Subsidiarity (European Union)


In the European Union, the principle of subsidiarity is the principle that decisions are kept with Member States if the intervention of the European Union is not necessary. De facto, the European Union takes action only when Member States’ power is limited. The principle of subsidiarity applied to the European Union can be resumed to “Europe where necessary, national where possible”.
The principle of subsidiarity is premised from the fundamental EU principle of conferral, ensuring that the European Union is a union of member states and competences are voluntarily conferred to Member States. The conferral principle also guarantees the principle of proportionality, establishing that the European Union should undertake only the minimum necessary actions.
The principle of subsidiarity is one of the core principles of the European law, and is especially important to the European intergovernmentalist school of thought.

EU recognition of the principle of subsidiarity

The term “principle of subsidiarity” was not referred to in the first European texts. It is mentioned for the first time in 1992 in the Treaty establishing the European Community as amended by the Maastricht Treaty. The Article 3b states:“In areas which do not fall within its exclusive competence, the Community shall take action in accordance with the principle of subsidiarity only if and in so far as the objectives of the proposed action cannot be sufficiently achieved by the Member States and can therefore by reason of the scale or effects of the proposed action be better achieved by the Community”
The Treaty on the European Union, also written in 1992, states: “decisions are taken as closely as possible to the citizen in accordance with the principle of subsidiarity.”
In 1997, the Treaty of Amsterdam proposes a Protocol on the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality establishing the conditions of application of both principles. It is established that the Union wishes that “decisions are taken as closely as possible to the citizens of the Union and that “the overall approach to the application of the subsidiarity principle will continue to guide the actions of the Union’s institutions as well as the development of the application of the principle of subsidiarity”.
The Treaty of Lisbon places in 2007 the principle of subsidiarity as one of the fundamental principles of the European Union. The article 3b states: “The limits of Union competences are governed by the principle of conferral. The use of Union competences is governed by the principles of subsidiarity and proportionality”. Since the Lisbon Treaty came into force at the end of 2009, national Parliaments have a role in policing the principle of subsidiarity. Under the so-called Early Warning System, they can submit reasoned opinions if they feel a new Commission proposal violates the subsidiarity principle.

The principle of subsidiarity in EU governance

The unprecedented development of subsidiarity in the European Union in the 1990s was caused by the increased of EU policies in the post-Maastricht period. In the 1990s, the European Union was preparing for the future enlargement of Central and Eastern European Countries as well as for the establishment of the Eurozone, and therefore needed to reinforce its task-allocation model. This model, called EU competences, is subject to the two fundamental principles of subsidiarity and proportionality.

EU competences

There are 3 competences in the European Union governance:
The principle of subsidiarity guarantees that in the area of non-exclusive competences, the Union may act only if an action cannot be sufficiently achieved at the Member States level, and could be better achieved at the Union level.

Federalist v. Intergovernmentalist school of thoughts

Since its inception, the European Community, then becoming the European Union, has faced the remarks and critics of two main school of thoughts: the federalists, defending a centralised decision-making model, and the intergovernmentalists, in favour of a broader share of competences.
On one side, the federalist school is in favour of more supranational decisions. For them, most of the decisions should be taken at a central level, by the Union, in order to improve the efficiency of decision-making, enjoy scale economies and avoid negative spillovers issued from local decisions. The fiscal federalism theory therefore perceives the principle of subsidiarity as a guarantee that the decisions will be taken at central level when there would demonstrable benefits of conducting the policy by the Union.
On the other side, the school of intergovernmentalism defends a decentralized model and more decisions taken by Member States, with a process in which the local knowledge enables to take the most adapted decisions and the citizens can express their disagreement by direct contact with the politicians or leaving the region. For the intergovernmentalist theory, the principle of subsidiarity guarantees that decisions will be taken as closely as possible to citizens, and therefore at the lowest level possible.
The EU principle of subsidiarity is seen by the literature as sufficiently unbounded to satisfy both school of thoughts and approach to centralization.

The principle of subsidiarity in EU environment policy

EU environmental policy

The Paris Summit in 1972 announced the development of an Environmental Action Programme. This European initiative demonstrated the European Economic Community's endorsement in environmental policymaking by defining medium and long-term goals and actions. Historically the task-allocation model of the EU environmental policy has been widely criticised, pointing out the lack of European coordination being an obstacle to the decision-making. Therefore, the European Union increased progressively its power over the years, mainly by a series of amendments to the Treaty of Rome and the increase of its EU bodies's influence over individual Member States.
The EU environmental policy is a shared competence between the Union and Member States: the Member States are able to exercise their competence only if the Union has not already exercised its competence.

EU ordinary legislative procedure

Based on the ordinary legislative procedure, the EU Council can propose suggestions of environmental legislation to the European Commission, who has the exclusive right to propose new environmental policies to the European Parliament and the Council of the EU. After they received the proposal, the European Parliament and the Council of the EU follow the co-decision procedure and review the proposal; they can either reject, amend or approve the proposal. If approved, the European Commission has the responsibility to ensure the implementation of the environmental legislation by Member States.

European Environment Agency

The European Environment Agency was created in 1994 and is a European agency providing information on the environment. Its headquarter is located in Copenhagen. Its management board is made of representatives of 33 states, a representative of the European Commission and scientists appointed by the European Parliament.
The EEA helps the EU institutional bodies in the development, implementation and evaluation of the EU environmental policy, but does not have any competence in the legislation and adoption of binding acts in this field.