Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/1999-12-13-Speech-1-156"
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"en.19991213.9.1-156"2
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"Mr President, I would like to start by thanking both parliamentary committees and not least both rapporteurs, Mr Aparicio Sánchez and Mr Brunetta, for their time and effort invested in the proposal. This motion for a resolution aims to establish a method for dividing two types of licences for trucks from the European Union which use the Swiss road network. So this proposal encompasses a regulation and a number of licences, the so-called permits for heavy goods vehicles, and will for the first time offer the opportunity to carry out a prescribed number of journeys on Swiss territory using EU lorries of the maximum permissible weight of 40 tonnes.
The other type of permits, the so-called ‘empty permits’, entitles lorries with a maximum weight of 28 tonnes to a prescribed number of journeys through Switzerland at a reduced toll tariff.
It gives me pleasure to be able to inform you that the Commission, which holds in high esteem the good work which both parliamentary committees delivered in this field, prepared as they are to compromise, can accept Amendments Nos 1 to 6 and Amendment No 8. This means all amendments but one. However, the Commission cannot accept Amendment No 7.
Mr President, Commission proposal intends to allocate 90% of the licences to the Member States which account for the lion’s share in Swiss traffic and at the same time, guarantee all Member States a basic quota of 1500 licences annually. The amendment reduces this minimum quota to 500. It is said that the outcome will benefit the quotas of the three major Member States which border Switzerland; to wit France, Germany and Italy. So this would be to the detriment of the other Member States. Since the licensing system contains a mechanism to distribute unused permits across the countries, I can reassure Parliament that there is no risk that permits allocated as part of the basic quota will be wasted or will go unused.
Consequently, the Commission would prefer it if all Member States were allocated the same minimum quota and, as such, cannot accept Amendment No 7."@en1
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