oceans, and urge ambitious
action by all other major players.
10. We are committed to the Paris Agreement and its
effective and strengthened implementation. To provide an effective platform for
cooperation in this regard, we commit to establish a U.S.-EU High-Level Climate
Action Group. We intend to lead by example through becoming net zero greenhouse
gases (GHG) economies no later than 2050 and implementing our respective
enhanced 2030 targets / Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs). We resolve
to engage our international partners to achieve an ambitious outcome at the
26th UN Climate Change Conference of the Parties (COP26), making every effort
to keep a 1.5 degree Celsius limit on global temperature within reach. We
intend to closely coordinate to promote robust climate measures, address the risk
of carbon leakage, and cooperate on sustainable finance, including by providing
the private sector with usable tools and metrics.
11. We are determined to accelerate a climate-neutral
future and ensure a just transition that leaves no one behind, including
through low greenhouse gas emission technologies, an increasing uptake of
renewable energies, a stronger engagement to promote clean energy innovation in
Mission Innovation, increased energy efficiency and methane emissions
reduction, sustainable food systems, including climate-smart agricultural
systems, and sustainable and smart mobility. We commit to rapidly scaling up
technologies and policies that further accelerate the transition away from
unabated coal capacity and to an overwhelmingly decarbonized power system in
the 2030s, consistent with our respective 2030 NDCs and 2050 net zero
commitments. The U.S.-EU Energy Council will continue to lead coordination on
strategic energy issues, including decarbonization of the energy sector, energy
security, and sustainable energy supply chains. We resolve to increase our
cooperation on transition towards a climate-neutral, resource-efficient and
circular economy. In this context, we intend to work towards a
Transatlantic Green Technology Alliance that would foster cooperation on the
development and deployment of green technologies, as well as promote markets to
scale such technologies.
12. We intend to continue to scale up efforts to meet the
USD 100 billion per year climate finance goal through to 2025, in the context
of meaningful mitigation actions and transparency on implementation from public
and private sources, as well as to continue to scale up finance contributing to
climate adaptation action. In order to fulfill the objectives of the
Paris Agreement, we stress that international investments in unabated coal must
stop now and call for global efforts to phase out unabated coal in energy
production. We resolve to take concrete steps towards an absolute end to new
direct government support for unabated international thermal coal power
generation in third countries by the end of 2021, including through Official
Development Assistance, export finance, investment, and financial and trade
promotion support. We commit to reviewing our official trade, export, and
development finance policies towards these objectives.
13. We are strongly determined to halt and reverse
biodiversity loss by 2030 and take urgent action to address its drivers. In
this context, we are committed to the goal of conserving or protecting at least
30 percent of the global land and 30 percent of the global oceans by 2030. We
commit to contribute to this goal by conserving or protecting at least 30
percent of our own land, including terrestrial and inland waters, and coastal
and marine areas by 2030 according to national circumstances and approaches. We
plan to actively restore nature for the benefit of the health and well-being of
our citizens, and step up our cooperation on deforestation and wildlife
trafficking. We encourage others to make similar commitments to support efforts
that benefit both climate and biodiversity, and protect our oceans. We plan to
jointly promote a successful and ambitious post-2020 global biodiversity
framework at the 15th UN Biodiversity Conference of the Parties
(COP15). We also encourage partners to join multilateral efforts at the UN
Environment Assembly to consider next steps at the global level to tackle
plastics pollution.
14. We commit to working together to protect our oceans,
including by combatting marine litter. We resolve to support the designation of
new marine protected areas in the Southern Ocean, and continue cooperating for
the purpose of the sustainable blue economy, sustainable fishing, prevention of
Illegal, Unreported, and Unregulated (IUU) Fishing, and research through the
All-Atlantic Ocean Research alliance. We will also plan to work together at the
next UN Ocean Conference and at the intergovernmental conference on Marine
Biodiversity beyond National Jurisdiction.
III. Strengthen trade, investment, and technological cooperation
15. We commit to grow the U.S.-EU trade and investment
relationship as well as to uphold and reform the rules-based multilateral
trading system. We intend to use trade to help fight climate change, protect
the environment, promote workers’ rights, expand resilient and sustainable
supply chains, continue to cooperate in emerging technologies, and create
decent jobs. We resolve to stand together to protect our businesses and workers
from unfair trade practices, in particular those posed by non-market economies
that are undermining the world trading system.
16. We resolve to drive digital transformation that spurs
trade and investment, strengthens our technological and industrial leadership,
boosts innovation, and protects and promotes critical and emerging technologies
and infrastructure. We plan to cooperate on the development and deployment of
new technologies based on our shared democratic values, including respect for
human rights, and that encourages compatible standards and regulations.
17. To kick-start this positive agenda and to provide an
effective platform for cooperation, we establish a high-level U.S.-EU Trade and
Technology Council (TTC). The major goals of the TTC will be to grow the
bilateral trade and investment relationship; to avoid new unnecessary technical
barriers to trade; to coordinate, seek common ground, and strengthen global
cooperation on technology, digital issues, and supply chains; to support
collaborative research and exchanges; to cooperate on compatible and international
standards development; to facilitate regulatory policy and enforcement
cooperation and, where possible, convergence; to promote innovation and
leadership by U.S. and European firms; and to strengthen other areas of
cooperation. The cooperation and exchanges of the TTC will be without prejudice
to the regulatory autonomy of the United States and the European Union and will
respect the different legal systems in both jurisdictions. Cooperation within
the TTC will also feed into coordination in multilateral bodies and wider
efforts with like-minded partners, with the aim of promoting a democratic model
of digital governance.
18. The TTC will initially include working groups with
agendas focused on technology standards cooperation (including on AI, Internet
of Things, among other emerging technologies), climate and green tech, ICT
security and competitiveness, data governance and technology platforms, the
misuse of technology threatening security and human rights, export controls,
investment screening, promoting SMEs access to, and use of, digital
technologies, and global trade challenges. It will also include a working group
on reviewing and strengthening our most critical supply chains. Notably, we
commit to building a U.S.-EU partnership on the rebalancing of global supply
chains in semiconductors with a view to enhancing U.S. and EU respective
security of supply as well as capacity to design and produce the most powerful
and resource efficient semiconductors.
19. In parallel with the TTC, we intend to establish a
U.S.-EU Joint Technology Competition Policy Dialogue that would focus on
approaches to competition policy and enforcement, and increased cooperation in
the tech sector. To support collaborative research and innovation exchanges, we
promote a staff exchange program between our research funding agencies, and we
intend to explore the possibility of developing a new research initiative on
biotechnology and genomics, with a view to setting common standards. A new
implementing arrangement between the EU Joint Research Centre and the U.S.
National Institute of Standards and Technologies aims to expand cooperation to
new areas. We also resolve to deepen cooperation on cybersecurity information
sharing and situational awareness, as well as cybersecurity certification of
products and software.
20. We commit to work together to ensure safe, secure, and
trusted cross-border data flows that protect consumers and enhance privacy
protections, while enabling Transatlantic commerce. To this end, we plan
to continue to work together to strengthen legal certainty in Transatlantic
flows of personal data. We also commit to continue cooperation on consumer
protection and access to electronic evidence in criminal matters.
21. We salute having reached an Understanding on a
Cooperative Framework for Large Civil Aircraft, reflecting a new transatlantic
relationship in this area. We are committed to make this framework
work to promote a level playing field, overcome long-standing differences,
avoid future litigation, and more effectively address the challenge posed
by non-market economies. We will engage in discussions to allow the
resolution of existing differences on measures regarding steel and aluminum
before the end of the year. In this regard, we are determined to work together
to resolve tensions arising from the U.S. application of tariffs on imports
from the EU under U.S. Section 232, and will work towards allowing trade to
recover from its 2020 lows and ending the WTO disputes. We
commit to ensure the long-term viability of our steel and aluminum
industries, and to address excess capacity. We are determined to foster a
fair, sustainable, and modern international tax system and cooperate to reach a
global consensus on the question of taxation of multinational companies through
the G20/OECD Inclusive Framework and look forward to reaching an agreement at
the July meeting of G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank
Governors.
22. We intend to work cooperatively on efforts to achieve
meaningful World Trade Organization (WTO) reform and help promote outcomes that
benefit our workers and companies. We commit to work together to advance the
proper functioning of the WTO’s negotiating function and dispute settlement
system, which requires addressing long-standing issues. Plurilateral mechanisms
can provide a means for addressing new trade concerns when multilateral
solutions are not possible. We plan to continue to cooperate on special and
differential treatment, and on our joint transparency proposal. We intend to
seek to update the WTO rulebook with more effective disciplines on industrial
subsidies, unfair behavior of state-owned enterprises, and other trade and
market distorting practices. We intend to work closely together, and with the
wider support of the Membership of the WTO, to conclude a meaningful agreement
on fisheries subsidies, and to a trade policy response to the COVID-19 pandemic
that facilitates expansion of production and equitable access to vaccines, and
to work towards a WTO Ministerial later this year that contributes to a more
effective and modernized rules-based trading system.
23. We commit to strengthen our cooperation on space by
building on the Galileo – GPS Agreement. This could include making progress on
access to Galileo’s Public Regulated Service signal, engaging on space-based
Earth observation to support climate policies, for instance by monitoring CO2
levels and emergency services, as well as exchanging on our respective
approaches on space traffic management.
IV. Build a more democratic, peaceful and secure world
24. Together, the European Union and the United States are
an anchor for democracy, peace, and security around the world, to peacefully
prevent and resolve conflicts, uphold the rule of law and international law,
and promote human rights for all, gender equity and equality, and the
empowerment of women and girls, including by working together through
multilateral institutions including the UN Human Rights Council. Together, we
resolve to address humanitarian needs and stand up for international
humanitarian law as well as expand the resource base for humanitarian action. We
reject authoritarianism in all its forms around the globe, resisting autocrats’
efforts to create an environment that protects their rule and serves their
interests, while undermining liberal democracies. We intend to enhance
cooperation on the use of sanctions to pursue shared foreign policy and
security objectives, while avoiding possible unintended consequences for
European and U.S. interests. In this respect, we resolve to continue to engage
on issues on which we might have different approaches.
25. We intend to support democracy across the globe by
defending media freedom; advancing a free and open internet; fostering
responsible behavior in cyberspace; upholding transparency and combatting
corruption in financial systems, politics, and the economy; tackling
disinformation; protecting civil society and civic space; advancing women’s
political participation and empowerment; and protecting the human rights of all
people. We resolve to lead by example at home. We intend to partner in the
Summit for Democracy, committing to concrete actions to defend universal human
rights, prevent democratic backsliding, and fight corruption. We plan to
increase cooperation and exchange information and expertise to increase
resilience against and to counter foreign information manipulation and
interference, all forms of coercion including economic pressure, hybrid
threats, malicious cyber activities, terrorism and violent extremism, and other
common security threats. We resolve to support the ability of civil society and
independent media to operate freely, and to protect and defend journalists in
order to hold governments accountable.
26. We intend to closely consult and cooperate on the full
range of issues in the framework of our respective similar multi-faceted
approaches to China, which include elements of cooperation, competition, and
systemic rivalry. We intend to continue coordinating on our shared concerns,
including ongoing human rights violations in Xinjiang and Tibet; the erosion of
autonomy and democratic processes in Hong Kong; economic coercion;
disinformation campaigns; and regional security issues. We remain seriously
concerned about the situation in the East and South China Seas and strongly
oppose any unilateral attempts to change the status quo and increase tensions.
We reaffirm the critical importance of respecting international law, in
particular the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) noting its
provisions setting forth the lawful maritime entitlements of
States, on maritime delimitation, on the sovereign rights and jurisdictions of
States, on the obligation to settle disputes by peaceful means, and on the
freedom of navigation and overflight and other internationally lawful uses of
the sea. We underscore the importance of peace and stability across the Taiwan
Strait, and encourage the peaceful resolution of cross-Strait issues. We intend
also to coordinate on our constructive engagement with China on issues such as
climate change and non-proliferation, and on certain regional issues.
27. We stand united in our principled approach towards
Russia and we are ready to respond decisively to its repeating pattern of
negative behavior and harmful activities, which Russia must address to prevent
the further deterioration of relations including on the list of so-called
unfriendly states.To coordinate our policies and actions, we plan to establish
a U.S.-EU high-level dialogue on Russia. We condemn Russia’s continued actions
to undermine Ukraine’s and Georgia’s sovereignty, territorial integrity, and
independence. We call on Russia to ensure foreign diplomatic missions in Russia
can operate in a safe, secure, and productive fashion. We urge Russia to stop
its continuous crackdown on civil society, the opposition, and independent
media, and release all political prisoners. At the same time, we keep channels
of communication open and possibilities for selective cooperation in areas of
common interest. We also commit to work together to address the urgent and
escalating threat from criminal ransomware networks that pose risks to our
citizens and companies.
28. We are determined to continue to stand in support of
the sovereignty, independence, and territorial integrity of the EU’s Eastern
partners and will support the reform path of Ukraine, Georgia, and the Republic
of Moldova. We resolve to work towards long-term peace, resilience, and
stability in the South Caucasus. We stand with the people of Belarus and their
demands for human rights and democracy. We resolve to hold the Lukashenka
regime to account for its escalating attacks on human rights and fundamental
freedoms and for endangering aviation safety through the unprecedented and
unacceptable forced diversion of an EU passenger airplane under false
pretenses, and the subsequent arrest of a journalist as part of a continuing
assault on opposition voices and the freedom of the
press.
29. We intend to further strengthen our joint engagement
in the Western Balkans, including through the EU-facilitated dialogue between
Belgrade and Pristina on normalization of their relations, and by supporting
key reforms for EU integration. We resolve to work hand-in-hand for sustainable
de-escalation in the Eastern Mediterranean, where differences should be settled
through dialogue in good faith and in accordance with international law. We aim
for a cooperative and mutually beneficial relationship with a democratic
Turkey. We plan to join efforts for a stable and secure Middle East and North
Africa. The European Union and the United States welcome the ceasefire in the
conflict in the Middle East and reaffirm the need for Israelis and Palestinians
to enjoy equal measures of freedom, security, prosperity, and democracy on the
basis of a two-State solution. In light of the growing humanitarian needs
across Syria and the COVID 19 pandemic, we call on the UN Security Council to
ensure that humanitarian aid can reach all people in need in Syria, including
through cross border and cross line operations. We also regret the recent
illegitimate elections in Syria and call on the international community to hold
the Assad regime accountable for its brutal crimes and to work together to
advance a political resolution to the conflict in line with UNSC resolution
2254. We reaffirm our commitment to support Libya in its path towards peace,
security, and stability, and to work with parties in Yemen to agree to the UN’s
proposal for an immediate ceasefire.
30. We are committed to peace and sustainable development
in Africa. The political, human rights, security, and humanitarian situation in
Ethiopia, Somalia, and the Sahel countries is of grave concern. We share deep
concerns about the growing political and ethnic polarization throughout
Ethiopia that threatens the country’s sovereignty and territorial integrity. We
condemn ongoing atrocities, including widespread sexual violence, and we
welcome the ongoing OHCHR investigations and call for full accountability for
reported human rights violations in Tigray and for the perpetrators to be
brought to justice. We also call for the withdrawal of foreign forces, and
unimpeded humanitarian access. Following the Summit on financing African
economies, we plan to act together with our African partners to ensure
equitable access to safe and effective vaccines, and to provide financial
support towards a sustainable recovery. We are determined to significantly
amplify, on a voluntary basis, the impact of the proposed general allocation of
Special Drawing Rights by the IMF for Africa.
31. We intend to work together with our partners for a
free and open Indo-Pacific, which is inclusive, based on the rule of law and
democratic values, and will contribute to the security and sustainable
development of the region. We intend to work together to promote a swift return
to democracy in Burma. In view of the withdrawal of international troops from Afghanistan,
we intend to work closely to support the ongoing peace process and sustain
regional stability and protect human rights gains, in particular for women and
girls.
32. We further commit to strengthen our cooperation with
the countries of Latin America and the Caribbean to support socio-economic
recovery, address economic vulnerability, and push for stronger democratic
governance, including supporting a negotiated outcome that leads to free and
fair elections in Venezuela.
33. We resolve to work together to retain the Arctic as a
region of peace and stability and collaborate, in particular through the Arctic
Council, to ensure a clean habitat and constructive cooperation on climate
change, environmental protection, and sustainable economic development benefiting
the region’s inhabitants.
34. We resolve to work together to counter the
proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and renew global arms control
efforts. We emphasize our support for the ongoing diplomatic efforts and
negotiations in Vienna aimed at facilitating the return of the United States to
the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) as well as the full and
effective implementation of the deal by Iran and the United States. We share
serious concerns about steps taken by Iran, which are inconsistent with
the JCPOA. The European Union and the United States recognize that,
alongside the return to full and effective implementation by Iran of its
nuclear related commitments, the lifting of sanctions constitutes an essential
part of the JCPOA. The JCPOA remains critical to ensuring the exclusively
peaceful nature of Iran’s nuclear program and to upholding the global nuclear
non-proliferation architecture.
35. We resolve to revive dialogue on migration and
mobility, including innovative solutions on effective and safe migration policy
in cooperation with third countries, including via the U.S.-EU Platform on
Migration and Asylum.
36. We welcome the EU’s invitation to the United States to
join the PESCO project Military Mobility as an important step towards closer
U.S.-EU partnership in security and defense. We recognize the
contribution EU security and defense initiatives can make to both European and
Transatlantic security and plan to launch a dedicated dialogue on security and
defense and pursue closer cooperation in this field. We commit to work
towards an Administrative Arrangement for the United States with the European
Defence Agency, with discussions, including on modalities and conditions for a
closer and mutually beneficial cooperation in this framework, beginning as soon
as possible. We reaffirm our unwavering support for robust NATO-EU
cooperation and to the commitments outlined and principles enshrined in the
2016 and 2018 Joint Declarations. We will work jointly to raise the level
of NATO-EU ambition in order to further strengthen this mutually reinforcing
key strategic partnership.
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