fROM THE d f i d department for international developement 27 JULY 2010 A structure for the European External Action Service (EEAS) was agreed on Monday by William Hague and fellow EU foreign ministers. The new service, a product of the Lisbon Treaty, aims to strengthen the EU’s external reach and create a more joined-up approach to international development. The agreement gives a strong role to the EU’s International Development Commissioner, Andris Piebalgs. This is good news for developing countries, and will help ensure that the EU’s development resources retain their focus on helping the world’s poorest people lift themselves out of poverty. The UK Government, through DFID, called for the EEAS to retain this focus on development priorities, and partly due to these efforts the agreement includes: The European Commission is the world’s second largest donor and also the second largest provider of humanitarian assistance. It provides long term development assistance as well as immediate help for people affected by natural disasters, such as the Haiti earthquake. The Commission manages development programmes across 145 countries and has helped hundreds of millions of people to lift themselves out of poverty; for example, EU funding has helped provide clean water to 14 million people in Africa and 60 million textbooks for school children in Bangladesh. All 27 EU member states contribute financially to these programmes alongside the development work they fund directly. DFID ministers take part in deciding how EU development funds should be used. The UK Government is determined to make sure EU aid works and makes a real difference to the lives of the world’s poorest people.Agreement on EU External Action Service
DFID and the European Union














