Publications /
Opinion

Back
Appointment of the New European Commission II: Where is Africa?
Authors
November 29, 2024

After the European Parliament cleared the 26 candidates proposed by Member States to form the European Commission for 2024-2029, the new European super-ministers will take up their functions on 1 December, with a revised portfolio structure. Where does Africa fit into this new organizational chart of the European Commission?

Jozef Síkela, a Czech banker with a professional career in Austria, Slovenia and Ukraine, lately serving as his country’s Ministry of Industry, has been appointed Commissioner for International Partnerships. He will oversee the EU’s vast development cooperation portfolio, including the management of most of the Neighbourhood, Development and International Cooperation Instrument, with a total budget of 70.8 billion euros for 2021-2027, making the EU the largest global donor. Since financial assistance projects articulate EU cooperation with African countries, this Commissioner and his services at DG INTPA will serve as the primary interlocutors for African countries at the EU, working closely with European Union Delegations under the supervision of the new High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Estonian Kaja Kallas.

In her letter of mission addressed to the new Commissioner to set out his mandate, President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen outlined the priorities for this key portfolio. The Commissioner’s first task is to deploy and scale up the Global Gateway initiative, launched in 2021, to “ensure it puts forward the most attractive integrated offer to our partners, including on infrastructure investment, trade and macro-economic support.” This initiative is designed to compete with China’s Belt and Road Initiative, aiming to develop a global network of infrastructure to capture international merchandise flows and raw materials.

For Africa, the Global Gateway launched the Africa-Europe Investment Package, which is expected to mobilize approximately 150 billion euros in public and private investment by 2027—half of the total global budget. These investments will be directed toward sustainable infrastructure projects (digital, energy, transport), as well as initiatives in health, education, skills, and efforts to address climate change and environment challenges. In his hearing before the European Parliament, the new Commissioner emphasized the central role of this initiative in his mandate: “I was selected to turn the Global Gateway from a start-up into a scale-up,” reflecting his background as a finance specialist.

However, as inferred from his remarks during the hearing, his approach may not lead to significant changes: “If you see the basic rules on what to do with a startup in order to have a scaleup, in first place you will find ‘'better communication and marketing. So it starts that we have to talk more about the things we are doing, about the things we are doing right, to maybe finish certain showcases where we can achieve that basically the receiver states will become our ambassadors and to maybe even make a comparison with our rivals' approach.”

In terms of bilateral cooperation with partner countries, the letter of mission states: “You will work on building comprehensive partnerships with an integrated approach so that economic, humanitarian, development, peace and security policies all contribute to strengthening these partnerships. These will notably address the root causes and key drivers of irregular migration in partner countries and fight the networks of smugglers.” This formalizes the irregular migration control conditionality that has been a cornerstone of the EU’s development cooperation, as well as trade and investment relations, with partner countries since 2016.

37 Words

The mission letter also outlines the geographic scope of the new Commissioner’s mandate: Africa, Central Asia, Asia and the Indo-Pacific, and Latin America and the Caribbean. Africa is mentioned explicitly only once: “You will play a leading role in strengthening our mutual partnership with Africa, ensuring support to bridge the investment gap through Global Gateway, and working together to mutually address the concerns of our partners across the continent.” This amounts to barely 37 words or three lines in a letter that stretches to 2,500 words and seven pages. Notably, there is no explicit reference to the Africa-EU Partnership, despite it being listed as “a key priority for the Commission” on its official webpage.[1] The new Commissioner was more forthcoming in his confirmation hearing, dedicating more than one page (out of 13[2]) to his plans for EU-Africa cooperation.

Paradoxically, Africa is slightly more prominent in the mission letter of the new High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy and Vice-President of the European Commission. In a section on “A more strategic approach to our neighbourhood and partnerships,” there are a couple of more concrete references to Africa: “You will ensure new impetus in our mutual partnership with Africa ahead of the next EU-African Union Summit in 2025, working closely with the Commissioner for International Partnerships. You will work on a renewed approach to the Sahel region, given the growing risks of insecurity and instability in the region.”

However, when considered alongside the rebranding of DG DEVCO as DG International Partnerships in 2021,[3] the new structure signals the EU’s realignment around its own interests, rather than development or poverty reduction as its primary strategic objectives. This is made explicit in the mission letter’s first paragraph, which describes the new Commissioner’s assignment: “In recent years, the EU has maintained its unwavering commitments on development and on the eradication of poverty, while taking a more a more assertive approach in aligning its interests with its partnerships in a more contested and unstable world.” African countries, be advised.

The profiles and mission letters of the new European Commissioners can be found here: https://commission.europa.eu/about-european-commission/towards-new-commission-2024-2029/commissioners-designate-2024-2029_en

           

 

 


[1] https://international-partnerships.ec.europa.eu/policies/africa-eu-partnership_en.

[2] https://hearings.elections.europa.eu/documents/sikela/sikela_writtenquestionsandanswers_en.pdf.

[3] See the opinion piece by Iván Martín (2021) « La disparition de DG DEVCO : mauvais temps pour la coopération internationale au développement », 18 January 2021, https://www.policycenter.ma/opinion/la-disparition-de-dg-devco-mauvais-temps-pour-la-cooperation-internationale-au-developpement.

RELATED CONTENT

  • Authors
    January 6, 2022
    Le président français Emmanuel Macron a de grandes ambitions pour l'Union européenne. Sa doctrine est d'approfondir l'intégration politique de l'Union. Donner à l'Europe l'esprit et les moyens pour faire face aux bouleversements écologiques, sécuritaires, énergétiques et technologiques qui menacent la place de l'Union dans un monde en profondes ruptures. La présidence française du Conseil de l'Union européenne pour le premier semestre 2022 est pleine de défis, mais c'est l'occasion ...
  • Authors
    December 6, 2021
    Between January 2020 and June 2021, the world spent about US $16.5 trillion (18% of world GDP) to fight COVID-19, and this amount does not even include the most important losses such as deaths, mental health effects, restrictions on human freedom, and other nonmonetary suffering. Nearly 90% of this amount was spent by developed economies; the rest by emerging market and developing economies. Low-income countries spent just US $12.5 billion, or less than 0.0001% of the total. Moreove ...
  • Authors
    Pascal Chaigneau
    Eugène Berg
    Rodolphe Monnet
    Jacques Gravereau
    Jérémy Ghez
    Olivier Tramond
    Niagalé Bagayoko
    Alain Oudot de Dainville
    Jérôme Evrard
    Coordination de l’ouvrage: Imane Lahrich
    Fatine Cherkaoui
    October 28, 2021
    Depuis l’accession au trône du Roi Mohammed VI, l’Afrique s’est transformée en priorité de la diplomatie marocaine. Sur le plan économique, l’Afrique est devenue le prolongement naturel du Maroc en termes d’investissements et d’implantations. Pascal Chaigneau s’attarde sur les relations affaiblies Europe-Afrique, l’ambitieuse relation Chine-Afrique ainsi que les relations entre la Russie, les Etats-Unis, la Turquie ou encore les pays du Golf et l’Afrique. Ce chapitre traite égalemen ...
  • July 16, 2021
    Over 25 years after the launch of the Euro-Mediterranean Partnership (EMP) in the 1995 Barcelona Conference, the Mediterranean geographical area continues to be subject to the reflection and conceptualisation of the European Union (EU) with the aim of firmly establishing this strategic neighbourhood relationship and addressing the progress of the inherent challenges. Since then, several initiatives have marked the Euro-Mediterranean framework as stages on the path that claimed to be ...
  • November 18, 2020
    On the eve of the final negotiations on ‘‘future relations’’, an agreement between the United Kingdom and the European Union (EU) seems likely. First of all, London sees American support vanishing: unlike Donald Trump, President-elect Joe Biden is against Brexit. He announced that a USA-United Kingdom trade agreement would be ruled out if a ‘‘hard border’’ was re-established between the two Irelands. However, this is precisely what an exit without an agreement would imply: Northern ...
  • November 13, 2020
    A la veille des ultimes négociations sur les « relations futures », un accord entre le Royaume-Uni et l’Union européenne (UE) paraît probable. D’abord, Londres voit s’envoler l’appui américain : contrairement à Donald Trump, le président élu Joe Biden est défavorable au Brexit. Il a annoncé qu’un accord commercial USA-Royaume-Uni serait exclu si une « frontière dure » était rétablie entre les deux Irlandes. Or, c’est justement ce qu’impliquerait une sortie sans accord : l’Irlande d ...
  • Authors
    Hamza M’jahed
    October 19, 2020
    La Commission de l’Union européenne (UE) a présenté, le 23 septembre 2020, son Pacte sur la migration et l’asile, supposé être l’un des piliers de la nouvelle présidence de l’instance exécutive. Sur ce sujet, devenu quasi-existentiel pour l’UE, l’ambition est de repenser la stratégie migratoire européenne, en prônant une approche pragmatique et réaliste pour faire face à ce « défi » dont les enjeux divisent profondément l’Union, depuis l’afflux des réfugiés en 2015, qui a renforcé l ...
  • Authors
    April 9, 2020
    Our Senior Fellow, Len Ishmael has contributed to the Quarterly Journal by Beyond the Horizon ISSG (Volume 3 Issue 1), under the theme « Influencing and Promoting Global Peace and Security Horizon Insights », with a Policy Paper where she addresses China’s use of crises to « deepen and extend power and influence in Europe and the world ». Standing in solidarity with countries in Europe and elsewhere in the fight against COVID-19, China scores a diplomatic coup and extends its claim ...