Brussels, 18/10/2007 (Agence Europe) - On 17 October in Lisbon, European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso, together with Regional Policy Commissioner Danuta Hübner, Employment and Social Affairs Commissioner Vladimir Špidla, Portuguese Prime Minister Mr José Sócrates and Mr. Francisco Nunes Correia, Portuguese Minister for Regional Development, attended the signing ceremony and public presentation of 10 Operational Programmes. These programmes will direct the action of Cohesion Policy in Portugal for 2007-2013. Validation of the Portuguese National Strategic Framework (NSRF) took place on 28 June last.
The signings cover seven regional programmes (Azores, Alentejo, Algarve, Centro, Lisboa, Madeira and Norte) and three thematic programmes: "Competitiveness factors" and "Territorial enhancement" with investment from the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) and the Cohesion Fund (these amount to €14.8 billion including the regional programmes) and "Human Potential", under the European Social Fund (ESF) which amounts to €6.1 billion.
The new strategy will focus on human resources, innovation and technology, enterprise development and territorial cohesion. As priorities, the programmes will contribute to the completion of the trans-European transport networks (TEN-T), to the improvement of energy efficiency and reduction of CO2, to fostering the involvement of enterprises in research and development (R&D) and to the regeneration of deprived urban areas. The "Competitiveness factors" programme will increase the availability of micro-credits for enterprise, notably through the new European initiative "JEREMIE" (Joint European Resources for Micro to medium Enterprises).
In total, for 2007-2013, Portugal will benefit from €21.5 billion to implement Cohesion policy. The regions “Norte”, “Centro”, “Alentejo”, and “Azores” are eligible under the Convergence objective. The “Algarve” region will be eligible for “statistical phasing-out” (transitional support up to 2013). The region of Madeira falls into the phasing-in regime for the Regional Competitiveness and Employment objective, whereas Lisbon is a full Regional Competitiveness and Employment objective region.
More than 60 % of the investments for the "Convergence" regions have been "earmarked" by the authorities for expenditure related to the renewed "Lisbon agenda for growth and jobs". This focuses on sectors such as information and communication technologies, research and development, renewable energies, and support to small and medium enterprises. This proportion exceeds 75 % for regions under the Competitiveness and Employment objective. (O.L.)