The European Newspaper Publishers' Association is an international non-profitgroupadvocating the interests of the European newspaper publishing industry at different European and international organisations and institutions. ENPA's members together represent over 5,200 national, regional and local newspaper titles that in 2008 were bought by around 140 million people and read by 280 million people per day. Publishing industries as a whole constitute an important economic sector in the EU, then employing more than 750,000 people in 64,000 companies.
Mission statement
The group exists to:
enable European newspaper publishers to speak with one voice to European institutions and influence policy in publishers’ common interests;
represent and defend the interests of the press related to legislative or policy issues that might affect their freedom or economic role;
provide services to members and their publishers that are closely aligned to its lobbying mandate such as the transmission of information on the current state of legislative initiatives and their likely impact; and
ENPA is a member of the World Association of Newspapers, a non-profit, non-governmental organization made up of 76 national newspaper associations, 12 news agencies, 10 regional press organisations and individual newspaper executives in 100 countries. ENPA is a registered observer at the Council of Europe where its delegates participate in the work of the Media and Information Society Division.
History
It was founded in 1961 as the Communauté des Association d’Editeurs de Journaux du Marché Commun. it changed its name in the mid 1990s to ENPA – the European Newspaper Publishers’ Association. At the end of 2015, the association split into two entities. Half of the associations created a new organisation under a new management/leadership structure which launched in January 2016: News Media Europe. The remaining members included the national associations of Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, Luxembourg, Poland, Serbia, Slovakia, and Switzerland.
Issues
Supports advertising self-regulation and opposes the introduction of any advertising restrictions.
Urges manufacturers of paper and inks to continue research for more environmentally sustainable alternative models.
Seeks to remind the European institutions that since media is predominantly a national product and that there is no lack of media pluralism at the European level, and in line with the principle of subsidiarity, there is no competence for the European Union to act.
Seeks to promote the role of newspapers and the written press in enhancing media literacy;
Provides a forum within which media literacy experts from across Europe can exchange best practices.
Works to ensure that no communications or legislation at the European level include any mention of restriction to the right of the media to report on sports events or to the right of the public to receive newsworthy information.
Supports the application of zero-rate VAT on newspaper sales, set by national governments, not at the European level.