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Renewables with communities first 

Energy - News Section

A European consensus sets guiding principles to accelerate renewable energy and grid deployment while ensuring fairness, transparency, biodiversity protection, and local benefits 


Europe is at a turning point. To reach climate neutrality by 2050, the EU must drastically expand renewable energy and electricity grids. This challenge is also an opportunity: renewables are cheaper than fossil fuels, can reduce biodiversity risks, and bring local economic benefits. Yet progress remains too slow, hampered by lengthy permits, weak community dialogue, and a lack of perceived value for citizens. 

To overcome these barriers, European stakeholders have united behind a set of baseline principles for fast and fair deployment of renewables and grids. These principles underline that projects must be shaped with communities, not imposed on them. Early engagement with mayors and citizens, transparent communication, and mechanisms for feedback are central to building trust. 

Equally important is ensuring that local communities share in the value of new projects. This means creating jobs, offering benefit-sharing schemes such as funds or co-ownership, and guaranteeing that revenues are used transparently for local improvements, from transport to housing. The principles also commit to nature-positive deployment, applying strategies to avoid or minimise harm and, where possible, enhance biodiversity. 

Finally, the consensus highlights the need to empower community-led initiatives, giving citizens and municipalities fair access to the energy market and the grid. By creating space for local ownership, Europe can ensure that the energy transition is not only fast but also fair. 

Together, these principles form a European consensus: a shared roadmap to accelerate the transition while protecting ecosystems and ensuring citizens see real, tangible benefits. 

Read the position paper here 

For more information, contact: 

The Green Deal Implementation

Energy Transition - News

The Green Deal at a crossroads: lessons from the first 100 days


In 2019, the European Commission announced a “man-on-the-moon moment” with the launch of the flagship initiative of the new President Von der Leyen: the Green Deal. Five years later, after setbacks and adjustments, is the course still the same? Under the growing pressure of the European industrial competitiveness decline, energy security issues, and unprecedented geopolitical challenges, the Green Deal finds itself at a critical turning point. Officially, the transition remains a priority for the new Commission, but its implementation is marked by strategic adjustments and compromises that tend to redefine its initial ambition.

For local and regional governments, the stakes are high. Since the launch of the Green Deal, they have been on the front lines of the green transition, with the adoption of a long series of European legislations regulating the costly implementation of sustainable mobility plans, the deployment of renewable energy, and the modernisation of infrastructure to achieve climate goals. However, the growing trend towards the nationalisation of European policies and funding threatens to marginalise them and lead to concentrating investments in already well-positioned territories, precisely at a time when action must be strengthened on the ground.

An increasingly centralised governance model for the green transition

Since President Von der Leyen is in office, the EU has adopted an increasingly centralised approach to implementing its policies, making national governments the preferred interlocutors. National Energy and Climate Plans, Social Climate Plans, the Recovery and Resilience Facility, and National Nature Restoration Plans have reinforced this model. Officially justified by efficiency and simplification imperatives,this choice has, in reality, widened the governance gap: while local governments are responsible for more than 70% of climate change mitigation measures, they are often left out of the formulation of national strategies that directly concern them.

Today, local governments are largely excluded from decision-making processes. According to the CEMR report Local Green Transition Prospects for an Inclusive and Competitive Deal, more than two-thirds of the local governments surveyed report not having had the opportunity to participate in consultations on the transposition of green legislation, and only 4% of regions and municipalities believe they were truly taken into account.

The next revision of the EU budget (MFF) could exacerbate this trend. The idea of consolidating all climate and green transition funding into a single national plan is gaining ground. On paper, this seems simpler. But this could further weaken the role of local governments, reducing them to mere implementers of top-down strategies, rather than considering them as essential actors in the transition. You can learn more about this at the CEMR position paper on MFF here.  

The OECD underscores the importance of a territorial approach to climate action, recommending that national governments facilitate the development of subnational climate targets tailored to local realities and ensure adequate funding for their implementation. Without direct involvement in shaping national strategies, local and regional governments are left with limited resources and influence, despite their critical role in building long-term investment strategies on the ground.

A green transition that cannot be disconnected from territories

The Draghi report highlighted the urgency for Europe to accelerate its transition to a carbon-neutral economy and to deploy substantial investments in green technologies to strengthen European competitiveness. Decarbonisation of industry, deployment of renewable energy, and development of sustainable transport infrastructure: The success of these political priorities depends highly on a territorial approach. Where will the new hydrogen valleys be located? How will rural areas adapt to new land uses and energy production? What role will medium-sized cities play in green industrial policy? How can competitiveness clusters be strengthened to structure these local dynamics and enhance synergies between businesses, research centres, and local governments? These are questions that cannot be answered solely at the national level (read also our reaction to the Competitiveness Compass).

Ignoring this dimension carries significant risks. Without a territorialised approach, the implementation of the Green Deal could lead to the concentration of green investments and jobs in a few already competitive regions, leaving others struggling to attract funding. The cohesion policy, which has historically been the EU’s main tool for ensuring balanced development, should be at the heart of the implementation of the new European Commission’s Clean Industrial Deal policy.

Embedding multi-level governance in the Green Transition

At the dawn of a new phase of its climate action, the EU must resolve a fundamental contradiction: the Green Deal can only succeed if it is implemented locally, but its governance model is becoming increasingly centralised. If the European Commission truly wants to achieve climate neutrality while preserving social and territorial cohesion, it must develop a robust and inclusive multi-level governance framework.

Considering this, three priorities must guide the EU’s approach:

  1. Grant local and regional governments a formal role in the development of national plans for implementing European legislation. These plans should not be limited to technocratic exercises but become true co-construction processes.
  2. Preserve and strengthen access to European funding for local and regional governments. The Commission’s emerging ideas for the next budget, namely a shift toward a national plan and a potential single European fund for competitiveness, risk sidelining local players and concentrating resources in already competitive regions, leaving others without the necessary financial means to support their transition. Ensuring direct access to funding for local and regional governments is essential to prevent growing investment disparities.
  3. Recognise local and regional governments as major investors. They account for more than half of public investments in climate-related infrastructure. Their investment capacity must be strengthened, not hindered.

Driving the Green Deal forward in a collaborative and territorially tailored way will not only enhance the EU’s competitiveness but also position it as a leader in the global transition towards a more sustainable economy. In light of the rapidly shifting geopolitical, economic and ecological landscape, a more inclusive governance model with a formal role to local and regional governments is more crucial than ever.

For more information, contact: 

Twinning call for proposals

Twinning - Call for Proposals

Call for proposals for the sub-granting 2025 – extended deadline until Tuesday, May 20


Building on the success of the 2024 pilot phase, CEMR is excited to announce the launch of the second sub-granting scheme, as part of the SPICE project —Empowering Local and Regional Governments for Sustainable Policy Implementation and Civic Engagement in Europe.

The initiative is funded by the European Commission, under the Citizens, Equality, Rights and Values (CERV) programme.

This call for project proposals is open to CEMR’s member associations and aims to strengthen further Twinning exchanges and activities between EU Local and Regional Governments. The focus is on promoting EU values and tackling key challenges such as democracy, citizens participation, gender equality, and inclusion.

Interested members are encouraged to participate in this call and contribute to fostering collaboration across the EU. For more details, and to submit your proposal, please read the full guidelines and complete the forms below.’

For more information, contact: 

Final call for the EU budget

MFF - Position paper News 2025

Local and regional governments’ final call to EU institutions for a real involvement in the design of the EU budget 


The future of the EU budget is at a crossroads. As the European Commission launches consultations on the post-2027 Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF), local and regional governments across Europe, represented by CEMR, are calling for a fundamental change: an EU budget that is inclusive, decentralised, and truly aligned with the needs of cities, municipalities, and regions.  

This requires that future national plans and investment priorities in each Member State are not imposed from the top-down, but shaped through meaningful consultations with local and regional governments, just as the Partnership Principle ensures in Cohesion Policy. Only in this way can EU investments be fit for purpose and truly serve the people it is intended to benefit. 

CEMR’s newly released position paper on the post-2027 MFF sets out a clear vision for a reformed EU budget that strengthens multi-level governance and empowers local and regional governments as essential partners for effective spending of the EU budget on the ground. With growing social and economic inequalities, the need to accelerate climate adaptation, and increasing geopolitical instability, Europe cannot afford to sideline local and regional governments—the very actors that implement over 70% of EU policies on the ground. 

National plans must include mandatory consultations to local and regional governments 

The roadmap on the next MFF confirmed the European Commission’s ambition to establish single national plans for reforms and investments based on priorities defined at European level. The European Commission mentions the Recovery and Resilience Facility (RRF) as a good example of an instrument linking investments and reforms and points out that two thirds of the EU budget (Cohesion Policy funds and the Common Agricultural Policy) could in the future be implemented according to the RRF approach. In this context, CEMR issues a final warning to the European Commission: the RRF model failed to ensure effective multi-level governance. CEMR found that, since consultation with local and regional governments was not mandatory, it simply did not occur in most of the Member States.  

The European Commission must ensure that national plans and the definition of investment priorities in each Member State are developed through meaningful consultations with local and regional governments, similar to the Partnership Principle in Cohesion Policy. This is the only way to guarantee that EU investments are fit for purpose and meet the real needs of the population.  

The EU is more than its institutions and the 27 states—it belongs to its people, municipalities, cities, and regions. Decisions based solely on macroeconomic trends risk disconnecting it from citizens” — Gunn Marit Helgesen, CEMR President. 

CEMR key priorities for the post-2027 EU budget 

CEMR’s position paper, backed by national associations of local and regional governments across Europe, contains concrete proposals to reform the post-2027 EU budget and enhance its effectiveness: 

  • Empowering municipalities, cities and regions not only as implementers but also as planners 
    The Partnership Principle should be made mandatory across all EU-funded programmes to ensure that the funds effectively reflect the actual needs of local and regional governments. 
  • Decentralising the Cohesion Policy 
    Strengthening the capacity of local and regional governments to manage EU funds will ensure that investments address real local needs and promote balanced territorial development. 
  • Diversifying EU instruments as part of the ambitious policy agenda for cities 
    From shared management funds to increased direct funding, it would allow EU investment to reach local and regional authorities of all sizes, from all types of territories, both urban and rural.   
  • Simplifying and easing EU funding mechanisms  
    to reduce administrative burdens for both Managing Authorities and beneficiaries. CEMR proposals for simplification include: a single set of rules for beneficiaries across the different funds; flexibility in thematic concentration to allow place-based definition of priorities, hence accelerating funds disbursement; and a labelling of auditing processes as compliant with EU rules to avoid multiplication of auditing.
  • Enhancing synergies among EU funds. 
    The next MFF must improve coordination between different EU funding instruments to maximise impact at the territorial level. 

Take part in the public consultation 

Local and regional governments must not be sidelined in shaping the post-2027 EU budget. The European Commission’s consultation must not be reduced to a bureaucratic exercise or a mere checkbox. Consultations alone are not enough. The next EU budget regulations must include a mandatory requirement to involve local and regional governments in defining the investments that will meet the real needs of the population. 

Use this public consultation —open until May 7 2025— to demand a real seat at the table and a budget that truly serves our communities. A stronger, more inclusive Europe starts from the ground up. Speak up before it’s too late. 

Read the full CEMR position paper here

Contribute to the public consultation on the future EU budget here: https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/ip_25_486 

For more information, contact: 

Democracy in Türkiye

Democracy in Turkiye - News 2025

CEMR Presidency meets with the President of the Union of Municipalities of Türkiye (UMT) to share insights on Turkish democracy


Local democracy and elected representatives in Türkiye are currently facing significant challenges, with mayors being dismissed or imprisoned and replaced by government-appointed trustees. These actions not only undermine democratic principles but also threaten the very foundations of local self-governance and human rights.

On March 3rd, Ekrem İmamoğlu, Mayor ofİstanbul Metropolitan Municipality and President of the UMT took part in an extraordinary CEMR Presidency meeting to share firsthand insights into the situation in Türkiye. His intervention highlighted the harsh realities facing opposition mayors, the far-reaching consequences for local governance, and the various efforts being made to resist these pressures.

CEMR stands in solidarity with all local leaders in Türkiye and beyond who are defending local democracy and the fundamental right to serve their communities freely.

For more information, contact: 

Declaration on three years of war in Ukraine

Ukraine Declaration - News 2025

CEMR issues a declaration reaffirming support and urging international action 


After three years of Ukraine’s resistance to Russia’s full-scale invasion, local and regional elected representatives from the Council of European Municipalities and Regions (CEMR) reaffirm their unwavering support for Ukraine and its people.  

CEMR has issued a formal declaration condemning the war launched by Russia and calling for decisive international action. 

Call against attacks on Ukrainian mayors 

Local and regional elected representatives are on the frontlines of this war, ensuring that essential services continue despite difficult conditions. Yet, they have also become targets of aggression.  

CEMR denounces the abduction of Ukrainian mayors and supports the call of the Association of Ukrainian Cities demanding the immediate release of those still detained: 

  • Oleksandr Babych – Mayor of Hola Prystan (Kherson region) 
  • Ihor Kolykhaiev – Mayor of Kherson 
  • Anatolii Siryi – Starosta of Novi Borovychi (Chernihiv region) 

CEMR also condemns arbitrary imprisonment, torture and murder of Ukrainian people in Russian captivity including: 

  • Yevhenii Matvieiev – Mayor of Dniprorudne (Zaporizhzhia region) 
  • Oleksii Vynnychenko – Starosta of Hrebenykivka (Sumy region) 

Call for Ukraine’s full EU membership 

A victory for Ukraine and a just peace that will allow its reconstruction requires the full engagement of the European Union and its member states.  

CEMR is committed to fostering resilience, recovery, and democratic governance in Ukraine. In its declaration, CEMR reaffirms its dedication to: 

  • Supporting the reconstruction of Ukraine’s municipalities and regions through partnerships and exchanges. 
  • Advocating for Ukraine’s full integration into the European Union to ensure long-term stability and prosperity. 
  • Sustaining cooperation between European and Ukrainian local and regional governments through key initiatives, including: 
  • The Bridges of Trust Community, Strengthening democratic governance, fostering partnerships, advancing recovery, and supporting Ukraine’s EU integration.   

A call for action 

As the war continues, it is time for European institutions, national governments, and local and regional authorities to intensify their support for and to Ukraine. The path to peace and reconstruction requires decisive action, sustained cooperation, and a commitment to justice. 

CEMR urges the international community to stand firm in defending democracy, peace, and the rule of law. We call for Ukraine’s victory and a just peace that will allow its cities, regions, and people to rebuild their brighter future. 

Read the full CEMR declaration: 

For more information, contact: 

Public procurement to local realities

European Union - News

CEMR Releases New Position Paper on Public Procurement: A Call for More Flexibility and Less Bureaucracy


CEMR has officially released its position paper on public procurement, outlining key changes needed to ensure a procurement system that truly works for local and regional governments.

As the largest public investors and contracting authorities in the EU, local and regional governments (LRGs) play a crucial role in delivering essential public services. However, the current public procurement framework remains too complex, rigid, and burdensome, limiting their ability to act efficiently and effectively.

CEMR’s position paper highlights three key areas for reform:

  • Greater flexibility to adapt procurement to local needs
  • Simplified rules to reduce administrative burdens
  • Stronger support for SMEs to foster local economic growth

The document serves as a clear call to action for EU policymakers, urging them to shape a procurement framework that respects the autonomy of local governments while ensuring efficient public service delivery.

For more information, contact:

EU’s Green Agenda 2025

Green City - News Section

Why It Matters for Local and Regional Governments (LRGs) and What to Watch Next


From new climate targets to updated waste regulations, the European Union is rolling out policies that will shape the future of cities and municipalities. While these decisions may seem distant from everyday life, they have a direct impact on local governments—affecting everything from energy bills to public transport, water management, and waste collection.

Local and regional authorities are on the front lines of the green transition. They are the ones turning EU policies into real-life projects: renovating buildings to be more energy-efficient, upgrading public transport, and ensuring clean air and water for their citizens. But with so many new EU initiatives in the pipeline, what should local governments pay attention to in the coming months?

1. Climate and Energy: New Targets, Local Impact

The European Commission’s Competitiveness Compass outlines key climate and energy measures for 2025, including a revised Climate Law and a Clean Industrial Deal. These will influence energy prices, local renewable energy projects, and even funding for green infrastructure.

Meanwhile, the EU is tackling energy poverty, with plans to better protect vulnerable households from rising costs. Local governments, which often manage social housing and community energy programs, will need to be prepared for these changes.

2. Water and Waste: Tighter Rules, Bigger Responsibilities

Water management is rising on the EU agenda, with the European Parliament’s Water Resilience Strategy pushing for stronger action on pollution, efficiency, and climate adaptation. This means cities may need to invest in better infrastructure to secure water supply and prevent flooding.

At the same time, the revised Urban Wastewater Treatment Directive introduces stricter water quality standards and a stronger application of the polluter-pays principle, ensuring that industries—not taxpayers—shoulder the costs of wastewater treatment.

On waste, new EU packaging rules taking effect this month will require cities to adjust collection programs to meet higher standards. Additionally, Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) rules for textiles will require businesses to take more responsibility for the waste they create, easing some of the burden on local waste services.

3. Mobility: Changes Coming for Public Transport and Urban Planning

The EU’s Sustainable Transport Investment Plan and High-Speed Rail Plan will influence urban mobility strategies. Meanwhile, CEMR is ensuring that local governments have a say in the EU Expert Group on Urban Mobility, particularly on topics like city access for businesses and cycling infrastructure.

4. Green Finance: How Cities Can Access More EU Funding

One of the biggest challenges for local governments in the green transition is funding. The European Commission’s new Project Group on Affordable Housing will prioritise unlocking financing for energy-efficient renovations, including through the Social Climate Fund.

What’s Next? Stay Informed and Get Involved

With so many EU policies evolving, local governments need to stay ahead of the changes. The coming months will be crucial in determining how these policies are implemented—and how they affect cities and regions across Europe.

Want to know more about how CEMR advocates for local and regional governments in the green transition?

Contact Axelle Griffon (axelle.griffon@ccre-cemr.org) and Edoardo Bodo (edoardo.bodo@ccre-cemr.org)

Competitiveness Compass

Europe of the regions is dead,
long live Europe of the industries


If you were still a “Europe of the regions” believer in spite of all the signs in the direction of re-nationalisation of European policies; the latest communication from the European Commission “A Competitiveness Compass for the EU” could leave the impression that it is the final blow to the idea that the European project also takes place at the local level, closer to the citizens.

There had been many warning signals: in the last years, the EU has changed the “delivery model” of its funds towards a de facto recentralisation. After the National CAP Strategic Plans, the National Social Climate Plans and the National Recovery and Resilience Plans, there was not much doubt anymore that the European Commission is looking to simplify the life of its own administration, with a single contact point in Member States, preferably budget Ministries. Then, however the Member States decide to organise and draft the national plans, in consultation or not with the subnational government levels and the most relevant stakeholders, this is outside of the Commission’s remit.

Mayors, counties or regions’ local leaders know the best their local ecosystem and the development opportunities in their territories. The Competitiveness framework should rely on them and suggest not another centralised national plan, but territorial competitiveness plans, ensuring a broad territorial coherence of investments for growth and competitiveness.  Yet, the few mentions of local and regional governments in the communication are to say that they should play their part in the simplification efforts and acceleration of administrative procedures at the service of the private sector.

With the new Competitiveness Compass, the Union at least reaffirms a common European objective that governments, at all levels, should follow. And there is a broad consensus that industrial renewal, research and innovation, transitioning to low carbon economies are all very important priorities that could contribute to improving life of Europeans – because that is the end goal, right? But there is one element critically missing for this vision to become true: a territorial vision.

Start-ups, universities, research labs, factories, all still need to be physically located somewhere: in a municipality, city, region. Somewhere with access to a fast broadband, somewhere with efficient mobility and transport solutions for employees commuting, receiving or shipping products, somewhere with good public services, ensuring a quality of life that would attract or retain the skilled workforce needed, and somewhere the taxes on these economic activities may contribute to a municipality’s revenues and therefore effectively benefit the entire local community[1].

And while the communication clearly identifies the need for public investments to de-risk and unlock private investments, it is completely overlooking the major role of local and regional governments to drive public investments. Subnational governments are responsible for 53% of the total public investment in the EU[2], and yet they are increasingly required to contribute to the fiscal consolidation efforts of Member States, steadily reducing their investment capacities.

One of the major risks with a complete lack of territorial vision, is the major downside of the Single Market: the concentration of capital, wealth and work forces in a few already attractive places, leaving entire regions behind the competitiveness run. The Cohesion Policy was created especially to prevent this type of concentration and channel EU public investments in places that would otherwise fail to attract businesses, investments or researchers.

And the Competitiveness Compass is probably just a foretaste of what the Commission is preparing for the entire architecture of EU funds in its next multi-annual financial framework. Writing in the communication “The Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF) proposal will be the opportunity to further streamline access to and simplify EU funding instruments – currently fragmented over too many programmes – across the board”, the Commission is confirming the leak and rumours in the direction of having a single national plan (yes, another one) for all currently shared management fund (i.e. all Cohesion Policy funds, and the Common Agricultural Policy). This could be a worst-case scenario: investments and reforms priorities decided at top European level that make no sense for the people and the places where the funds are spent. This is already happening with the European Semester[3].

The only solution to reconcile the overarching European goal of competitiveness, and the actual needs and priorities of Europeans wherever they want to live, is to enshrine multi-level governance in the competitiveness agenda and the upcoming long-term budget of the EU.


[1] European Joint Research Centre, Local taxes on economic activity in municipalities in EU Member States, European Joint Research Centre, https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC129095

[2] OECD (2024) Subnational governments structure and finance, OECD, Paris, https://www.oecd.org/content/dam/oecd/en/topics/policy-issues/subnational-finance-and-investment/subnational-governments-infrastructure-finance-2024.pdf/_jcr_content/renditions/original./subnational-governments-infrastructure-finance-2024.pdf

[3] CEMR, Top level decision – local consequences: The European Semester explained, 2024 https://ccre-cemr.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/EU-Semester-Study-2024.pdf

For more information, contact:

FOSTER Local Training

Foster Training News 2025

Building Future-Oriented Governance for Climate Resilience


How can Local and Regional Governments prepare for the environmental challenges of tomorrow? On January 23, 2025, CEMR hosted a FOSTER Local Training, bringing together experts, policymakers, and local leaders to explore innovative governance approaches for a climate-resilient future.

FOSTER—Future Oriented Solutions Towards Environmental Resilience—is a two-year EU-funded initiative that strengthens local and regional authorities’ ability to anticipate and respond to climate challenges. Through participatory governance, strategic foresight, and inclusive capacity-building, the project empowers local actors to shape policies that reflect the needs of their communities.

Key Takeaways from the Training

During the event, participants delved into:

Inclusive Communication – How local governments can make their messages accessible and representative of diverse communities.

Participatory Democracy – Strengthening civic engagement and fostering trust between governments and citizens.

Women in Politics – A CEMR study revealing the barriers women face in leadership and strategies to promote gender equality.

Strategic Foresight & Scenario Planning – Equipping local governments with tools to anticipate future risks and opportunities.

Greening Cities – Exploring sustainable urban solutions through foresight discussions.

The training was not just about knowledge-sharing but about action. It provided local actors with practical tools to co-design policies that anticipate climate risks, engage communities, and ensure long-term environmental resilience.

📥 Download the training materials here

Subscribe to Resonance to stay tuned for more activities on climate resilience and join us in shaping the future of local governments!

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