The Commission is planning to adopt its monthly infringements package, Brussels

Berlaymontgebouw in Brussel
Kevin Bergenhenegouwen
date December 7, 2017
city Brussels, Belgium
location Berlaymont building (BERL) i Show location
organisation European Commission (EC) i

European Commission - Upcoming events

Thursday, 7 December 2017: The Commission is planning to adopt its monthly infringements package

The news:

On Thursday, 7 December 2017, the European Commission is currently planning to adopt its monthly infringements package. These decisions seek to enforce EU law across Europe so that citizens and businesses can benefit fully from the internal market.

A press release and a comprehensive factsheet on key decisions will be available in the Press Release Database on the day.

The background:

The Member States of the EU must apply EU law correctly and timely. The European Commission acts as a Guardian of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU) and oversees the application of EU law under the supervision of the Court of Justice of the European Union (the Court). Article 258 of the TFEU gives the Commission the power to take legal action against a Member State that is not respecting its obligations under EU law.

The European Commission may open a formal infringement procedure by sending a letter of formal notice (LFN, Article 258 of TFEU) if a Member State does not comply with EU law. If the Commission receives no satisfactory reply, the Commission requests the Member State to comply within a given time limit by sending a reasoned opinion (Article 258 of TFEU). If the Member State does not send a (satisfactory) reply after receiving the reasoned opinion, the Commission brings the Member State concerned before the Court of Justice of the European Union (the Court, Article 258 of TFEU).

In case the Member State still does not comply, the Commission launches a second infringement procedure by sending a second letter of formal notice. In a second judgement, the Court may, on the basis of a proposal from the EC, impose lump sum and/or a daily penalty payment on a MS concerned (Art 260(2) of TFEU). In cases of failure to convert EU legislative directives into national law on time, the Commission may propose penalty payments without the need for a second judgement (Article 260(3) of TFEU).

More information:

infographic on the stages of an EU infringement procedure;

monitoring the application of European Union law;

consult the register of infringement decisions;

questions and answers on the EU infringement procedure.

AGENDA/17/4924

Press contacts:

Alexander WINTERSTEIN (+32 2 299 32 65)

Uldis ŠALAJEVS (+32 2 296 75 60)

General public inquiries: Europe Direct by phone 00 800 67 89 10 11 or by email


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European Commission (EC)

The European Commission is the executive body of the EU and runs its day-to-day business. It is made up of the College of Commissioners, 27 European Commissioners, one for each member state, who are each responsible for one or several policy areas. In addition, the 'Commission' also refers to the entire administrative body that supports the Commissioners, consisting of the Directorates-General and the Services.

The European Commission is the sole EU body capable of proposing new legislation. The Commission also performs an oversight function, monitoring whether European legislation is properly implemented in the member states. In the event of non-compliance, the Commission can coerce a member state to comply by starting a legal procedure at the European Court of Justice.

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