Discussion Papers 2008.
Visions and Strategies in the Carpathian Area (VASICA) 99-106. p.
13 European Territorial Cooperation within the
Carpathian area
13.1 Situation and problems
The Carpathian region is a specific area of Europe, even from the point of view of European
(international) cooperation. There are few places of the world, where in a relatively small area, the
borders of so many countries meet. The most outstanding example can be found in the North-
Eastern Carpathians. By drawing a circle with 60 km radius around the town of Mukacheve,
(Ukraine, Transcarpathia region), some areas of 5 countries will be covered in the circle (Poland,
Slovakia, Ukraine, Hungary and Romania). There are only three places in the World in similar
situation: beside Mukacheve, Darjiling in India (India, Bangla Desh, Nepal, Bhutan and China)
and Katuna Mulilo in Namibia, Afrika (Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Zambia and Angola).
If there is one area in Europe for which European cooperation is of vital impor-
tance, then it is the Carpathian region. The area which was delineated for the pro-
ject includes 14 state border sections in 4466 km length (AT–CZ, PL–CZ, CZ–SK,
PL–SK, PL–UA, SK–UA, SK–HU, SK–AT, HU–AT, HU–UA, HU–RO, RO–UA,
HU–SRB, RO–SRB). It includes 81 NUTS3 units, of which, according to EU defi-
nition, 52 are border regions. Most of its large rivers are flowing through several
countries. The Danube catchment area covers – at least in a small part of all 8 Car-
pathian countries. Tisa catchment area covers 5 countries. The new member states,
with the exception of the Czech Republic, all are on the external border of the EU.
It is therefore justified that the 6 EU member countries in the Carpathian region
have a 28 percent share of the “European cooperation” Structural Funds support of
the EU (2173 thousand €, 2004 prices for 2007–2013).
Cross-border cooperation between Carpathian countries has two main forms:
− Bottom-up initiatives which, of course, can enjoy EU support to their activi-
ties. Such initiatives are the Euroregions and Working Communities (Figure
16);
− Top-down initiatives of the European Commission, that is the cross-border
and Trans-national Structural Funds programmes.
13.1.1 Bottom-up initiatives
The main types of bottom-up cross-border regional cooperations in the Carpathian
area are the Euregions or Euroregions. The prototype of these regions was estab-
lished as early as the 1970s on the German-Dutch border. Its organisational struc-
tures served as a model for all later established similar regions, at least formally.
They emerged first along the Western borders of Germany. After the political
Illés, Iván : European Territorial Cooperation Within the Carpathian Area.
In: Visions and Strategies in the Carpathian Area (VASICA)
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2008. 99-106. p. Discussion Papers, Special
100
VISIONS AND STRATEGIES IN THE CARPATHIAN AREA (VASICA)
change in 1990, they appeared also along the Eastern borders of Germany and later
there was diffusionto other Eastern borders. Now, the German–Polish, the
German–Czech, the Polish–Czech, the Polish–Slovak, the Slovak–Hungarian and
the Austria–Hungarian borders are fully covered by Euroregions (Table 13).
The similarity to the model of the Dutch-German Euregion is, however, only
the appearance, being the competencies and powers of Carpathian Euroregions
radically different from the original model. Their established common boards do
not dispose over any genuine decision-making competencies; they can adopt only
recommendations. Even these recommendations are mostly of rather general and
vague character. The partner regions are able to pay a very modest membership
fee, which is hardly enough to pay one or two employees in a secretariat, and to
host the rotating meetings of the board.
Figure 16
Euroregions in the Carpathians
Source: Author’s edition.
Illés, Iván : European Territorial Cooperation Within the Carpathian Area.
In: Visions and Strategies in the Carpathian Area (VASICA)
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2008. 99-106. p. Discussion Papers, Special
EUROPEAN TERRITORIAL COOPERATION WITHIN THE CARPATHIAN AREA
10
1
Table 13
Euroregions in the Carpathians
Number
Name of the Euroregion
Countries
NUTS2 level regions, where the
cooperation takes place
1.
Euroregion „Tatry”
PL, SK
Podkarpackie, Východné Slovensko
2.
Euroregion „Beskidy”
PL, SK
Malopolskie, Stredné Slovensko
3.
Euroregion „Tešínské Slezsko – PL, CZ
Šląskie, Moravskoslezsko
Šląsk Cieszinsky”
4.
Euroregion „Praděd – Pradziad” PL, CZ
Opolskie, Severovýchod
5.
Euroregion „Silesia”
PL, CZ
Šląskie, Moravskoslezsko
6.
Euroregion „Neisse – Nysa –
PL, CZ, D
Dolnošląskie, Severovýchod, Dresden
Nisa
7.
Waldviertel – Pomoravie –
CZ, A, SK
Jihovýchod, Niederösterreich, Západné
Zahorie
Slovensko
8.
Bilé – Biele Karpaty
CZ, SK
Stŕední Morava, Západné Slovensko
9.
Euroregion Ister-Granum
SK, HU
Közép-Dunántúl, Západné Slovensko,
Stredné Slovensko
10.
Váh – Danube – Ipoly
SK, HU
Észak-Magyarország, Západné Slovensko,
Stredné Slovensko
11.
Ipoly – Ipel’
SK, HU
Észak-Magyarország, Západné Slovensko,
Stredné Slovensko
12.
Euroregion „Neogradensis”
SK, HU
Észak-Magyarország, Stredné Slovensko
13.
Euroregion „Sajó-Rima – Slaná- SK, HU
Észak-Magyarország, Stredné Slovensko,
Rimava”
Východné Slovensko
14.
Euroregion „Košice – Miskolc” SK, HU
Észak-Magyarország, Východné
Slovensko
15.
Euroregion „Kras”
SK, HU
Észak-Magyarország, Východné
Slovensko
16.
Euroregion „West Pannonia”
A, HU
Burgenland, Nyugat-Dunántúl
17.
Euroregion „Bihar-Bihor”
RO, HU
Nord-Vest, Észak Alföld
18.
Euroregion „Upper Prut”
MD, RO, UA Moldova, Nord-Est, Chernivtsi
19.
Euroregion „Danube-Maros-
HU, RO, YU Dél-Alföld, Vest, Vojvodina
Tisa-Kris”
20.
Euroregion „Danube 21st
BG, RO, YU Sud, Sud-Vest, Severozapaden, East
Century” (Iron Gate)
Serbia
Source: Author’s collection.
Illés, Iván : European Territorial Cooperation Within the Carpathian Area.
In: Visions and Strategies in the Carpathian Area (VASICA)
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2008. 99-106. p. Discussion Papers, Special
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VISIONS AND STRATEGIES IN THE CARPATHIAN AREA (VASICA)
The Euroregions and their members can submit, as any other juristic or natural per-
son an application for INTERREG and PHARE-CBC project support. Of course,
the organisational framework of the Euroregion facilitates some coordination of
these project proposals and applications, and it is an advantage of this organisa-
tions. But, for the time being, establishing a Euroregion is rather of political sig-
nificance, signalling the intention to cooperate. There are only few Euroregions
which can boast with tangible results.
At present, there are 20 Euroregions or “Euroregion type” organisations in the
Carpathian area (see Table). It is more than 20 percent of all such organisations in
Europe.
Organisational consolidation, however, did not follow the quantitative increase.
In many cases, even the organisational form is not yet cleared. Are they associa-
tions, or corporations or interest groups? Sometimes national governments do not
know how many Euroregions are on their borders, because Euroregions are sub-
jects neither to Association Act, nor to Corporation Act and there is no obligation
to register the establishment of a Euroregion. The list below, can be therefore only
of tentative character. The recent regulations of the European Commission con-
cerning “European Groupings of territorial co-operation” might facilitate and pro-
mote the activities of Euroregions also in the Carpathian area.
One example: The Carpathian Euroregion. Its birth and its activities 1992–
After the democratic change in Central and Eastern Europe, enthusiasm for transnational and
cross-border cooperation increased both within the respective countries and outside the region. A
New York based institute, the Institute for East-West Studies, took the initiative in 1991, and pro-
posed to establish a cooperation system in the North-Eastern Carpathian area. The family of the di-
rector of the Institute, Mr. John Edwin Mroz, stemmed from this area. That was one reason for his
and his institute’s commitment to the cause of transnational cooperation in the region.
But, after the first months of general enthusiasm, already the first steps of organisation met
some difficulties. Initially, in 1992, counties and districts from all 5 counties applied for member-
ship in the cooperation scheme. But the governments of Slovakia and Romania vetoed their appli-
cation with the argument: their regions were not entitled for entering into international contractual
relationship without the permission of the central government. So, the Slovak and Romanian re-
gions became not members but only observers in the new Euroregion. Later, however, they joined
the Carpathian Euroregion.
In the first years, after the foundation, the Institute for East-West Studies persuaded one Japa-
nese Foundation, the Sasakawa Foundation, to support financially the Carpathian Euroregion. The
Council of Europe included into several publications their contribution to the foundation of the
Carpathian Euroregion, but, as a matter of fact, after the foundation they never contacted the re-
gion any more. Concerning the European Union, the Carpathian Euroregion was not eligible for
EU support since none of the founding countries was – by the time of founding – member of the
EU, not even candidate in the year 1993. It was a strange situation: a European region on a very
critical point of the continent could be established and could operate only with the organisational
help of an American institute and with the financial help of a Japanese foundation.
Somewhat later the Carpathian Euroregion lost one of its most important external financing
sources. The only substantial funding resource remained the membership fee of the participating
Illés, Iván : European Territorial Cooperation Within the Carpathian Area.
In: Visions and Strategies in the Carpathian Area (VASICA)
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2008. 99-106. p. Discussion Papers, Special
EUROPEAN TERRITORIAL COOPERATION WITHIN THE CARPATHIAN AREA
10
3
regions. But the Ukrainian regions were unable, from the beginning, to pay any membership fees,
and the same applies to the Romanian and Slovak regions which joined later. Only the Hungarian
and Polish regions paid the membership fee, but under these circumstances, it became quite high.
Some Hungarian members found the costs of membership higher than its benefits and left the
Euroregion.
Beyond financial problems, there were organisational and logistic problems as well. The first
seat of the common secretariat was located – as a symbolic act – to Ukraine, to the city of
Uzhgorod, in Transcarpathia region. It turned out soon that this choice entails a lot of logistic dif-
ficulties. Phone contact to Ukraine was extremely difficult, electronic (e-mail, internet) contact
was almost impossible. The city of Uzhgorod is 23 km from the Hungarian and 6 km from the
Slovak border but border crossing required several hours because of the slow and bureaucratic
procedures. Consequently, the Secretariat had to be transferred to Hungary, to Debrecen, later to
Nyíregyháza. The seat of the Carpathian Foundation was initially Košice in Slovakia, later it was
also relocated to Eger, Hungary.
Difficulties have arisen also from the fact that the roles, competencies and the autonomy of re-
gions in the participating countries were quite different. Members of the Council of the Euroregion
were exclusively heads or leading officials of regional governments, no representatives of the
business or scientific community, no NGOs.
The experts of the Euroregion prepared an excellent strategic document for the development of
the area, a good operational programme and several project proposals. Unfortunately, with the ex-
ception of some conferences and study tours (and the cooperation of the respective universities)
nothing was implemented from these strategies, programmes and projects during the 15 years ex-
istence of the Euroregion. The main reason for it was the lack of financial resources, but the in-
ability of taking decisions and the lack of connections to the business community played also a
role in this failure. Important factor was also the lack of an effective neighbourhood policy of the
EU in these years.
Now, from 2007, there are possibilities for the efficient support of transnational cooperation in
this area. The institutions, instruments, legal regulations and resources are in place. Unfortunately,
in the meantime the Carpathian Euroregion has lost its dynamics, enthusiasm, and also a large part
of its membership. Perhaps it has been established too early.
13.1.2 Top-down initiatives: the Structural Funds Interreg and Territorial
cooperation programmes
Interreg was a Community initiative which aimed to stimulate interregional coop-
eration in the European Union. It started in 1989, and was financed under the
European Regional Development Fund (ERDF). It was designed to stimulate coop-
eration between the member states of the European Union on different levels. One
of its main targets was to diminish the influence of national borders in order to
attain equal economic, social and cultural development on the whole territory of
the European Union. Interreg was launched as Interreg I for the programming pe-
riod 1989–93, and continued as Interreg II for the subsequent period 1994–99. It
has moved on to Interreg III for the period 2000–2006. Candidate countries could
join the programme from 1995 (those who had EU member neighbour). From
1996, the programme was extended to borders between candidate states (it was
financed from the PHARE pre-accession financial support instrument).
Illés, Iván : European Territorial Cooperation Within the Carpathian Area.
In: Visions and Strategies in the Carpathian Area (VASICA)
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2008. 99-106. p. Discussion Papers, Special
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VISIONS AND STRATEGIES IN THE CARPATHIAN AREA (VASICA)
Nevertheless, in the first period, there were several problems during the imple-
mentation of Interreg-PHARE-CBC programmes:
− Candidate countries were obliged, to spendt the largest part of their PHARE-
CBC allocation on the borders to EU member states, while most needs and
problems emerged on the other borders;
− Interreg was financed from the Structural Funds, PHARE-CBC from pre-
accession aid. The two financial support funds were managed by two differ-
ent DG-s in the European Commission. Their regulations, methodologies,
timetables were totally different. Under such conditions it was extremely dif-
ficult (if not impossible) to implement a really common programme.
− Not only regulations but basic objectives were also different. Basic invest-
ment needs in the border regions of member states were satisfied from na-
tional resources and from Objective 1 support. Interreg was used mainly for
the satisfaction of secondary, not so basic and urgent needs. In contrast,
PHARE-CBC was the only source of EU support in the border regions of
candidate states and they used it to satisfy basic needs (water supply, sewage
systems, access roads and so on). Anyway, PHARE-CBC was very useful,
but programmes could not be regarded as really common ones, they were
rather parallel ones.
− A serious problem was that these funds could not be used along borders with
non-member and non-candidate states, though, these border regions were –
mostly – in the worst and most critical situation.
The situation turned for much better after 2004, when candidate states became
members and they had access to the Structural Funds. It improved further from
2007 when the neighbourhood programmes and the ENPI (European Neighbour-
hood and Partnership Instrument) was introduced. The new instruments enabled
non-member states to participate in these programmes on equal conditions. Regu-
lations became more harmonised. Besides cross-border programmes, neighbour-
hood programmes play a more important role in European cooperation.
The main financial data of the programmes are the following.
As it can be seen, ERDF allocations to these programmes between 2004–2006
and 2007–2013 have increased six-ten times. It means that substantially more and
larger projects can be implemented.
The other strand of INTERREG (Territorial cooperation) is trans-national coop-
eration. This strand aims at the cooperation within large European regions, includ-
ing regions from several states. Until 2006, the Carpathian region as a whole be-
longed to the CADSES (Central European, Adriatic, Danubian and Southeast
European Space) programme area, including 17 states from Poland to Greece. By
preparing for the next – 2007–2013 programming period, the Commission and
some member states found this space too large for trans-national cooperation and
Illés, Iván : European Territorial Cooperation Within the Carpathian Area.
In: Visions and Strategies in the Carpathian Area (VASICA)
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2008. 99-106. p. Discussion Papers, Special
EUROPEAN TERRITORIAL COOPERATION WITHIN THE CARPATHIAN AREA
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5
divided the CADSES area into two cooperation areas: Central Europe (including
the Carpathian countries Austria, Hungary, Czech Republic, Poland and Slovakia),
and Southeast Europe (including the Carpathian countries Austria, Slovakia, Hun-
gary, Romania and Serbia). As it can bee seen, the Carpathian area had been di-
vided into two halves. Launching projects, embracing the whole Carpathian area
will be not impossible, but undoubtedly more difficult than before.
Nevertheless, it can be stated, that even in the past period, very few CADSES
projects were devoted to the problems of the Carpathian area. Out of the 1600 pro-
ject partners of the CADSES projects, only 70 (4,3%) were located in the Carpa-
thian area. Out of the 134 lead project partners, only 4 (3%) were located in the
Carpathian area (Krakow, Vsetin, Karviná, Miskolc). And even out of these four,
only one was engaged in the problems of mountainous areas (Shining Mountains,
Miskolc) (Table 14).
Table 14
CADSES projects in the Carpathian Area, 2002–2006
Programme
Financial resources
Financial resources
2002–2004
2004–2006
Total
ERDF contri-
Total
ERDF contri-
million €
bution million €
million €
bution million €
POLAND – SLOVAKIA cross-
21.0
185.2
157.4
border programmes
CZECH REPUBLIC – SLOVAKIA
18.2
13.7
109.1
92.7
cross border programmes
HUNGARY – ROMANIA cross-
42
23.9
275.0
224.0
border programmes
HUNGARY – SLOVAKIA cross-
27.8
23.8
176.4
207.6
border programmes
CZECH REPUBLIC – POLAND
46.0
34.5
219.4
cross-border programmes
AUSTRIA – CZECH REPUBLIC
69.2
38.3
107.4
cross-border programmes
AUSTRIA – SLOVAKIA cross-
19.0
59.9
border programmes
AUSTRIA – HUNGARY cross-
77
71
96.8
82.3
border programmes
POLANDS – BELARUS–
37.8
186.2
UKRAINE neighbourhood
programmes
HUNGARY – (ROMANIA) –
31.7
68.6
SLOVAKIA – UKRAINE
neighbourhood programme
Source: Collected by the author.
Illés, Iván : European Territorial Cooperation Within the Carpathian Area.
In: Visions and Strategies in the Carpathian Area (VASICA)
Pécs: Centre for Regional Studies, 2008. 99-106. p. Discussion Papers, Special
106
VISIONS AND STRATEGIES IN THE CARPATHIAN AREA (VASICA)
13.2 Policy recommendations in respect to territorial cooperation
and common programmes
1) The promotion of European territorial cooperation should be one of the main
objectives of Structural Funds supports. Territorial cooperation had been “pro-
moted” to one of the three priorities of the Structural Funds objectives. A sub-
stantial share of support was allocated to the new member states and this is also
a step to the right direction. Nevertheless, funds devoted to trans-national coop-
eration did not increase, yet considering inflation they even decreased in the
present period. This is regrettable. Namely, for Carpathian cooperation, the
most suitable form of cooperation is trans-national cooperation.
2) In the framework of cross-border programmes one should aim at launchung
really common, or at least “mirror” projects. Only projects of this kind contrib-
ute to eliminating borders as obstacles of cooperation.
3) Beyond bilateral cross-border programmes, larger emphasis should be given to
neighbourhood programmes, including the participation of non-member states
in the Carpathian area. Without the participation of Ukraine, it is impossible to
prepare a really integrated programme for the Carpathians. Experience has
shown that most problems of territorial cooperation are concentrated in those
relatively small areas where the borders of three countries meet.
4) Mountainous areas should receive more attention in territorial cooperation pro-
jects. The significance and weight of the problem is much larger than the atten-
tion which was devoted to it in the framework of CADSES programme.
5) In the Alpine space, much more experience has been accumulated concerning
project themes and approaches in mountainous areas. The Central European
programme space ensures possibilities for projects handling together and paral-
lel the problems of the Alps and the Carpathians. There is much to learn from
the Alpine praxis in this respect.
6) Despite the division of the Carpathian area into two programme spaces, there
are possibilities for implementing comprehensive Carpathian projects and for
comprehensive Carpathian participation. According to Structural Funds regula-
tions 20% of programme allocations can be used outside the programme area,
and 10 percent even outside the EU. Projects should take advantage of this
regulation.