Joint Declaration of the Eastern Partnership Summit
Riga, May 21-22, 2015
The Heads of State or Government and the representatives
of the Republic
of Armenia, the Republic of Azerbaijan, the Republic of Belarus,
Georgia, the
Republic of Moldova and Ukraine, the representatives of the European
Union
and the Heads of State or Government and representatives of its Member
States have met in Riga on 21-22 May 2015. The President of the
European
Parliament and representatives of the Committee of the Regions, the
European
Economic and Social Committee, the European Investment Bank and the
European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the Conference of
Regional and Local Authorities of the Eastern Partnership and the
Euronest
Parliamentary Assembly were also present at the Summit.
1. The participants of the Riga summit reconfirm the
high importance they
attach to the Eastern Partnership as a specific dimension of the
European
Neighbourhood Policy. They reaffirm their shared vision of this
strategic and
ambitious Partnership as one based on mutual interests and commitments
and
supporting sustained reform processes in the Eastern European partner
countries, States participating in the Eastern Partnership. Summit
participants
recommit themselves to strengthen democracy, rule of law, human rights
and
fundamental freedoms, as well as the principles and norms of
international
law, which are and have been at the heart of this Partnership since it
was
launched as a common endeavour of the Member States of the European
Union and their Eastern European partners. They recall that the Eastern
Partnership is founded on shared ownership, responsibility,
differentiation and
mutual accountability. They underline the importance of the engagement
of all
society in turning this shared vision into reality.
2. In the framework of the European Neighbourhood Policy
and the
Eastern Partnership, the Summit participants reaffirm the sovereign
right of
each partner freely to choose the level of ambition and the goals to
which it
aspires in its relations with the European Union. It is for the EU and
its
sovereign partners to decide on how they want to proceed in their
relations.
The Summit participants underline that strengthening democracy and
enabling
functioning market economies, improving macroeconomic stability and the
business environment, as well as enhancing interconnectivity, mobility
and
people-to-people contacts open new prospects for cooperation,
contributing
also to trade, growth and competitiveness. This serves the shared
commitment
to stability, security and prosperity of the European Union, Eastern
European
partners and our entire continent.
3. The acts against Ukraine and the events in Georgia
since 2014 have
shown that the fundamental principles of sovereignty and territorial
integrity
within internationally recognised borders cannot be taken for granted
in the
21st century on the European continent. The EU remains committed in its
support to the territorial integrity, independence and sovereignty of
all its
partners. Full adherence to all the principles and commitments
enshrined in the
1975 Helsinki Final Act and 1990 Charter of Paris by all OSCE
Participating
States, as well as full respect for the principles and provisions of
the UN
Charter, is critical to our vision of a free, democratic, peaceful and
undivided
Europe. The participants of the Summit stress that the Eastern
Partnership aims
at building a common area of shared democracy, prosperity, stability
and
increased cooperation and is not directed against anyone. In this
context, the
Summit participants express their willingness to help rebuild trust and
confidence on our continent.
4. The Summit participants strongly support all efforts
aimed at
de-escalation and a political solution based on respect for Ukraine's
independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity. They call on all
parties to
swiftly and fully implement the Minsk Agreements of September 2014 and
the
package of measures for their implementation of February 2015,
supported by
the quadrilateral Declaration of Heads of State and Government, and
endorsed
by UNSC Resolution 2202 of 17 February 2015. They expect all parties to
honour their commitments in this framework. They call for the urgent
release
of all hostages and unlawfully detained persons. They express their
full
support for the OSCE and its efforts through the Special Monitoring
Mission
and the Trilateral Contact Group. They will also continue to support
all
diplomatic efforts within the Normandy format and appreciate the
contribution
of Belarus in facilitating negotiations. The Summit participants call
upon all
parties to fully cooperate with the international investigations and
criminal
proceedings to hold to account those who are responsible for the
downing of
MH17. The EU reaffirms its positions taken in the Joint Statement made
at the
EU-Ukraine Summit on 27 April, including on the illegal annexation of
Crimea and Sevastopol. The Summit participants reaffirm their positions
in
relation to ‘UN General Assembly Resolution 68/262 on the territorial
integrity
of Ukraine'.
5. The Summit participants emphasise the need for the
earliest peaceful
settlement of the conflicts in the region on the basis of the
principles and
norms of international law. The resolution of conflicts, building trust
and good
neighbourly relations are essential to economic and social development
and
cooperation. The Summit participants welcome the EU's contribution to
further
promoting stability and confidence building, and underline the need for
stronger EU engagement in this regard. They welcome the EU's
strengthened
role in conflict resolution and confidence building efforts in the
framework or
in support of existing agreed formats and processes, including through
field
presence when appropriate. They highlight the importance of advancing
the
negotiations in the 5+2 format on a comprehensive political settlement
of the
Transnistrian conflict and welcome intensified Chisinau-Tiraspol
dialogue in
all formats. They reiterate their full support to the mediation efforts
by the
co-chairs of the Minsk Group on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict,
including at
the level of Presidents and their statements since 2009. Recalling the
need to
fully implement the 12 August 2008 Ceasefire Agreement, Summit
participants
reiterate their commitment to conflict resolution efforts in Georgia,
including
through the co-chairmanship of the Geneva International Discussions by
the
EU Special Representative for the South Caucasus and the crisis in
Georgia
and the full implementation of the mandate of the EU Monitoring Mission
in
Georgia. Participants stress the specific role of the OSCE, as an
inclusive
organisation, in conflict resolution in the region. The Summit
participants also
agree to intensify cooperation between the EU and Eastern European
partners
in international fora.
6. Summit participants reaffirm the Eastern Partnership
objective to
develop strengthened, differentiated relations between the EU and its
six
sovereign, independent partners. The scope and depth of cooperation are
determined by the EU's and partners' ambitions and needs as well as the
pace
of reforms.
7. Summit participants reconfirm elements and principles
embodied in
Eastern Partnership Summit Declarations and underline their firm
intention to
carry forward the commitments taken at previous Summits and in
bilateral
agreements. Summit participants recognise that democracy, respect for
human
rights and fundamental freedoms, and the rule of law lie at the heart
of
political association and economic integration as envisaged in the
Association
Agreements. They recognise the commitment of the partners concerned to
implementing and promoting these values. Summit participants
acknowledge
the European aspirations and European choice of the partners concerned,
as
stated in the Association Agreements.
8. Summit participants underline that the Eastern
Partnership continues to
serve as the inclusive framework for cooperation and dialogue aimed at
long-term, comprehensive modernisation reforms. They remain committed
to
ensuring that the full potential of this partnership is reached,
building on
achievements to date. The Summit discussions on the strengthening of
relations between the EU and its partners will also inform the ongoing
review
of the European Neighbourhood Policy. The Summit participants encourage
all sections of their societies to contribute to this review.
9. The participants of the Summit reviewed and welcomed
the significant
achievements in the Eastern Partnership since the Vilnius Summit in
2013,
notably the signing and provisional application of the Association
Agreements
(AA) with Georgia, the Republic of Moldova and Ukraine, which
constitute
a major step in accelerating these partners' political association and
economic
integration with the EU. The Summit participants stress that
implementation
of AA/DCFTAs will be a top priority of the EU and the partners
concerned
for the coming years. It is the key means of achieving sustainable
democracy
and the deep modernisation of these partners' economies and societies
for
which their citizens are calling. Summit participants look forward to
the
provisional application of the Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade Area
(DCFTA) with Ukraine starting on 1 January 2016 and the positive impact
its
implementation will bring about. Constructive efforts in the trilateral
consultations on EU-Ukraine DCFTA implementation, using the existing
flexibilities available to the contracting parties within the DCFTA,
are
important. They welcome the completion of ratification procedures in a
majority of EU Member States and call on the remaining Member States to
follow suit to enable early and full entry into force of these
agreements.
10. The Summit participants welcome the successful start
of the
implementation of the Association Agreements. They take positive note
of the
increase in trade between the EU and Georgia and the Republic of
Moldova
respectively since the application of the DCFTAs. Association Councils
have
held their first meetings to review and guide the implementation of the
agreements. The EU has provided and will continue to provide, notably
via the
European Neighbourhood Instrument (ENI), significant support and
dedicated
programmes, including in institution-strengthening and public
administration
reform, to bolster all three partners' capacity to carry forward
comprehensive
reform which is essential in order to draw maximum benefit from the
AA/DCFTAs. The DCFTA Facility for SMEs, a new joint initiative of the
European Commission, the EIB and the EBRD, will unlock important new
investments to support SMEs in taking full advantage of the new
business
opportunities arising from the AA/DCFTAs. The EU's incentive-based
approach ("more-for-more") will benefit those partners most engaged in
reforms. EU financial support to all its partners will be conditioned
by
concrete reform steps.
11. The Summit participants stress that the
implementation of
AA/DCFTAs, accompanied by reforms, will bring about the comprehensive
approximation with EU legislation and standards leading to the gradual
economic integration of partners in the EU internal market and
therefore to the
creation of an economic area. The Summit participants agree that such
an
ambitious long- term vision for economic integration between partners
concerned and the EU is desirable — contributing also to the longer
term goal
of a wider area of economic prosperity based on WTO rules and sovereign
choices throughout Europe and beyond. Participants remain committed to
continuing to encourage trade between the EU, Eastern European partners
and
their trading partners.
12. Summit participants welcome the steps taken since
the Vilnius Summit
in 2013 in developing differentiated bilateral relations between the EU
and
each of its partners. Participants welcome the common understanding
reached
on the scope for a future agreement between the EU and Armenia aimed at
further developing and strengthening their comprehensive cooperation in
all
areas of mutual interest. Participants also welcome the progress made
in
defining a stronger basis for an upgraded contractual framework for
EU-Azerbaijan bilateral relations in all areas of mutual interest.
Participants
welcome the steps taken in EU-Belarus relations and look forward to the
follow-up on the Interim Phase on modernisation, including some
possible
projects, and the resumption of the EU-Belarus Human Rights Dialogue.
13. The participants of the Summit stress the importance
of the continued
intensification of result- oriented multilateral cooperation within the
Eastern
Partnership at all levels, including the 4 multilateral platforms and
welcome
the holding of ministerial meetings and conferences across a wide range
of
sectors, including Justice and Home Affairs, Trade, Digital Economy,
Health
and Agriculture in the first half of 2015. They also continue to
underline the
importance of Informal Partnership Dialogues as a venue for informal
discussions among foreign ministers and for informal exploration of new
areas
of sectoral cooperation. In this context, they look forward to the next
Dialogue
to be held in Minsk in June and to the further development of
cooperation in
the field of environment, which remains an important area of
cooperation in
the Eastern Partnership. Gender equality is a promising new area of
cooperation.
14. The Summit participants note the progress made in
the cooperation
taking place under the Eastern Partnership Flagship Initiatives notably
on
Integrated Border Management, Small and Medium Enterprises, energy
issues,
environment and climate change and natural and man-made disasters.
These
initiatives contribute to demonstrating to citizens the tangible
benefits brought
about by the Partnership through effective, practical projects. The
Summit
participants welcome the launch of the new Flagship Initiative on
Sustainable
Municipal Development and look forward to its implementation. In this
context they emphasise the important role of the E5P (Eastern Europe
Energy
Efficiency and Environment Partnership) and the progress reached in
extending
the E5P to Armenia, Georgia and the Republic of Moldova, in addition to
Ukraine.
15. Acknowledging the significance of Eastern
Partnership multilateral
cooperation, the Summit participants stress the importance of ensuring
coherence between various relevant regional initiatives and networks.
They
recall that the Eastern Partnership could help develop closer ties
among its
partners.
16. The Summit participants welcome the implementation
of the Eastern
Partnership Visibility Strategy and agree on the need to strengthen
strategic
communication efforts, including exchanges and activities involving the
EU,
its Member States and interested Eastern European partners, on the
basis of the
shared values and benefits which Eastern Partnership cooperation
brings. They
underline the important role that media plays in a democratic society
and
welcome the outcome of the Media Conference held in Riga on 20 May and
confirmed their continued support for media freedom.
17. The Summit participants affirm their goal to achieve
an ambitious and
global climate change agreement in December at the Paris CoP 21 in
order to
keep global warming within the limit of 2oC. In this regard, they
welcome the
submission of the EU's intended nationally determined contribution, as
well as
partners' intention to submit theirs as soon as possible, and urge all
other
parties to do so as well.
18. In fulfilment of the objectives of the Eastern
Partnership, the full use
of the ENI including, where relevant, cross-border and territorial
cooperation
programmes, will be essential. Furthermore, Summit participants stress
the
importance of the European Neighbourhood Investment Facility to
facilitate
loans from European Financing Institutions in particular to improve
interconnections and market access. Summit participants stress the
importance
to further develop the Eastern European partners' participation in EU
programmes and their cooperation with EU Agencies. Summit participants
urge progress to be made in the following four fields by the time of
the next
Summit.
Strengthening Institutions and Good Governance
19. Summit participants reaffirm that progress in the
fields of
strengthening the independence of the judiciary, effectively preventing
and
tackling corruption and implementing public administration reform is
essential
for good governance, building citizens' trust and strengthening
relations
between the EU and its partners. Improved rule of law and legal
certainty will
enable partners to provide better public services, attract investment
and in turn
improve the lives of their citizens. The EU and its Eastern European
partners
will continue to cooperate in these fields, underpinned by EU support.
20. The Summit participants agree on the importance of
strengthening the
resilience of Eastern European partners faced with new challenges for
their
stability. They support the strengthening of democratic structures,
notably
through enhanced cooperation in state-building including, where
appropriate,
civilian security sector reform and cyber security and encourage
efforts to
identify key projects in these fields in the coming period. A more
structured
cooperation framework in the area of civil protection and disaster
management
based on common objectives will help to address the destabilising
impact of
emergencies and crises and foster societal resilience.
21. Summit participants welcome the range of support the
EU has
provided to strengthen institutions in Ukraine: Macro-Financial
Assistance
under the conditions agreed between the Ukrainian authorities and the
EU and
linked to Ukraine's sustained implementation of the IMF programme,
extension
of autonomous trade preferences, development grants to support state-
building
and stabilise the economy, humanitarian aid, expert advice across all
areas of
governance overseen by a specially created Support Group for Ukraine,
as well
as deployment of an Advisory Mission (EUAM) to advise on civilian
security
sector reform. The Summit participants welcome the signature by Ukraine
and
the EU of the Memorandum of Understanding and Loan Agreement related to
the Macro-Financial assistance programme of EUR 1.8 billion. They
welcome
the significant financial and technical assistance and policy advice
provided
by the EU to support the implementation of economic and institutional
reforms
in the Republic of Moldova and in Georgia. They also welcome similar
support provided to other Eastern European partners. They welcome the
support for Georgia through the ongoing Macro-Financial Assistance
programme. They also commend the valued contribution of the Border
Assistance Mission (EUBAM) to border-related cooperation between the
Republic of Moldova and Ukraine and look forward to its continuation.
22. The participants of the Summit agree on the further
strengthening,
where appropriate, of multilateral and bilateral security dialogue and
practical
CSDP cooperation including opportunities for the participation of the
partners
concerned in CSDP activities, missions and operations, enhancing their
capacities in this respect. They commend the speedy entry into force of
the
Framework Participation Agreement with Georgia. They welcome the
contribution by Ukraine to the EU-led Naval Military Operation
(EUNAVFOR
Atalanta), the contribution by Georgia to the EU Military Operation in
Central
African Republic (EUFOR RCA) and by the Republic of Moldova to EU
Training Mission in Mali (EUTM Mali), as well as further commitments by
Georgia and the Republic of Moldova to contribute to EU Military
Advisory
Mission in Central African Republic (EUMAM RCA) and by Georgia to
EUTM Mali. They also appreciate Ukraine's contribution to an EU
Battlegroup
in 2014 and its interest in continuing such contributions in the
future. They
also acknowledge the important role played by the two EU CSDP missions
in
Eastern European partners, welcoming the extension of the Monitoring
Mission
in Georgia for another two years and the deployment of the Advisory
Mission
in Ukraine.
Mobility and People to People
23. The Summit participants reconfirm that enhanced
mobility of citizens
in a secure and well- managed environment remains a core objective of
the
Eastern Partnership. This will facilitate easier and more frequent
travel,
business and people to people contacts. They welcome the fact that the
visa
free regime for citizens from the Republic of Moldova holding a
biometric
passport, in place since April 2014, has been operating effectively
facilitating
travel, business and people to people contacts. They warmly welcome the
progress made by Georgia and Ukraine respectively in the implementation
of
their Visa Liberalisation Action Plans as described in the latest
Progress
Reports by the European Commission. They look forward to completion by
Ukraine and Georgia of the implementation of the 2nd phase of their
Visa
Liberalization Action Plans once all benchmarks are fulfilled through
the
implementation of all required reforms, and welcome the Commission's
readiness to do its utmost to support Ukraine and Georgia in the
implementation of their VLAPs and its intention to report on progress
by
Ukraine and Georgia respectively by the end of 2015. Fulfilment of all
benchmarks would allow to conclude the VLAP process and the Commission
to propose to the European Parliament and to the Council to exempt
Ukrainian
and Georgian citizens respectively from the visa requirement in line
with the
criteria of the Regulation 539/2001. They welcome the progress to date
in the
implementation of the Visa Facilitation and Readmission Agreements
(VFA/RA) with Armenia and Azerbaijan respectively. They look forward to
consideration in due course of the opening of a visa dialogue with
Armenia,
provided that Armenia continues to ensure sustained progress in the
full
implementation of the VFA/RA. They welcome the progress achieved in the
VFA/RA negotiations with Belarus, as well as that achieved towards the
establishment of an EU-Belarus Mobility Partnership. The Summit
participants
stress the importance of effective and full use of the Mobility
Partnership
Instrument by the signatories of the respective Partnerships, building
on the
successful experiences to date. They also welcome the outcomes of the
second
Eastern Partnership Justice and Home Affairs Ministerial meeting, held
on 29
January 2015 in Riga.
24. The participants of the Summit stress the importance
that
people-to-people contacts in the areas of education, research, youth
and culture
play in supporting the objectives of the Eastern Partnership. They
welcome the
launch in 2014 of the first call of Erasmus+ programme fully open to
students,
young people and universities from the Eastern European partners
offering
enhanced opportunities for cooperation and mobility. Summit
participants
welcome the accession of Belarus to the European Higher Education Area
and
look forward to the report on its progress in implementing the road map
of
reforms to its higher education system necessary to meet the
requirements of
the Bologna Process. The Summit participants welcome the association of
the
Republic of Moldova and Ukraine to the framework programme for research
and innovation Horizon 2020 and look forward to finalising the
agreements for
association of Armenia and Georgia. They take note of the outcomes of
the
2nd EaP Youth Forum that took place in Riga on 10-11 February with a
focus
on youth employment and cross-sectoral cooperation in the area of
youth.
Participation by Georgia, the Republic of Moldova and Ukraine in the
programme "Creative Europe", as well as the launch of the second phase
of
the EaP Culture Programme earlier this year will further strengthen
culture
cooperation under the EaP. The Summit participants also take note of
the
signature of, and the ratification by, Azerbaijan of the Protocol to
the
Framework Agreement on Participation of Azerbaijan in EU programmes and
look forward to its final entry into force once the EU internal
procedures have
been completed. The participants of the Summit look forward to the
first ever
European Games, to be hosted in Azerbaijan in June.
25. The participants of the Summit reaffirm the value
they attach to the
role of the broader society within the Eastern Partnership. They take
note of
the outcome of the Civil Society Conference held in Riga on 20-21 May
and
confirmed their continued support for the Civil Society Forum and its
National
Platforms. The Summit encourages closer inter-parliamentary
cooperation,
dialogue and promotion of exchanges within the Euronest Parliamentary
Assembly. Summit participants also welcome the further steps taken by
the
Conference of local and regional authorities of the Eastern Partnership
(CORLEAP) in promoting cooperation at the regional and municipal levels
of
government. They invite the European Commission to ensure appropriate,
targeted support to local and regional authorities to assist their role
in pursuing
the goals and objectives of the Eastern Partnership.
Market Opportunities
26. The participants of the Summit welcome closer
cooperation within the
Eastern Partnership in the areas supporting business and enterprise.
They agree
to the further strengthening of the business dimension of the Eastern
Partnership including through improving the business environment and
legal
certainty in Eastern European partners to the benefit of local,
regional and
European SMEs and businesses. They take note of the recommendations
submitted by the Business Forum held in Riga on 21 May in conjunction
with
the Summit and welcome EU cooperation programmes supporting the
development of Small and Medium-sized Enterprises in the Eastern
European
partners. With all three AA/DCFTA partners, the EU has also put in
place a
new initiative, the DCFTA Facility, to support Small and Medium-Sized
Enterprises (SMEs) benefit from the AA/DCFTAs. They welcome the
participation of the Republic of Moldova in the EU programme for the
Competitiveness of Enterprises and Small and Medium- sized Enterprises
(COSME) and look forward to Ukraine and Armenia joining in future. The
Summit participants look forward to the imminent accession of the
Republic
of Moldova to the Regional Convention on pan-Euro-Mediterranean
preferential rules of origin and look forward to future accession of
Georgia.
The Summit participants emphasise the importance of ensuring the
functioning
of an efficient system of transit of goods. In this context, they
encourage the
implementation of the Authorised Economic Operator system. They also
stressed the importance of cooperation and regulatory convergence,
where
appropriate, in the field of agriculture and rural development,
including to use
available trade opportunities under the DCFTAs in this sector.
27. The Summit participants recognise the digital
economy as an area with
yet untapped potential for both the EU and partners. They welcome the
launch
of E@P.CONNECT linking the research and academic communities in the
Eastern European partners to the pan-European research and education
network
GEANT. They also welcome the setting up and establishment of EaPeReg,
the
EaP network of regulators for electronic communications and the
completion
of the Study on Harmonisation of Digital Markets in EaP. They look
forward
to holding of the first Eastern Partnership Ministerial meeting on
digital
economy next month and the planned establishment of a Panel on
Harmonising
Digital Markets in the second half of this year, building on an
initiative of
Belarus with support from several EU Member States.
Interconnections
28. The participants of the Summit reaffirm their common
interest in
strengthening energy security, sustainability and competitiveness and
in
enhancing the diversification of supply. They reiterate their intention
to deepen
further bilateral and multilateral cooperation in the sphere of energy.
Participants emphasise the need for well-functioning energy markets
with a
stable, transparent and investor-friendly regulatory framework, rule of
law and
a gradual liberalisation of the market, when appropriate, to provide a
basis for
investments. They will promote an inclusive and open policy on energy
security, transportation and supply. They underline the contribution
that energy
efficiency and renewable energy can make to increased security of
supply, and
encourage practical cooperation between the EU and Eastern European
partners
in this respect. They acknowledge the progress made on major energy
infrastructure projects and interconnectivity enhancements put in place
since
the last summit, including opening natural gas reverse flow capacities
to
Ukraine from Hungary, Poland and Slovakia, the particular role played
by
Azerbaijan as well as the contribution by others, including Georgia, in
the
realisation of the Southern Gas Corridor and the ongoing work on the
expansion of the South Caucasus Pipeline, and the Trans-Anatolian
Pipeline
and the Trans-Adriatic Pipeline, the inauguration of the Iasi-Ungheni
gas
interconnector, and the preliminary work on Isaccea-Vulcanesti
electricity
interconnection between Romania and the Republic of Moldova.
Participants
concerned reaffirm their commitment to facilitate the development, in a
result-oriented way, of strategic infrastructure, notably in relation
to the
Southern Gas Corridor. The Summit participants also encourage and
support
the continuation of gas and electricity interconnections both inside
the EU and
between the EU and its Eastern European partners, including through
standard
Interconnection Agreements between Transmission System Operators. They
look forward to continued EU support for the modernisation of the
Ukrainian
Gas Transmission System as a key part of the European grid network.
Participants take note of the progress made on energy sector reform in
Ukraine
and the Republic of Moldova, in line with EU energy market legislation
under
the Energy Community and note the importance of further work and
implementation in this field. They emphasise the importance of the EU's
continued role in facilitating gas talks between Russia and Ukraine
that will
contribute to underpinning the stable, sufficient and uninterrupted gas
flow to
Europe and the work to develop an energy contingency plan. The Summit
participants welcome the objective of the Energy Union regarding the
closer
integration of the EU and Energy Community energy markets. They also
welcome the progress in the negotiations for Georgia's accession to the
Energy
Community. They welcome the work towards the inclusion of Energy
Community members in the Central and South Eastern Gas Connectivity
Steering Group and the interest of Azerbaijan to participate as an
observer in
this Group. They welcome the conclusion of the Cooperation Arrangement
between the European Commission and Belarus on an Early Warning
Mechanism.
29. In the area of Transport, the Summit participants
stress the importance
of making transport links between the EU and Eastern European partners
safer
and more efficient, and of supporting the improvement of logistics
systems,
including motorways of the sea, and fostering cooperation between rail
corridors. They look forward to further work on updating and
streamlining the
list of priority projects and removing infrastructure and
non-infrastructure
bottlenecks to enhance transport interconnections between the EU and
partners
on the EaP transport network thanks to further investments and to
improved
cross-border transport cooperation by the time of the next Summit. They
attach
importance to improved connections with the TEN-T network across all
transport modes. The participants also welcome the ongoing work towards
the
definition of an Eastern Partnership inland waterways network and look
forward to its inclusion into the EaP transport network. They stress
the
importance of concluding the EU-Ukraine Aviation Agreement, as referred
in
the Association Agreement, at the earliest possible date in 2015. They
look
forward to the launching of negotiations on an EU-Armenia Aviation
Agreement at the earliest opportunity. They welcome the resumption of
negotiations on an EU-Azerbaijan Aviation Agreement. They welcome
implementation of the EU-Republic of Moldova and EU- Georgia Aviation
Agreements.
30. The Summit participants look forward to the next
Summit to be held
in 2017 that will assess the results achieved and will outline the way
forward
in the Partnership.
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