Transcript Slide 1

ORGALIME
Manufacturing Matters
32 Member associations, 22 countries
130,000 companies, €1,510 billion of annual output, 9.7 million people employed
Austria
FEEI
FMMI
Belgium
AGORIA
Bulgaria
BASSEL
Denmark
DI
Finland
Federation of Finnish
Technology Industries
France
FIEEC
FIM
Germany
VDMA
WSM
ZVEI
Great Britain
BEAMA
EAMA
GAMBICA
Lithuania
LINPRA
Italy
ANIE
ANIMA
Luxembourg
ILTM
The Netherlands
FME-CWM
METAALUNIE
Norway
Norsk Industri
Poland
PIGE
Portugal
AIMMAP
ANEMM
Slovenia
GZS-MPIA
Spain
CONFEMETAL
SERCOBE
Switzerland
SWISSMEM
Ireland
IEEF
Sweden
TEKNIKFÖRETAGEN
Latvia
MASOC
Croatia
HUP
Orgalime industry
Comparative size of EU manufacturing
Orgalime as the voice of European engineering represents
3 industrial branches that manufacture some 28% of EU total output
Metal articles 7%
Mechanical
engineering 9.5%
Electrical & electronic
engineering 10,5%
Orgalime industry by sectors
Orgalime roles and aims
N°1 voice of the engineering industry on selected issues
Inform members about EU initiatives
Coordinate and lobby positions of members - European
Sector Associations and networks
Provide a service for European Sector Associations in our
industry including as associate members
Do specific work on General Conditions, guidelines for
application of legislation, etc…
Orgalime issues today
Competitiveness
Energy and Environment
Technical Policy issues
Policy issues
Industrial Policy
Market and Trade issues
Legal issues
Orgalime issues today
Energy + Environment
Policy issues
Competitiveness
Industrial policy horizontal
Technical Policy issues
ERP/Energy efficiency
Revision New Approach
WEEE/ROHS/Waste
Low Voltage Directive
REACH
Machinery Directive
EFFRA
IED
EMC Directive
Regulatory framework
EPBD
Construction Products
Smart grids
Electromagnetic Fields
Electric vehicles
Pressure Equipment
‘Manufacturing matters’
Research and innovation –
Investment
climate
and
taxation
Skills and labour
Directive...
Industrial policy sectoral
Market and trade issues
Legal issues
'EnginEurope'- Mechanical’
Market access
European Contract Law
Electra’ – Electrical
Market Surveillance
IPR
'Strengthening the link'-
Anti-Counterfeiting
Competition Legislation
Metalworking
Raw Materials
Product Liability
Key Enabling technologies
Standardisation Policy
Standard contracts
N°1 Challenge constraining
regulators
BREFs
Best practices
Noise
Optical
Radiations
IED
Physical Agents
VOCs
Vibes
Environment &
Occupational Health
REACH
EMF
Packaging
Clean Technology
Substances
Manufacturing
ECO Label
EMAS
Business process
assembly, marketing
distribution, sale
RoHS revision
EMF
RoHS
EuP
Design
Air
Use
Environment &
Public Health
Noise
Environment
Liability
Water
Extraction of
natural resources
Waste
shipment
Recycling & Disposal
Waste
framework
Hazardous
waste
WEEE
WEEE revision
Outdoor Noise
The importance of networks
Flexible networks
Industry networks e.g.
CEEMET
European networks
Business Europe
National networks
...
Other players
Alliance
The completed jigsaw
European Parliament
European Commission
Council
European
Alliance
CEEMET
Orgalime
European
Sector
Committees
Business
Europe
Member state
governments
National
Confederation
National
European
Institutions
National
Employers’
Federations
National
Association
Regional
Local
Regional
governments
City council
Employers
Trade
Orgalime Active Committees
Working Groups and Task Forces
Presidents - Directors
 Presidents’ Board
 Top Executive Forums
 General Assembly
 Board of Directors
Horizontal issues and WGs
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Trade Policy Network
Anti Counterfeiting TF
Legal Affairs WG
ECO WG
EPPE TF
NAMS TF
REACH Core Group
IED (ex. IPPC) TF
CPR TF
GAD TF
Standardisation TF
Economists & Statistics WG
R&D WG
Branch Activities
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Orgalime CEEI
TCC
WEEE/RoHS TF
Electra Sherpa Group
Electric Vehicles TF
Smart Grids TF
Electromagnetic Fields TF
MELC (Mechanical Engin.)
THG
Machinery Directive TF
PED TF
Noise TF
Mechanical Engineering
Sherpa Group
 MALC (Metalworking)
 Steel Users Group
Who does what?
Example: climate change
European Commission
European Sector
Associations
National Level
Follow up
National Level
European Parliament
Regulation
 ETS
 EPBD
 Eco Design Directive
Driving political
message
 Electra
 Positions
 T&D Europe
 ESMIG
 Orgalime platform
 Building regulations for existing
stock of buildings
 Modernising public buildings
 Permitting for power lines
 Public lighting and telematics
 Incentives: tax incentives,
temporary subsidies
Conclusions
Continuous regulatory change
Making our voice heard in Brussels
16.500 lobbyists and growing - 20.000 officials
Making our voice heard nationally
(Risk of) fragmentation of our national networks
(Sometimes) weak representation structures in
new member states at a time when after
enlargement they play an ever stronger role
Changing financing structures
And of course competition…