Digital Single Market Strategy: European Commission agrees areas for action

26 Mar 2015 12:57 PM

Digital technology is part of everyday life. From studying to watching films, buying or selling online to connecting with friends or your doctor – the internet is a goldmine of digital opportunities. But every day in the EU people and companies run into many barriers – from geo-blocking or cross-border parcel delivery inefficiencies to unconnected e-services. Digital services too often remain confined to national borders. The Juncker Commission has made it a priority to remove these obstacles and create a Digital Single Market: making the EU's single market freedoms "go digital", and boosting growth and jobs on our continent. The College of Commissioners yesterday had a first discussion on the Digital Single Market Strategy due in May – and set out the main areas the Commission will focus its work on to trigger real changes for consumers and businesses alike.

Vice-President for the Digital Single Market Andrus Ansip said: “Let us do away with all those fences and walls that block us online. People must be able to freely go across borders online just as they do offline. Innovative businesses must be helped to grow across the EU, not remain locked into their home market. This will be an uphill struggle all the way, but we need an ambitious start. Europe should benefit fully from the digital age: better services, more participation and new jobs”.

Commissioner for the Digital Economy and Society Günther H. Oettinger said: “Europe cannot be at the forefront of the digital revolution with a patchwork of 28 different rules for telecommunications services, copyright, IT security and data protection. We need a European market, which allows new business models to flourish, start-ups to grow and the industry to take advantage of the internet of things. And people have to invest too – in their IT-skills, be it in their job or their leisure time.

Yesterday's orientation debate has set out three main areas on which Commission action will focus during this mandate:

1. Better access for consumers and businesses to digital goods and services

Main contributors:

Andrus Ansip, Vice-President for the Digital Single Market

Günther Oettinger, Digital Economy & Society

Elżbieta Bieńkowska, Internal Market, Industry, Entrepreneurship & SMEs

Věra Jourová, Justice, Consumers & Gender Equality

Tibor Navracsics, Education, Culture, Youth & Sport

Carlos Moedas, Research, Science and Innovation

Pierre Moscovici, Economic & Financial Affairs, Taxation & Customs

Margrethe Vestager, Competition

2. Shaping the environment for digital networks and services to flourish

Main contributors:

Andrus Ansip, Vice-President for the Digital Single Market

Günther Oettinger, Digital Economy & Society

Margrethe Vestager, Competition

Elżbieta Bieńkowska, Internal Market, Industry, Entrepreneurship & SMEs

Věra Jourová, Justice, Consumers & Gender Equality

Pierre Moscovici, Economic & Financial Affairs, Taxation & Customs

Phil Hogan, Agriculture & Rural Development

Corina Crețu, Regional Policy

3. Creating a European Digital Economy and Society with long-term growth potential

Main contributors:

Andrus Ansip, Vice-President for the Digital Single Market

Günther Oettinger, Digital Economy & Society

Elżbieta Bieńkowska, Internal Market, Industry, Entrepreneurship & SMEs

Věra Jourová, Justice, Consumers & Gender Equality

Vytenis Andriukaitis, Health & Food Safety

Marianne Thyssen, Employment, Social Affairs, Skills & Labour Mobility

Violeta Bulc, Transport

Carlos Moedas, Research, Science & Innovation

Next Steps

Yesterday’s discussions set out the priority areas for action to focus work on when preparing the comprehensive Digital Single Market Strategy to be unveiled in May.

Background

Several Commissioners are part of the Digital Single Market project team and are actively involved in this work. The Commission is also actively engaging with a wide range of stakeholders in the run up to the Strategy (see the report – join the debate on "Digital4EU").

Annex I: Factsheet - Why we need a Digital Single Market

Annex II: The Digital Single Market project team

For more information

How digital is your country? New figures reveal progress needed towards a digital Europe

Webpage of Vice-President for the Digital Single Market Andrus Ansip (@Ansip_EU)

Webpage of Commissioner for Digital Economy and Society Günther H. Oettinger (@GOettingerEU)

Website of the Digital Agenda for Europe

President Juncker’s political guidelines

The Commission Work Programme 2015

Annex II: The Digital Single Market project team

Press contacts

General public inquiries: