COPIED
3 mins

The future of Europe will depend on how we deal with rural areas

Peter Schmidt
Stefano Palmieri

The EU enjoys incredible territorial diversity, and we need to make sure that people are able to make the most of the inherent features of the areas in which they live. Now more than ever before, the COVID-19 crisis has shown that no EU citizen should be left behind and disadvantaged, for example in terms of access to public services, especially in health, housing and employment opportunities, simply because they live in one region rather than another. Here, territorial cohesion comes into play, aiming for more balanced and sustainable development, in accordance with the territory where one lives.

That is why the Treaty of Lisbon called on the EU and Member States to pay particular attention to reducing disparities between the levels of development of the various regions and the backwardness of the least-favoured regions.

EU rural and urban territories are not developing evenly. It is critical to foster policies that curb this trend, ensure a fair and sustainable transition to a wellbeing economy in all areas and promote population rebalancing. For years, the European Economic and Social Committee (EESC) has stressed the need to reduce the development gap between different territories. In a recent own-initiative opinion on 'An integrated approach for the EU's rural areas, with particular emphasis on vulnerable regions' the EESC has drawn attention to those regions currently threatened by stagnation, depopulation or desertification.

The damage caused by having swathes of deserted countryside in Europe is not just economic but also social, environmental and cultural.

It is therefore critical to deal with two equally severe forms of degradation: on one hand, the excessive pressure on air, water and soil due to the concentration of economic activity in urban areas, and, on the other hand, the abandonment of large areas of territory, whose biological and landscape diversity is declining irreparably.

"The EESC proposes a 'territorial contract 'between urban society and the rural world, participatory and adapted to the characteristics of the territories"

The new Territorial Agenda 2030 aims to tackle these disparities among regions, including in rural areas. The new agenda was adopted in December 2020, when organised civil society contributed its opinion on 'the Revision of the Territorial Agenda of the EU, the Leipzig Charter and the Urban Agenda for the EU'. It refers to 'Better balanced territorial development utilising Europe's diversity', whereby all sectors must take action to encourage neighbourhoods, communities, municipalities, counties, regions and Member States to coordinate their responses to global societal challenges and to improve working, living and business conditions in all places.

Rural areas, which play a critical role in economic and social cohesion, in regions' resilience, and in the contribution of countless services from various local ecosystems, including food production, should, hand in hand with urban areas, strengthen their socio-economic prosperity, innovation capacity, positions in global value chains and global competitiveness across the EU, to achieve a sustainable and inclusivewellbeing economy,in line with the objectives of the European Green and Social Deal, the Next Generation EU recovery package and the 17 Sustainable Development Goals.

"The damage caused by having swathes of deserted countryside in Europe is not just economic but also social, environmental and cultural"

Civil society's contribution is crucial in this context, and the EESC has always supported a bottom-up approach and the empowerment of communities to come up with solutions. Local civil society, workers and business actors as well as citizens need to be engaged to unlock the immense potential of rural/urban communities, and to co-design and foster their sustainable development.

The EESC proposes a 'territorial contract 'between urban society and the rural world, which should be participatory and adapted to the characteristics of the territories, and should preserve their historical, cultural and natural heritage.

We call for a holistic approach for a sustainable urban/ rural developmentthat precludes policies and institutions from operating in isolation. For this, institutional coordination, integration and alignment are key (linking rural and urban policies with all other relevant policies, such as food, climate, biodiversity, poverty reduction, land use, transport, infrastructure, services of general interest, new activities based on the circular economy and the bio economy, immigration, and the creation of employment and high-quality jobs). The EESC will also actively contribute to the EU's long-term vision for rural areas that is being developed by the European Commission (expected in June 2021).

Stefano Palmieri is the president of the Economic and Monetary Union, Economic and Social Cohesion Section, EESC

Peter Schmidt is the president of the Agriculture, Rural Development and the Environment Section, EESC

This article appears in Rural areas: an eye to the future

Go to Page View
This article appears in...
Rural areas: an eye to the future
Go to Page View
Editorial
Wiktor Szydarowski, ESPON EGTC
The way into the future
The semester of the Portuguese Presidency of the
Now is the time for territorial, smart and ambitious investments!
Elisa Ferreira Europe's response to the crisis is
Thematic dossier
A Long Term Vision for Rural Areas to turn changes into opportunities
A new pathway is emerging for the prosperous future of rural areas
Fatima Bacharel Andreea China Rural areas:
The EU cohesion policy needs a universal basic income
Nowadays, the environment is a priority in the
Rural areas are entitled to the EU's cohesion and crisis response
Rural areas not only represent the smallest building
The future of Europe will depend on how we deal with rural areas
Peter Schmidt Stefano Palmieri The EU enjoys incredible
CAP reform and a Green Deal: an unmissable opportunity to promote agroecological practices
Guillaume Cros The Occitanie region is
How to harness the potential of rural areas to m ake them suitable places for innovation opportunities?
' Eugenio Giani In her speech during
Which future do you want for rural areas?
Marion Eckardt Last year, the European LEADER
Taking action to spur growth in French rural areas: the rural agenda
Marie-Lorraine Dangeard The Territorial Agenda 2030 provides
Reinventing Scandinavian Mountains
Jan Edøy Erik Hagen Em pirical
Landscape transformation programme: An institutional innovation model
Miguel Freitas The new European forest strategy
Rural networking to build a Long Term Vision for Rural Areas
Enrique Nieto In early 2020, the President of
The pandemic may help us re-discover places that were left behind
João Ferrão is a research professor at the
Cit izens and territories should feel the im pact of NextGenerationEU funds
In the face of the COVID-19 crisis, Local
The macroregional strategy for the Adriatic-Ionian Region: a common vision, a shared mission
Mathilde Konstantopoulou Following the end of the
Why we need new evidence to better address the social consequences of the Covid-19 pandemic
Nicolas Rossignol ESPON' s first attempt to
Older people’s interests in policymaking: a lesson from COVID-19?
Piera Petruzzi Member State governments have begun to
Development challenges for lake areas in the EU
Károly Fekete Éva Geletáné Varga
Leaping from a primary to a quaternary sector in a rural EU border area
Sandra Spule What are employment options for
Measuring the climate impact of spatial planning
Pauline Riordan Because of its broad reach,
Functional areas as emerging geographies: how to define and measure them
' Zintis Hermansons The understanding of different functional
Eco-clust er s as governance tools
Jacopo Riccardi Thijs Fikken Europe's urban-maritime
European Year of Rail 2021. Connecting places and people
Valeria Fedeli The year 2021 is the
Measuring digitalisation in regions and cities, matching the targets of the 2030 Digital Com pass
Anke Schuster Marek Bobiš The COVID-19 pandemic has
Driving and scaling-up innovation in cross-border digital healthcare from the demand side
Martin Gauk Angela Emidio The ESPON
Communicating Cohesion Policy on Planet Pandemia One year on
Image: Claudio Nichele Agnès Monfret Claudio Nichele Like
Communication in time of pandemics - INTERACT experience
Kevin Fulcher When COVID-19 arrived in Europe,
Interreg Europe communication during the COVID-19 pandemic
Petra Polaskova The COVID-19 pandemic has drastically
How to hold an international event when everybody is stuck in their homes?
Jenny Koutsomarkou Imagine the impact of the pandemic
Upcoming ESPON events Transnational Outreach
Due to the COVID-19 restrictions, all events will
Territorial resilience: meaning and main implications for spatial planning
The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic across regions
Setting up the ESPON 2030 Program m e: heading towards the finish line
The last few months have been particularly intensive
Policy Brief on rural areas: More than just a publication
Fatima Bacharel Andreea China Since the
Outlook of the Slovenian presidency
Blanka Bartol TomaẐ Miklav Ḉ iḈ In
Looking for back issues?
Browse the Archive >

Previous Article Next Article