Patrick Verhoeven ECSA Secretary-General |
of cargo-handling and passenger services from the market access chapter, they have also added the possibility for Member States to also exclude pilotage, without ensuring a proper supervision and the full transparency of pilotage charges,” ECSA said in a release.
As explained by ECSA, “this severely limits the scope of the Regulation while increasing the heterogeneity in the legal framework applicable to EU ports. What is more, provisions pertaining to the consultation of port users as well as a supervision mechanism to ensure the proper implementation of EU rules have been removed.” Patrick Verhoeven, ECSA Secretary-General noted that regardless of the outcome of the current legislative process, “the European Commission should still encourage port development and foster efficiency.
Progress on many policy areas, such as on pilotage exemption certificates, is long overdue, while the principles of free market access and transparency are not uniformly applied in all EU ports.”