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Special territories of members of the European Economic Area

The special territories of members of the European Economic Area (EEA) are the 32 special territories of EU member states and EFTA member states which, for historical, geographical, or political reasons, enjoy special status within or outside the European Union and the European Free Trade Association.

Special territories of members of the European Economic Area
Location of the European Union and the special territories
Largest settlementsLas Palmas, Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Willemstad, Saint-Denis, Funchal, Nouméa
Official language
Special territory
Area
• Total
2,733,792 km2 (1,055,523 sq mi)
Population
• Estimate
6,114,658
CurrencyEuro (EUR; ; OMRs, 3 OCTs[a]
and 9 special cases[b])
5 others
Date formatdd/mm/yyyy (AD)

The special territories of EU member states are categorised under three headings: nine Outermost Regions (OMR) that form part of the European Union, though they benefit from derogations from some EU laws due to their geographical remoteness from mainland Europe; thirteen Overseas Countries and Territories (OCT) that do not form part of the European Union, though they cooperate with the EU via the Overseas Countries and Territories Association; and ten special cases that form part of the European Union (with the exception of the Faroe Islands), though EU laws make ad hoc provisions. The Outermost Regions were recognised at the signing of the Maastricht Treaty in 1992,[1] and confirmed by the Treaty of Lisbon in 2007.[2]

The Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union states that both primary and secondary European Union law applies automatically to the outermost regions, with possible derogations due to the particularities of these territories. The Overseas Countries and Territories are recognised by Article 198 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union which allows them to opt into EU provisions on the freedom of movement for workers and freedom of establishment, and invites them to join the Overseas Countries and Territories Association (OCTA) in order to improve cooperation with the European Union.[3] The status of an uninhabited territory, Clipperton, remains unclear since it is not explicitly mentioned in primary EU law and has a sui generis status at the national level.[4][d] Collectively, the special territories encompass a population of some 6.1 million people and a land area of about 2,733,792 square kilometres (1,055,500 sq mi). Around 80 percent of this area is represented by Greenland. The largest region by population, the Canary Islands, accounts for more than a third of the total population of the special territories. The smallest by land area is the island of Saba in the Caribbean (13 km2 or 5 sq mi). The French Southern and Antarctic Lands is the only special territory without a permanent population.

Outermost Regions edit

The Outermost Regions (OMR) are territories forming part of a member state of the European Union but situated a significant distance from mainland Europe. Due to this situation, they have derogation from some EU policies despite being part of the European Union.

According to the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, both primary and secondary European Union law applies automatically to these territories, with possible derogations to take account of their "structural social and economic situation (...) which is compounded by their remoteness, insularity, small size, difficult topography and climate, economic dependence on a few products, the permanence and combination of which severely restrain their development".[5] All form part of the European Union customs area; however, some fall outside of the Schengen Area and the European Union Value Added Tax Area.

Seven Outermost Regions were recognised at the signing of the Maastricht Treaty in 1992.[1] The Treaty of Lisbon included two additional territories (Saint Barthélemy and Saint Martin) in 2007.[5] Saint Barthélemy changed its status from OMR to OCT with effect from 1 January 2012.[2] Mayotte, which was an OCT, joined the EU as an OMR with effect from 1 January 2014.[6]

The 9 Outermost Regions of the European Union are:[7]

Flag Coat of arms Name Loca­tion Area Pop. Capital Largest
settle­ment
Official
language
State
 
 
Azores North Atlantic 2,333 km2 (901 sq mi) 245,746 Angra do Heroísmo, Horta and Ponta Delgada Ponta Delgada Portuguese   Portugal
 
 
Madeira 801 km2 (309 sq mi) 289,000 Funchal Funchal
 
 
Canary Islands 7,493 km2 (2,893 sq mi) 2,101,924 Santa Cruz de Tenerife
and Las Palmas
Las Palmas Spanish   Spain
 
 
French Guiana South America 83,534 km2 (32,253 sq mi) 281,612 Cayenne Cayenne French   France
 
Guadeloupe Caribbean 1,628 km2 (629 sq mi) 402,119 Basse-Terre Les Abymes
 
Martinique 1,128 km2 (436 sq mi) 385,551 Fort-de-France Fort-de-France
 
 
Saint Martin 53 km2 (20 sq mi) 36,286 Marigot Marigot
 
Mayotte Indian Ocean 374 km2 (144 sq mi) 256,518 Dzaoudzi (de jure),
Mamoudzou (de facto)
Mamoudzou
 
Réunion 2,511 km2 (970 sq mi) 865,826 Saint-Denis Saint-Denis
Total 99,855 km2 (38,554 sq mi) 4,864,582

Autonomous Regions of Portugal edit

 
Angra do Heroísmo, oldest continuously settled town in the archipelago of the Azores and UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Azores and Madeira are two groups of Portuguese islands in the Atlantic. Azores and Madeira are integral parts of the Portuguese Republic, but both have the special status as Autonomous Regions, with a degree of self-governance. Some derogations from the application of EU law apply in regards to taxation, fishing and transportation.[8][9] Their VAT is lower than the rest of Portugal, but they are not outside the EU VAT Area.

Canary Islands edit

The Canary Islands are a Spanish archipelago off the African coast which form one of the 17 autonomous communities of Spain–the country's principal first-level administrative division. They are outside the EU VAT Area.[10] The Canary Islands are the most populous and economically strongest territory of all the outermost regions in the European Union. The outermost regions office for support and information is located in these islands, in the city of Las Palmas on the island of Gran Canaria.

French overseas regions edit

 
French Guiana tropical forest, looking toward Cacao

French Guiana, Guadeloupe, Martinique, Mayotte, and Réunion are five French overseas regions (which are also overseas departments) which under French law are, for the most part, treated as integral parts of the Republic. The euro is legal tender;[11] however, they are outside the Schengen Area and the EU VAT Area.[10]

Mayotte is the newest of the five overseas departments, having changed from an overseas collectivity with OCT status on 31 March 2011. It became an outermost region, and thus part of the EU, on 1 January 2014.[12]

Collectivity of Saint Martin edit

Saint Martin is the only overseas collectivity of France with the status of being an Outermost Region of the EU.[13] As with the French overseas departments, the euro is legal tender in Saint Martin, and it is outside the Schengen Area and the EU VAT Area.

On 22 February 2007, Saint Martin and Saint Barthélemy were broken away from the French overseas department of Guadeloupe to form new overseas collectivities. As a consequence their EU status was unclear for a time. While a report issued by the French parliament suggested that the islands remained within the EU as outermost regions,[14] European Commission documents listed them as being outside the European Community.[15] The legal status of the islands was clarified on the coming into force of the Treaty of Lisbon, which listed them as an outermost region.[16] However, Saint Barthélemy ceased being an outermost region and left the EU, to become an OCT, on 1 January 2012.

Overseas countries and territories edit

The overseas countries and territories (OCT) are dependent territories that have a special relationship with one of the member states of the EU. Their status is described in the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, and they are not part of the EU or the European Single Market. The Overseas Countries and Territories Association was created to improve economic development and cooperation between the OCTs and the EU,[17] and includes most OCTs except three territories which do not have a permanent local population.

 
Bora Bora, in French Polynesia

The OCTs have been explicitly invited by the EU treaty to join the EU-OCT Association (OCTA).[3] They were listed in the Article 198 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, which aside from inviting them to join OCTA, also provided them the opportunity to opt into EU provisions on the freedom of movement for workers[18] and freedom of establishment.[19] Yet, the freedom of establishment is limited by Article 203 TFEU and the respective Council Decision on OCTs. Its Article 51(1)(a) prescribes only that "the Union shall accord to natural and legal persons of the OCTs a treatment no less favourable than the most favourable treatment applicable to like natural and legal persons of any third country with whom the Union concludes or has concluded an economic integration agreement." Again this can be, according to Article 51(2)(b) limited. The obligations provided for in paragraph 1 of this Article shall not apply to treatment granted under measures providing for recognition of qualifications, licences or prudential measures in accordance with Article VII of the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) or the GATS Annex on Financial Services.

The OCTs are not subject to the EU's common external customs tariffs[20] but may claim customs on goods imported from the EU on a non-discriminatory basis.[21] They are not part of the EU and the EU acquis does not apply to them, though those joining OCTA are required to respect the detailed rules and procedures outlined by this association agreement (Council Decision 2013/755/EU).[22] OCTA members are entitled to ask for EU financial support.[23]

When the Rome Treaty was signed in March 1957, a total of 15 OCTs existed: French West Africa, French Equatorial Africa, Saint Pierre and Miquelon, Comoros Archipelago, French Madagascar, French Somaliland, New Caledonia, French Polynesia, French Southern and Antarctic Lands, French Togoland, French Cameroons, Belgian Congo, Ruanda-Urundi, Trust Territory of Somalia, Netherlands New Guinea. The list was since then revised multiple times, and comprised—as noted by the Lisbon Treaty—25 OCTs in 2007. One of the French territories subsequently switched status from OMR to OCT (Saint Barthélemy), while another French territory switched from OCT to OMR (Mayotte). As of July 2014, there are still 13 OCTs (six with France, six with the Netherlands and one with Denmark)[24] of which all have joined OCTA.

The 13 Overseas Countries and Territories of the European Union are:[25]

Flag Coat of arms Name Loca­tion Area Pop. Capital Largest settlement Official lan­guage(s) Sovereign state
 
 
Greenland North Atlantic & Arctic 2,166,086 km2 (836,330 sq mi) 56,483 Nuuk Nuuk Greenlandic   Kingdom of Denmark
 
 
Curaçao Caribbean 444 km2 (171 sq mi) 160,337 Willemstad Willemstad Dutch, Papiamento, English   Kingdom of the Netherlands
 
 
Aruba 179 km2 (69 sq mi) 104,822 Oranjestad Oranjestad Dutch, Papiamento, English, Spanish
 
 
Sint Maarten 37 km2 (14 sq mi) 33,609 Philipsburg Lower Prince's Quarter Dutch, English
 
 
Bonaire 294 km2 (114 sq mi) 18,905 Kralendijk Kralendijk Dutch
 
 
Sint Eustatius 21 km2 (8 sq mi) 3,193 Oranjestad Oranjestad
 
 
Saba 13 km2 (5 sq mi) 1,991 The Bottom The Bottom
 
 
French Polynesia Pacific 4,167 km2 (1,609 sq mi) 275,918 Pape'ete Fa'a'ā French   French Republic
 
 
New Caledonia 18,576 km2 (7,172 sq mi) 268,767 Nouméa Nouméa
 
Wallis-et-Futuna 142 km2 (55 sq mi) 11,899 Mata-Utu Mata-Utu
 
Saint Barthélemy Caribbean 25 km2 (10 sq mi) 9,279 Gustavia Gustavia
 
Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon North Atlantic 242 km2 (93 sq mi) 6,080 Saint-Pierre Saint-Pierre
 
 
French Southern and Antarctic Lands Indian Ocean & Antarctica 439,781 km2 (169,800 sq mi) 0[e] Saint-Pierre Port-aux-Français (base)
Total 2,630,007 km2 (1,015,451 sq mi) 945,893

Overseas Countries and Territories Association edit

The Overseas Countries and Territories Association (OCTA) is an organisation founded on 17 November 2000 and headquartered in Brussels. All OCTs have joined OCTA as of February 2020. Its purpose is to improve economic development in overseas countries and territories, as well as cooperation with the European Union. On 25 June 2008, a Cooperation Treaty between the EU and OCTA was signed in Brussels.[26] The current chairman is Louis Mapou.[27]

French overseas territories edit

The French Southern and Antarctic Lands (which also include the French Scattered Islands in the Indian Ocean, and the French claim of Adélie Land) are a disputed French Overseas Territory embodying the French claims to Antarctica but has no permanent population.[28] It has sui generis status within France.[29]

Saint Pierre and Miquelon, Saint Barthélemy, French Polynesia, and Wallis and Futuna are overseas collectivities (formerly referred to as overseas territories) of France, while New Caledonia is a "sui generis collectivity". Saint Barthélemy[30] and Saint Pierre and Miquelon use the euro,[31] while New Caledonia, French Polynesia and Wallis and Futuna use the CFP Franc, a currency which is tied to the euro and guaranteed by France. Natives of the collectivities are European citizens owing to their French citizenship and elections to the European Parliament are held in the collectivities.

On 22 February 2007, Saint Barthélemy and Saint Martin were separated from the French overseas department of Guadeloupe to form new overseas collectivities. As a consequence, their EU status was unclear for a time. While a report issued by the French parliament suggested that the islands remained within the EU as outermost regions,[14] European Commission documents listed them as being outside the European Community.[15] The legal status of the islands was clarified on the coming into force of the Lisbon Treaty which listed them as outermost regions.[16] However, Saint Barthélemy ceased being an outermost region and left the EU, to become an OCT, on 1 January 2012. The change was made to facilitate trade with countries outside the EU, notably the United States,[32] and was made possible by a provision of the Lisbon Treaty which allows the European Council to change the EU status of a Danish, Dutch, or French territory on the initiative of the member state concerned.[33]

Dutch overseas territories edit

 
Willemstad, the capital city of Curaçao.

Six territories of the Netherlands—all of which are Caribbean islands—have OCT status. As such, they benefit from being able to have their own export and import policy to and from the EU, while still having access to various EU funds (such as the European Development Fund). The inhabitants of the islands are EU citizens owing to their Dutch citizenship, with the right to vote in elections to the European Parliament.[34] Initially they did not have voting rights for such elections, but the European Court of Justice granted them such rights, when they ruled their exclusion from the franchise was contrary to EU law, as all other Dutch citizens resident outside the EU did have the right to vote.[35] None of the islands use the euro as their currency. The US dollar is used on Bonaire, Sint Eustatius and Saba, while Curaçao and Sint Maarten utilize their own shared currency the Antillean guilder, and finally the currency of Aruba is the Aruban florin.[34]

Aruba, Curaçao, and Sint Maarten are classified as "countries" under Dutch law, and have considerable internal autonomy. In June 2008, the Dutch government published a report on the projected effect on the islands were they to join the EU as outermost regions.[36][37] It concluded that the choice would be for the islands themselves to weigh up the advantages and disadvantages of becoming part of the EU as outermost regions, and that nothing would be done absent the islands specifically requesting it.[38]

Bonaire, Sint Eustatius, and Saba (collectively called Caribbean Netherlands) are "special municipalities" of the Netherlands proper. Their current OCT status, and the prospect of advancing their status to become part of the EU as new OMRs (outermost regions), was reviewed by the Dutch parliament in 2015,[39] as part of the planned review of the Dutch law (WOLBES and FINBES) concerning the quality of their recently implemented new public administration bodies.[40] In October 2015, the review concluded the present legal structures for governance and integration with European Netherlands was not working well within the framework of WolBES, but no recommendations were made in regards of whether a switch from OCT to OMR status would help improve this situation.[41][42][43][44]

The islands inherited their OCT status from the Netherlands Antilles which was dissolved in 2010. The Netherlands Antilles were initially specifically excluded from all association with the EEC by reason of a protocol attached to the Treaty of Rome, allowing the Netherlands to ratify on behalf of the Netherlands in Europe and Netherlands New Guinea only, which it subsequently did.[45] Following the entry into force of the Convention on the association of the Netherlands Antilles with the European Economic Community on 1 October 1964, however, the Netherlands Antilles became OCTs.

Greenland edit

 
View of Kangertittivaq in eastern Greenland, one of the largest sound-fjord systems in the world

Greenland joined the then European Community in 1973 as a county along with Denmark, but after gaining autonomy with the introduction of home rule within the Kingdom of Denmark, Greenland voted to leave in 1982 and left in 1985, to become an OCT. The main reason for leaving is disagreements about the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP) and to regain control of Greenlandic fish resources to subsequently remain outside EU waters. Greenlandic nationals (OCT-nationals) are, nonetheless, EU citizens due to Greenland's associated relationship with the EU within the meaning of EU treaties as well as holding Danish nationality.[citation needed]

The EU–Greenland relationship is a comprehensive partnership, which is complementary to the OCT association arrangements under "Council Decision 2013/755/EU"; based specifically on "Council Decision 2014/137 of 14 March 2014" (outlining the relations)[46] and the Fisheries Partnership Agreement of 30 July 2006.[47]

Special cases edit

While the outermost regions and the overseas countries and territories fall into structured categories to which common mechanisms apply, this is not true of all the special territories. 10 member state territories have ad hoc arrangements in their relationship with the EU. In those special cases, VAT rules do not apply and they may also be exempt from customs or excise rules.[48][49]

Flag Coat of Arms Name Area Pop. Sove­reign State Part of the EU Cus­toms Union[48] VAT rules[48] Ex­cise rules[48]
 
 
Melilla 12.3 km2 (5 sq mi) 86,384   Spain Yes No No No
 
 
Ceuta 18.5 km2 (7 sq mi) 85,144 Yes No No No
 
 
Åland 1,580 km2 (610 sq mi) 30,129   Finland Yes Yes No No
 
 
Faroe Islands 1,399 km2 (540 sq mi) 52,337   Denmark No No No No
 
 
United Nations Buffer Zone in Cyprus[f] 346 km2 (134 sq mi) 8,686[53]   Cyprus (de jure) Yes Yes[g] No[55] Yes[g]
 
Livigno 227.3 km2 (88 sq mi) 6,721   Italy Yes No No No
 
 
Campione d'Italia[h] 2.68 km2 (1 sq mi) 1,961 Yes Yes[56] No Yes[56]
 
 
Büsingen am Hochrhein 7.62 km2 (3 sq mi) 1,536   Germany Yes No No No
 
 
Heligoland 1.7 km2 (1 sq mi) 1,265 Yes No No No
 
Monastic community of Mount Athos 335.63 km2 (130 sq mi) 1,811   Greece Yes Yes No Yes
Total 3,930 km2 (1,517 sq mi) 303,283

Åland edit

Åland, an autonomous archipelago belonging to Finland, but with partial autonomy, located between Sweden and Finland, with a Swedish-speaking population, joined the EU along with Finland in 1995. The islands had a separate referendum on accession and like the Finnish mainland voted in favour.

EU law, including the fundamental four freedoms, applies to Åland.[57] However, there are some derogations due to the islands' special status. Åland is outside the VAT area[10] and is exempt from common rules in relation to turnover taxes, excise duties and indirect taxation.[58] In addition, to protect the local economy, the treaty of accession allows for a concept of hembygdsrätt/kotiseutuoikeus (regional citizenship). Consequently, there are restrictions on the holding of property and real estate, the right of establishment for business purposes and limitations on who can provide services in Åland, for people not holding this status.[59] The status may be obtained by any Finnish citizen legally resident in Åland for 5 years who can demonstrate an adequate knowledge of the Swedish language.[60]

Büsingen am Hochrhein edit

The German village of Büsingen am Hochrhein is an exclave entirely surrounded by Switzerland, and as such is, for practical purposes, in a customs union with the latter non-EU country.[61] The euro is legal tender, though the Swiss franc is preferred.[62] Büsingen is excluded from the EU customs union and the EU VAT area.[10] Swiss VAT generally applies.[citation needed] Büsingen was also outside of the Schengen area until Switzerland joined on 12 December 2008.[citation needed]

Campione d'Italia and Livigno edit

The Italian exclave village of Campione d'Italia is enclaved by Switzerland's Ticino canton as well as Lake Lugano (or Ceresio), and is a comune in the Province of Como, whilst Livigno, a small and remote mountain resort town, is a comune in the Province of Sondrio. Both comuni are part of the Lombardy region. Although part of the EU, Livigno is excluded from the customs union and VAT area, with Livigno's tax status dating back to Napoleonic times. Campione is excluded from the EU VAT area. It was excluded from the EU customs area until the end of 2019.[10][63] Shops and restaurants in Campione accept payments in both euros and Swiss francs, and prices are displayed in both euros and Swiss francs.[64]

Ceuta and Melilla edit

 
Ceuta in Spanish North Africa.

Ceuta and Melilla are two Spanish cities on the North African coast. They are part of the EU but they are excluded from the common agricultural and fisheries policies.[65] They are also outside the customs union and VAT area,[10] but no customs are levied on goods exported from the Union into either Ceuta and Melilla, and certain goods originating in Ceuta and Melilla are exempt from customs charges.

While nominally part of the Schengen Area (Schengen visas are valid), Spain performs identity checks on all sea and air passengers leaving the enclaves for elsewhere in the Schengen Area.[66]

Small islands scattered along the northern coast of Africa, collectively known as plazas de soberanía are also integral parts of Spain since the 15th century, and therefore also part of the European Union.[citation needed] Their currency is the euro. They in general need permission to visit, so therefore identity is checked upon arrival.[citation needed] They are claimed by Morocco.

Cyprus edit

 
The internationally unrecognised Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus

When the Republic of Cyprus became part of the European Union on 1 May 2004, the northern third of the island was outside of the effective control of its government due to the Turkish invasion of Cyprus, a United Nations buffer zone of varying width separated the two parts, and a further 3% of the island was taken up by UK sovereign bases (under British sovereignty since the Treaty of Establishment in 1960). Two protocols to the Treaty of Accession 2003—numbers 3 and 10, known as the "Sovereign Base Areas Protocol" and the "Cyprus Protocol" respectively – reflect this complex situation.

EU law only applies fully to the part of the island that is effectively controlled by the government of the Republic of Cyprus. EU law is suspended in the northern third of the island (the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, whose independence is recognised only by Turkey) by article 1(1) of the Cyprus Protocol.[67] If the island is reunified, the Council of the European Union will repeal the suspension by a decision. Four months after such a decision has been adopted, new elections to the European Parliament will be held on the island to elect Cypriot representatives from the whole of the island.[68]

Cypriot nationality law applies to the entire island and is accordingly available to the inhabitants of Northern Cyprus and the British sovereign base areas on the same basis as to those born in the area controlled by the Republic of Cyprus.[69][70] Citizens of the Republic of Cyprus living in Northern Cyprus are EU citizens and are nominally entitled to vote in elections to the European Parliament; however, elections to that Parliament are not organised in Northern Cyprus as it is governed de facto by a separate state, albeit a state recognized only by Turkey.[71]

Akrotiri and Dhekelia edit

The United Kingdom has two sovereign base areas on Cyprus, namely Akrotiri and Dhekelia. Unlike other British overseas territories, their inhabitants (who are entitled to British Overseas Territories Citizenship) have never been entitled to British citizenship.

Prior to Cypriot accession to the EU in 2004, although the United Kingdom was an EU member at the time, EU law did not apply to the sovereign base areas.[72] This position was changed by the Cypriot accession treaty so that EU law, while still not applying in principle, applied to the extent necessary to implement a protocol attached to that treaty.[73] This protocol applied EU law relating to the Common Agricultural Policy, customs, indirect taxation, social policy and justice and home affairs to the sovereign base areas. The sovereign base areas' authorities also made provision for the unilateral application of directly applicable EU law.[74] The UK also agreed in the Protocol to keep enough control of the external (i.e. off-island and northern Cyprus) borders of the base areas to ensure that the border between the sovereign base areas and the Republic of Cyprus could remain fully open and would not have to be policed as an external EU border. Consequently, the sovereign base areas would have become a de facto part of the Schengen Area if and when Cyprus implemented it. The base areas are already de facto members of the eurozone due to their previous use of the Cypriot pound and their adoption of the euro as legal tender from 2008.[75]

Because Cypriot nationality law extends to Cypriots in the sovereign base areas, Cypriot residents, as citizens of the Republic of Cyprus, are entitled to EU citizenship. Just under half of the population of the sovereign base areas are Cypriots, the rest are British military personnel, support staff and their dependants.[76] In a declaration attached to the Treaty of Establishment of the Republic of Cyprus of 1960, the British government undertook not to allow new settlement of people in the sovereign base areas other than for temporary purposes.[77]

Under a protocol to the Brexit withdrawal agreement, certain provisions of EU law on agriculture, customs, indirect taxation, social security and border control continue to apply to the sovereign base areas.[78]

United Nations buffer zone edit

The United Nations buffer zone between north and south Cyprus ranges in width from a few metres in central Nicosia to several kilometres in the countryside. While it is nominally under the sovereignty of the Republic of Cyprus, it is effectively administered by the United Nations Peacekeeping Force in Cyprus (UNFICYP). The population of the zone is 8,686 (as of October 2007),[needs update] and one of the mandates of UNFICYP is "to encourage the fullest possible resumption of normal civilian activity in the buffer zone".[53] Inhabited villages located in the buffer zone are legally administered by the Republic of Cyprus but policed by UN peacekeepers.[50] Article 2.1 of the Cyprus Protocol[67] allows the European Council to determine to what extent the provisions of EU law apply in the buffer zone.[79]

Faroe Islands edit

 
Kunoy island, Faroe Islands

The Faroe Islands have never been part of the EU. Danish citizens residing on the islands are not considered citizens of a member state within the meaning of the treaties or, consequently, citizens of the European Union.[80] However, Faroese people may become EU citizens by changing their residence to the Danish mainland.

The Faroe Islands are not part of the Schengen Area, and Schengen visas are not valid. However, the islands are part of the Nordic Passport Union and the Schengen Agreement provides that travellers passing between the islands and the Schengen Area are not to be treated as passing the external frontier of the Area.[81] This means that there is no formal passport control, but an identity check at check-in for air or boat travel to the islands where Nordic citizens on intra-Nordic travel need no passport, only showing the ticket plus identity card.[82]

Heligoland edit

 
Heligoland

Heligoland is an archipelago of Germany situated in the North Sea 70 km (43 mi) off the German north-western coast. It is part of the EU, but is excluded from the customs union and the VAT area.[10]

Monastic community of Mount Athos edit

Monastic community of Mount Athos is an autonomous monastic region of Greece. Greece's EU accession treaty provides that Mount Athos maintains its centuries-old special legal status,[83] guaranteed by article 105 of the Greek Constitution. It is part of the customs union but outside the VAT area.[10] Notwithstanding that a special permit is required to enter the peninsula and that there is a prohibition on the admittance of women, it is part of the Schengen Area.[84] The monastery has certain rights to house monks from countries outside the EU. A declaration attached to Greece's accession treaty to the Schengen Agreement states that Mount Athos's "special status" should be taken into account in the application of the Schengen rules.[85]

Areas of extraterritoriality edit

The Saimaa Canal and Värska–Ulitina road are two of several distinct travel arrangements that exist or existed because of changes in borders over the course of the 20th century, where transport routes and installations ended up on the wrong side of the border. Some have become superfluous thanks to the Schengen Agreement. These listed examples pass the external EU border.

Saimaa Canal edit

Finland leases the 19.6 kilometres (12.2 mi)-long Russian part of the Saimaa Canal from Russia and is granted extraterritoriality rights.[86] The area is not part of the EU, it is a special part of Russia. Under the treaty signed by Finnish and Russian governments, Russian law is in force with a few exceptions concerning maritime rules and the employment of canal staff which fall under Finnish jurisdiction. There are also special rules concerning vessels travelling to Finland via the canal. Russian visas are not required for just passing through the canal, but a passport is needed and it is checked at the border.[86] Euros are accepted for the canal fees. Prior to the 50-year lease renewal coming into effect in February 2012, the Maly Vysotsky Island had also been leased and managed by Finland. Since then it has been fully managed by Russian authorities, and is no longer part of the concession territory.

Värska–Ulitina road edit

The road from Värska to Ulitina in Estonia, traditionally the only road to the Ulitina area, goes through Russian territory for one kilometre (0.6 mi) of its length, an area called Saatse Boot.[87] This road has no border control, but there is no connection to any other road in Russia. It is not permissible to stop or walk along the road. This area is a part of Russia but is also a de facto part of the Schengen area.

Switzerland edit

Some roads, railways and tram lines of the system in Basel, along the border of Switzerland allow transit between two Swiss places through neighbouring countries without customs controls (and before 2008 passport controls), or between the border and international airports. See Privileged transit traffic#Switzerland.

Non-EU countries and territories with partial EU integration edit

Special territories of some other European countries are strongly connected to the European Union. These are as follows:

Summary edit

Special territories of EU member states edit

This table summarises the various components of EU laws applied in the special territories of EU member states.

Member states and territories Application of EU law EURATOM EU citizen­ship EU elections Schengen area EU VAT area EU customs territory EU single market Euro­zone
  Cyprus, except: Yes Yes Yes Yes Set to implement later[i] Yes Yes Yes Yes
  UN Buffer Zone With exemptions ? Yes No No No Yes[j] With exemptions[k] Yes
  Northern Cyprus Suspended No Cypriot citizens[l] No No No No[93] No[94] De facto TRY
  Denmark, except: Yes[m] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes DKK (ERM II)
  Greenland Minimal (OCT)[24] No[95] Yes No No No No[93] Partial[96] DKK (ERM II)
  Faroe Islands No No[97] No No No No No[93] Minimal (FTA)[98][99] DKK (ERM II)
  Finland, except: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
    Åland Islands With exemptions Yes[100] Yes Yes Yes No Yes[93] With exemptions Yes
  France, except: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
  French Guiana With exemptions (OMR) Yes Yes Yes[n] No[101] VAT free Yes[93] Yes Yes
  Guadeloupe With exemptions (OMR) Yes Yes Yes[n] No[101] Low-rate VAT Yes[93] Yes Yes
  Martinique With exemptions (OMR) Yes Yes Yes[n] No[101] Low-rate VAT Yes[93] Yes Yes
  Réunion With exemptions (OMR) Yes Yes Yes[n] No[101] Low-rate VAT Yes[93] Yes Yes
  Mayotte With exemptions (OMR) Yes Yes Yes[n] No[101] VAT free Yes[93] Yes Yes
  Saint Martin With exemptions (OMR)[102] Yes Yes Yes[n] No[101] Low-rate VAT Yes[93] Yes Yes[103]
  Saint Barthélemy Minimal (OCT)[24] Yes Yes Yes[n] No[101] No No Partial[96] Yes[103]
  Saint Pierre and Miquelon Minimal (OCT)[24] Yes Yes Yes[n] No[101] No No[93] Partial[96] Yes[103]
  Wallis and Futuna Minimal (OCT)[24] Yes Yes Yes[n] No[101] No No[93] Partial[96] XPF, pegged to EUR
  French Polynesia Minimal (OCT)[24] Yes Yes Yes[n] No[101] No No[93] Partial[96] XPF, pegged to EUR
  New Caledonia Minimal (OCT)[24] Yes Yes Yes[n] No[101] No No[93] Partial[96] XPF, pegged to EUR
  French Southern and Antarctic Lands Minimal (OCT)[24] Yes Yes No[o] No[101] No No[93] Partial[96] Yes[104]
  Clipperton Island ? Yes[105] Yes[104] No[o] No[101] ? ? ? Yes[104]
  Germany, except: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
  Büsingen am Hochrhein Yes Yes Yes Yes Participating with Switzerland[p] No No[93] Yes Yes
  Heligoland Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes VAT free No[93] Yes Yes
  Greece, except: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Agio Oros Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes VAT free[10] Yes[93] Yes Yes
  Italy, except: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
  Livigno Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes VAT free No[93] Yes Yes
  Campione d'Italia Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes[p] Low-rate VAT Yes[63] Yes Yes
  Netherlands, except: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
    Bonaire Minimal (OCT)[24] No[q] Yes Yes No[101] No No[106] Partial[96] USD[107]
  Saba Minimal (OCT)[24] No[q] Yes Yes No[101] No No[106] Partial[96] USD[107]
  Sint Eustatius Minimal (OCT)[24] No[q] Yes Yes No[101] No No[106] Partial[96] USD[107]
  Curaçao Minimal (OCT)[24] No[108] Yes Yes No[101] No No[106] Partial[96] ANG[r]
  Sint Maarten Minimal (OCT)[24] No[108] Yes Yes No[101] No No[106] Partial[96] ANG[r]
  Aruba Minimal (OCT)[24] ?[97][109] Yes Yes No[101] No No[106] Partial[96] AWG
  Portugal, except: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
  Azores Yes (OMR) Yes Yes Yes Yes Local rate Yes Yes Yes
  Madeira Yes (OMR) Yes Yes Yes Yes Local rate Yes Yes Yes
  Spain, except: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
  Canary Islands With exemptions (OMR) Yes Yes Yes Yes VAT free Yes Yes Yes
  Ceuta With exemptions Yes Yes Yes Partial[s] VAT free No Yes Yes
  Melilla With exemptions Yes Yes Yes Partial[s] VAT free No Yes Yes
Member states and territories Application of EU law EURATOM EU citizen­ship EU elections Schengen area EU VAT area EU customs territory EU single market Euro­zone
Legend for the "Application of EU law" column:   Full. Part of the EU.[111]Minimal or none. Not part of the EU territory.

Special territories of other European states edit

Special territories of EFTA states and some other European countries also have a special status in regard to EU laws applied.[98]

Countries and territories Application of EU law EURATOM Schengen area EU VAT area EU customs territory EU single market Adoption of euro
  Norway, except: Partial No Yes No No With exemptions, in EEA[112] NOK
  Svalbard Partial No No[113] VAT free[88] No No[112][114] NOK
  Jan Mayen Partial No Yes[113][115] VAT free[88] No Like rest of Norway[112] NOK
  Bouvet Island No No No No No No NOK
  Peter I Island No No No No No No NOK
  Queen Maud Land No No No No No No NOK
   Switzerland, except: Partial Associated state Yes Swiss–Liechtenstein VAT area Swiss–Liechtenstein customs territory With exemptions, not in EEA[116] CHF
  Samnaun and Val Sampuoir Partial Associated state Yes VAT free[90] Swiss–Liechtenstein customs territory With exemptions, not in EEA[116] CHF
  Basel Badischer Bahnhof platforms Partial Associated state Yes Yes[90] Yes Yes[116] CHF
  United Kingdom and Crown Dependencies, except: No Associated state CTA No No No GBP (including GGP/JEP/IMP)
Northern Ireland Partial[t] Associated state CTA Goods only, de facto Goods only, de facto Goods only, de facto GBP
  Akrotiri and Dhekelia Partial[78] Associated state Set to implement later[i] Yes[78] Yes[78] Partial[u] Yes[118]
  Gibraltar Partial Associated state Set to implement later[119] No Set to implement later[119] Partial GIP
Other British Overseas Territories No Associated state No No No No Various currencies
Countries and territories Application of EU law EURATOM Schengen area EU VAT area EU customs territory EU single market Adoption of euro

Former special territories edit

Many currently independent states or parts of such were previously territories of the following EU members since the latter joined the EU or, previously the European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC):

  • Belgium (with multiple territories, from ECSC formation until 1962)
  • France (with multiple territories, from ECSC formation)
  • Italy (with Italian Somaliland, from ECSC formation until 1960)
  • The Netherlands (with multiple territories, from ECSC formation)
  • Portugal (with multiple territories, from 1986 enlargement until 2002)
  • United Kingdom (with multiple territories, from 1973 enlargement)

Most of these territories seceded before the implementation of the Maastricht Treaty in 1993 and the following years, meaning that cooperation like the EU citizenship, the VAT union or the Eurozone did not exist, so it made less difference to be a special territory then.

These were:

  • Cambodia (gained independence from France in 1953), no Community treaty applied there, besides ECSC preferences[120]
  • Laos (gained independence from France in 1954), no Community treaty applied there, besides ECSC preferences[120]
  • Vietnam (gained independence from France in 1954), no Community treaty applied there, besides ECSC preferences[120]
  • Tunisia (gained independence from France in 1956), no Community treaty applied there, besides ECSC preferences[120]
  • Morocco (gained independence from France in 1956), no Community treaty applied there, besides ECSC preferences[120]
  • Guinea (gained independence from France in 1958), had OCT status[121]
  • Cameroon (French-administered part gained independence from France in 1960 along with some of UK-administered parts); had OCT status for the French part[121]
  • Togo (gained independence from France in 1960), had OCT status[121]
  • Mali (gained independence from France in 1960), had OCT status[121]
  • Senegal (gained independence from France in 1960), had OCT status[121]
  • Madagascar (gained independence from France in 1960), had OCT status[121]
  • DR Congo (gained independence from Belgium in 1960), had OCT status[121]
  • Somalia (Italian-administered part gained independence from Italy in 1960 along with UK-administered part); had OCT status for the Italian part[121]
  • Benin (gained independence from France in 1960), had OCT status[121]
  • Niger (gained independence from France in 1960), had OCT status[121]
  • Burkina Faso (gained independence from France in 1960), had OCT status[121]
  • Ivory Coast (gained independence from France in 1960), had OCT status[121]
  • Chad (gained independence from France in 1960), had OCT status[121]
  • Central African Republic (gained independence from France in 1960), had OCT status[121]
  • Congo (gained independence from France in 1960), had OCT status[121]
  • Gabon (gained independence from France in 1960), had OCT status[121]
  • Mauritania (gained independence from France in 1960), had OCT status[121]
  • Burundi (gained independence from Belgium in 1962), had OCT status[121]
  • Rwanda (gained independence from Belgium in 1962), had OCT status[121]
  • Netherlands New Guinea (transferred from the Netherlands to UN in 1962, later annexed by Indonesia), had OCT status[121]
  • Suriname (gained independence from the Netherlands in 1975), had OCT status,[120][122][123] EURATOM application unsure.[124]
  • Algeria (gained independence from France in 1962), had a status similar to OMR[125]
  • Bahamas (gained independence from the UK in 1973), had OCT status[126]
  • Grenada (gained independence from the UK in 1973), had OCT status[126]
  • Comoros (gained independence from France in 1975), had OCT status[121]
  • Seychelles (gained independence from the UK in 1976), had OCT status[126]
  • French Somaliland (gained independence from France as Djibouti in 1977), had OCT status[121]
  • Solomon Islands (gained independence from the UK in 1978), had OCT status[126]
  • Tuvalu (gained independence from the UK in 1978), had OCT status[126]
  • Dominica (gained independence from the UK in 1978), had OCT status[126]
  • Saint Lucia (gained independence from the UK in 1979), had OCT status[126]
  • Kiribati (gained independence from the UK in 1979), had OCT status[126]
  • Saint Vincent and the Grenadines (gained independence from the UK in 1979), had OCT status[126]
  • Zimbabwe (gained de jure independence from the UK in 1980), no Community treaty applied there, besides ECSC preferences[120][127]
  • Vanuatu (gained independence from the UK and France in 1980), generally had OCT status[128]
  • Belize (gained independence from the UK in 1981), had OCT status[126]
  • Antigua and Barbuda (gained independence from the UK in 1981), had OCT status[126]
  • Saint Kitts and Nevis (gained independence from the UK in 1983), had OCT status[126]
  • Brunei (gained independence from UK in 1984), had OCT status[126]
  • Hong Kong (sovereignty transferred from the UK to China in 1997), no Community treaty applied there,[127] besides ECSC preferences[120]
  • Macao (sovereignty transferred from Portugal to China in 1999), EURATOM was applicable,[129] besides the ECSC preferences[120]
  • Timor-Leste (East Timor) (gained independence from Indonesia in 2002, considered under Portuguese administration before that), no Community treaty applied there [v]

The United Kingdom left the EU in 2020. When it was a member, some of its Crown Dependencies and Overseas Territories were partially integrated with the EU.

  • Gibraltar was part of the EU and partially inside its single market.
  • Jersey, Guernsey and the Isle of Man were not part of the EU, but were in its customs union and enjoyed free trade.
  • Akrotiri and Dhekelia continue to have partial integration with Cyprus, an EU member state, even after the UK is no longer an EU member.
  • Other territories which were Overseas Territories that year had OCT status.

Additionally in Europe there were special territories in the past that had different status than their "mainland", because of various reasons, but now are part of a member state. Some of these territories were as follows:

  • The Austrian areas of Kleinwalsertal and Jungholz formerly enjoyed a special legal status. The two areas have road access only to Germany, and not directly to other parts of Austria. They were in customs and currency union with Germany and there were no border controls between Kleinwalsertal and Jungholz, respectively, and Germany. When Austria entered the EU (and its customs union) in 1995, the customs union became defunct. The entry into force of the Schengen Agreement for Austria (1997) and the introduction of the euro (2002) caused Kleinwalsertal and Jungholz to lose their remaining legal privileges. It is now legally treated in the same manner as the rest of Austria.
  • Saar (merged with the Federal Republic of Germany on 1 January 1957), was fully part of the Community as French-administered European territory[130]
  • West Berlin (merged with the Federal Republic of Germany on 3 October 1990), was subject to the full application of the treaties[w]
  • German Democratic Republic (East Germany) was until 1972 on paper a part of one Germany and the European Community, since West Germany, the NATO countries and the European Community did not recognize the German Democratic Republic (East Germany) until 1972. East Germany did not recognize any membership of the EC. The West German government treated trade with East Germany as inter-German trade and not subject to the EC trade tariffs.
 
Sermiligaaq, Greenland

The following areas are still special member state territories, but have changed their status. See their entries in the article for details.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Saint Pierre and Miquelon, Saint Barthélemy and the French Southern and Antarctic Lands
  2. ^ Åland, Ceuta, Melilla, Heligoland, Livigno and Mount Athos; de jure in Büsingen am Hochrhein and Campione d'Italia*, as well as in the UN Buffer Zone in Cyprus
    * Although most people pay with Swiss Francs in those 2 enclaves, only the euro has legal tender
  3. ^ The Faroese króna is not a separate currency, but a local issue of the Danish krone
  4. ^ The Clipperton Island is a private property of the French State. The Scattered Islands were regarded as "residual territories of the Republic" until 2007. They are now a district of the French Southern and Antarctic Lands.
  5. ^ 150 non-permanent in winter, 310 in summer (research and military personnel)
  6. ^ Villages in the buffer zone are legally administered by the Republic of Cyprus.[50] The application of EU acquis communautaire is suspended in territories where the Republic of Cyprus does not exercise effective control.[51] Northern Cyprus is a de facto state that is partially dependent on Turkey.[52]
  7. ^ a b With exceptions[54]
  8. ^ Including the Italian national waters of Lake Lugano.
  9. ^ a b Akrotiri and Dhekelia, and Cyprus should implement together the Schengen area.[117]
  10. ^ Exceptions may be in place for Turkish goods and services destined for Pyla.
  11. ^ Due to the military nature of zone, the UN requires permits for some economic activity to ensure that the fundamental nature of the area as a buffer zone is not compromised.[92]
  12. ^ Cypriot nationality law extends to Northern Cyprus, meaning citizens of the Republic of Cyprus residing in Northern Cyprus are entitled to EU citizenship.
  13. ^ Opt-outs in force for some treaty provisions and legislations
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Part of the former Outre-Mer electoral constituency, now part of the single national constituency.
  15. ^ a b No permanent population; not part of any of the eight former European Parliament electoral constituencies of France.
  16. ^ a b Together with Switzerland
  17. ^ a b c Bonaire, Saba, and Sint Eustatius: Inherited status as non-member from the Netherlands Antilles.
  18. ^ a b The Netherlands Antillean guilder was supposed to be replaced by the Caribbean guilder as early as 2012, but introduction is still expected in 2018.
  19. ^ a b The full Schengen acquis applies to all Spanish territories, but there are border checks on departure from Ceuta and Melilla to Spain or other Schengen countries, because of specific arrangements for visa exemptions for Moroccan nationals resident in the provinces of Tetuan and Nador.[66][110]
  20. ^ The Northern Ireland Protocol applies EU law only to the extent necessary to prevent a customs border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland
  21. ^ In a declaration attached to the Treaty of Establishment of the Republic of Cyprus of 1960, the British government undertook not to allow new settlement of people in the sovereign base areas other than for temporary purposes, meaning at present, free movement of people is limited.
  22. ^ When Portugal became a Community member in 1986 East Timor was considered a non-self-governing-territory under Portuguese administration by the United Nations despite Indonesian occupation of East Timor between 1975 and 1999. None of the EC laws were ever in force, but EURATOM and ECSC preferences were to apply if not for the Indonesian occupation. The de jure Portuguese administration formally ceased on 20 May 2002 when Portugal recognised East Timor's independence.
  23. ^ Until the unification of Germany in 1990 the de jure status of West Berlin was that of French, UK and US occupied zones with West German civilian administration. The treaties applied fully during 1952–1990 given the Federal German and French treaty responsibilities European Coal and Steel Community Treaty, Art.79, and during 1973–1990 given the British treaty responsibilities.[131][clarification needed] For the 1979, 1984 and 1989 European Parliaments, three MEPs were appointed on the nomination of the Berlin House of Representatives rather than being directly elected. From 3 October 1990 West Berlin was fully integrated in Berlin in the Federal Republic of Germany, along with the former East Germany.

References edit

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  2. ^ a b AFP (29 October 2010). "La collectivité de Saint-Barthélémy obtient un nouveau statut européen". Ministère de l'Outre-Mer (in French). Retrieved 8 April 2011.
  3. ^ a b Council Decision of 27 November 2001 on the association of the overseas countries and territories with the European Community ("Overseas Association Decision") (2001/822/EC).
  4. ^ Murray, Fiona (2012). The European Union and Member State Territories: A New Legal Framework Under the EU Treaties. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 172. ISBN 978-90-6704-826-2.
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  6. ^ "Council Directive 2013/61/EU of December 2013". 17 December 2013. Retrieved 1 January 2014.
  7. ^ "Regional policy & outermost regions". ec.europa.eu. Retrieved 10 July 2020.
  8. ^ "Case search – Competition – European Commission". ec.europa.eu. Retrieved 7 February 2020.
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  19. ^ Article 199(5) [ex Article 183(5)]
  20. ^ Article 200(1) [ex Article 184(1)]
  21. ^ Article 200(3) and 200(5) [ex Article 184(3) and (5)]
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  30. ^ Council Decision of 12 July 2011 on the signing and conclusion of the Monetary Agreement between the European Union and the French Republic on keeping the euro in Saint-Barthélemy following the amendment of its status with regard to the European Union (OJ L 189, 20 July 2011, pp. 1–2).
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  38. ^ "Tweede Kamer, vergaderjaar 2008–2009, 31700 IV, nr. 3: Brief van de staatssecretaris van Binnenlandse Zaken en Koninkrijksrelaties met het kabinetsstandpunt over de rapporten over de UPG status voor de eilandgebieden van de Nederlandse Antillen en Aruba" (PDF) (in Dutch). Eerstekamer.nl. 21 October 2008.
  39. ^ "Kamerstuk 31954 nr.7: Regels met betrekking tot de openbare lichamen Bonaire, Sint Eustatius en Saba (Wet openbare lichamen Bonaire, Sint Eustatius en Saba)" (in Dutch). Overheid.nl. 14 October 2009.
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  42. ^ DSP-Groep (23 September 2015). "Vijf jaar Caribisch Nederland: Werking van de nieuwe bestuurlijke structuur" (PDF) (in Dutch).
  43. ^ Sociaal en Cultureel Planbureau (October 2015). "Vijf jaar Caribisch Nederland: Gevolgen voor de bevolking" (PDF) (in Dutch).
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  123. ^ "The provisions of Part Four of the Treaty were applied to Surinam, by virtue of a Supplementary Act of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (page29) to complete its instrument of ratification, from 1 September 1962 to 16 July 1976.", in: eur-lex.europa.eu – Treaty establishing the European Community (consolidated version) – Text of the Treaty
  124. ^ See the Protocol on the application of the Treaty establishing the European Atomic Energy Community to the non European parts of the Kingdom of the Netherlands and Act ratifying the EAEC Treaty in the Netherlands. The protocol on non-application of EURATOM by derogation was abrogated by Article 8 (III) of the Treaty of Amsterdam, which entered into force in 1999, but there is no evidence that the EURATOM treaty was ever extended to other countries within the Kingdom (now: Aruba, Curaçao, and Sint Maarten, formerly: the Netherlands Antilles and Suriname).
  125. ^ European Economic Community Treaty, Art 227
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  127. ^ a b According to Art.227 (EEC) and Art.198 (EURATOM) these Treaties shall not apply to those overseas countries and territories having special relations with the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland which are not listed in Annex IV to the EEC Treaty. Zimbabwe and Hong Kong are not listed in the annex.
  128. ^ New Hebrides had ECSC preferences and EURATOM application 1952–1973 stemming from the French administration in the territory, from 1973 to 1980 from both the French and British administrations, no EEC law applied 1958–1973, EEC OCT status 1973–1980
  129. ^ Art.198 of the EURATOM Treaty states that the treaty applies to non-European territories under jurisdiction of Member States. So far there is no reference for Macau exclusion, thus considering it included between 1986 and 1999.
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  131. ^ "EUR-Lex – 11972B/AFI/DCL/06 – EN". Official Journal L 073, 27 March 1972, p. 0195.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Information on the "Territorial status of EU countries and certain territories" from the European Commission
    • Review of CARIFORUM-EU EPA – and Implications for the British and Dutch Caribbean Octs – What the CARIFORUM-EU trade deal means for current EU territories

special, territories, members, european, economic, area, special, territories, members, european, economic, area, special, territories, member, states, efta, member, states, which, historical, geographical, political, reasons, enjoy, special, status, within, o. The special territories of members of the European Economic Area EEA are the 32 special territories of EU member states and EFTA member states which for historical geographical or political reasons enjoy special status within or outside the European Union and the European Free Trade Association Special territories of members of the European Economic AreaFlag of the European UnionLocation of the European Union and the special territoriesLargest settlementsLas Palmas Santa Cruz de Tenerife Willemstad Saint Denis Funchal NoumeaOfficial languageFrenchSpanishDutchPortugueseEnglishSwedishFaroeseDanishGreenlandicGreekItalianGermanPapiamento depends on the territory Special territory9 Outermost Regions AzoresCanary IslandsFrench GuianaGuadeloupeLa ReunionMadeiraMartiniqueMayotteSaint Martin 13 Overseas Countries and Territories ArubaBonaireCuracaoFrench PolynesiaFrench Southern and Antarctic Lands GreenlandNew CaledoniaSabaSaint BarthelemySaint Pierre and MiquelonSint EustatiusSint MaartenWallis and Futuna Without permanent population 10 Special Cases AlandBusingen am HochrheinCampione d ItaliaCeutaFaroe IslandsHeligolandLivignoMelillaMount AthosUnited Nations Buffer Zone in CyprusArea Total2 733 792 km2 1 055 523 sq mi Population Estimate6 114 658CurrencyEuro EUR OMRs 3 OCTs a and 9 special cases b 5 others Aruban florin AWG Aruba CFP franc XPF New Caledonia French Polynesia Wallis and Futuna Danish krone DKK Greenland Faroese krona DKK Faroese Islands c Netherlands Antillean guilder ANG Curacao Sint Maarten United States dollar USD Bonaire Sint Eustatius Saba Date formatdd mm yyyy AD The special territories of EU member states are categorised under three headings nine Outermost Regions OMR that form part of the European Union though they benefit from derogations from some EU laws due to their geographical remoteness from mainland Europe thirteen Overseas Countries and Territories OCT that do not form part of the European Union though they cooperate with the EU via the Overseas Countries and Territories Association and ten special cases that form part of the European Union with the exception of the Faroe Islands though EU laws make ad hoc provisions The Outermost Regions were recognised at the signing of the Maastricht Treaty in 1992 1 and confirmed by the Treaty of Lisbon in 2007 2 The Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union states that both primary and secondary European Union law applies automatically to the outermost regions with possible derogations due to the particularities of these territories The Overseas Countries and Territories are recognised by Article 198 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union which allows them to opt into EU provisions on the freedom of movement for workers and freedom of establishment and invites them to join the Overseas Countries and Territories Association OCTA in order to improve cooperation with the European Union 3 The status of an uninhabited territory Clipperton remains unclear since it is not explicitly mentioned in primary EU law and has a sui generis status at the national level 4 d Collectively the special territories encompass a population of some 6 1 million people and a land area of about 2 733 792 square kilometres 1 055 500 sq mi Around 80 percent of this area is represented by Greenland The largest region by population the Canary Islands accounts for more than a third of the total population of the special territories The smallest by land area is the island of Saba in the Caribbean 13 km2 or 5 sq mi The French Southern and Antarctic Lands is the only special territory without a permanent population Contents 1 Outermost Regions 1 1 Autonomous Regions of Portugal 1 2 Canary Islands 1 3 French overseas regions 1 4 Collectivity of Saint Martin 2 Overseas countries and territories 2 1 Overseas Countries and Territories Association 2 2 French overseas territories 2 3 Dutch overseas territories 2 4 Greenland 3 Special cases 3 1 Aland 3 2 Busingen am Hochrhein 3 3 Campione d Italia and Livigno 3 4 Ceuta and Melilla 3 5 Cyprus 3 5 1 Akrotiri and Dhekelia 3 5 2 United Nations buffer zone 3 6 Faroe Islands 3 7 Heligoland 3 8 Monastic community of Mount Athos 4 Areas of extraterritoriality 4 1 Saimaa Canal 4 2 Varska Ulitina road 4 3 Switzerland 5 Non EU countries and territories with partial EU integration 6 Summary 6 1 Special territories of EU member states 6 2 Special territories of other European states 7 Former special territories 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksOutermost Regions editThe Outermost Regions OMR are territories forming part of a member state of the European Union but situated a significant distance from mainland Europe Due to this situation they have derogation from some EU policies despite being part of the European Union According to the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union both primary and secondary European Union law applies automatically to these territories with possible derogations to take account of their structural social and economic situation which is compounded by their remoteness insularity small size difficult topography and climate economic dependence on a few products the permanence and combination of which severely restrain their development 5 All form part of the European Union customs area however some fall outside of the Schengen Area and the European Union Value Added Tax Area Seven Outermost Regions were recognised at the signing of the Maastricht Treaty in 1992 1 The Treaty of Lisbon included two additional territories Saint Barthelemy and Saint Martin in 2007 5 Saint Barthelemy changed its status from OMR to OCT with effect from 1 January 2012 2 Mayotte which was an OCT joined the EU as an OMR with effect from 1 January 2014 6 The 9 Outermost Regions of the European Union are 7 Flag Coat of arms Name Loca tion Area Pop Capital Largestsettle ment Officiallanguage State nbsp nbsp Azores North Atlantic 2 333 km2 901 sq mi 245 746 Angra do Heroismo Horta and Ponta Delgada Ponta Delgada Portuguese nbsp Portugal nbsp nbsp Madeira 801 km2 309 sq mi 289 000 Funchal Funchal nbsp nbsp Canary Islands 7 493 km2 2 893 sq mi 2 101 924 Santa Cruz de Tenerifeand Las Palmas Las Palmas Spanish nbsp Spain nbsp nbsp French Guiana South America 83 534 km2 32 253 sq mi 281 612 Cayenne Cayenne French nbsp France nbsp Guadeloupe Caribbean 1 628 km2 629 sq mi 402 119 Basse Terre Les Abymes nbsp Martinique 1 128 km2 436 sq mi 385 551 Fort de France Fort de France nbsp nbsp Saint Martin 53 km2 20 sq mi 36 286 Marigot Marigot nbsp Mayotte Indian Ocean 374 km2 144 sq mi 256 518 Dzaoudzi de jure Mamoudzou de facto Mamoudzou nbsp Reunion 2 511 km2 970 sq mi 865 826 Saint Denis Saint DenisTotal 99 855 km2 38 554 sq mi 4 864 582Autonomous Regions of Portugal edit nbsp Angra do Heroismo oldest continuously settled town in the archipelago of the Azores and UNESCO World Heritage Site Azores and Madeira are two groups of Portuguese islands in the Atlantic Azores and Madeira are integral parts of the Portuguese Republic but both have the special status as Autonomous Regions with a degree of self governance Some derogations from the application of EU law apply in regards to taxation fishing and transportation 8 9 Their VAT is lower than the rest of Portugal but they are not outside the EU VAT Area Canary Islands edit The Canary Islands are a Spanish archipelago off the African coast which form one of the 17 autonomous communities of Spain the country s principal first level administrative division They are outside the EU VAT Area 10 The Canary Islands are the most populous and economically strongest territory of all the outermost regions in the European Union The outermost regions office for support and information is located in these islands in the city of Las Palmas on the island of Gran Canaria French overseas regions edit nbsp French Guiana tropical forest looking toward CacaoFrench Guiana Guadeloupe Martinique Mayotte and Reunion are five French overseas regions which are also overseas departments which under French law are for the most part treated as integral parts of the Republic The euro is legal tender 11 however they are outside the Schengen Area and the EU VAT Area 10 Mayotte is the newest of the five overseas departments having changed from an overseas collectivity with OCT status on 31 March 2011 It became an outermost region and thus part of the EU on 1 January 2014 12 Collectivity of Saint Martin edit Saint Martin is the only overseas collectivity of France with the status of being an Outermost Region of the EU 13 As with the French overseas departments the euro is legal tender in Saint Martin and it is outside the Schengen Area and the EU VAT Area On 22 February 2007 Saint Martin and Saint Barthelemy were broken away from the French overseas department of Guadeloupe to form new overseas collectivities As a consequence their EU status was unclear for a time While a report issued by the French parliament suggested that the islands remained within the EU as outermost regions 14 European Commission documents listed them as being outside the European Community 15 The legal status of the islands was clarified on the coming into force of the Treaty of Lisbon which listed them as an outermost region 16 However Saint Barthelemy ceased being an outermost region and left the EU to become an OCT on 1 January 2012 Overseas countries and territories editThe overseas countries and territories OCT are dependent territories that have a special relationship with one of the member states of the EU Their status is described in the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union and they are not part of the EU or the European Single Market The Overseas Countries and Territories Association was created to improve economic development and cooperation between the OCTs and the EU 17 and includes most OCTs except three territories which do not have a permanent local population nbsp Bora Bora in French PolynesiaThe OCTs have been explicitly invited by the EU treaty to join the EU OCT Association OCTA 3 They were listed in the Article 198 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union which aside from inviting them to join OCTA also provided them the opportunity to opt into EU provisions on the freedom of movement for workers 18 and freedom of establishment 19 Yet the freedom of establishment is limited by Article 203 TFEU and the respective Council Decision on OCTs Its Article 51 1 a prescribes only that the Union shall accord to natural and legal persons of the OCTs a treatment no less favourable than the most favourable treatment applicable to like natural and legal persons of any third country with whom the Union concludes or has concluded an economic integration agreement Again this can be according to Article 51 2 b limited The obligations provided for in paragraph 1 of this Article shall not apply to treatment granted under measures providing for recognition of qualifications licences or prudential measures in accordance with Article VII of the General Agreement on Trade in Services GATS or the GATS Annex on Financial Services The OCTs are not subject to the EU s common external customs tariffs 20 but may claim customs on goods imported from the EU on a non discriminatory basis 21 They are not part of the EU and the EU acquis does not apply to them though those joining OCTA are required to respect the detailed rules and procedures outlined by this association agreement Council Decision 2013 755 EU 22 OCTA members are entitled to ask for EU financial support 23 When the Rome Treaty was signed in March 1957 a total of 15 OCTs existed French West Africa French Equatorial Africa Saint Pierre and Miquelon Comoros Archipelago French Madagascar French Somaliland New Caledonia French Polynesia French Southern and Antarctic Lands French Togoland French Cameroons Belgian Congo Ruanda Urundi Trust Territory of Somalia Netherlands New Guinea The list was since then revised multiple times and comprised as noted by the Lisbon Treaty 25 OCTs in 2007 One of the French territories subsequently switched status from OMR to OCT Saint Barthelemy while another French territory switched from OCT to OMR Mayotte As of July 2014 there are still 13 OCTs six with France six with the Netherlands and one with Denmark 24 of which all have joined OCTA The 13 Overseas Countries and Territories of the European Union are 25 Flag Coat of arms Name Loca tion Area Pop Capital Largest settlement Official lan guage s Sovereign state nbsp nbsp Greenland North Atlantic amp Arctic 2 166 086 km2 836 330 sq mi 56 483 Nuuk Nuuk Greenlandic nbsp Kingdom of Denmark nbsp nbsp Curacao Caribbean 444 km2 171 sq mi 160 337 Willemstad Willemstad Dutch Papiamento English nbsp Kingdom of the Netherlands nbsp nbsp Aruba 179 km2 69 sq mi 104 822 Oranjestad Oranjestad Dutch Papiamento English Spanish nbsp nbsp Sint Maarten 37 km2 14 sq mi 33 609 Philipsburg Lower Prince s Quarter Dutch English nbsp nbsp Bonaire 294 km2 114 sq mi 18 905 Kralendijk Kralendijk Dutch nbsp nbsp Sint Eustatius 21 km2 8 sq mi 3 193 Oranjestad Oranjestad nbsp nbsp Saba 13 km2 5 sq mi 1 991 The Bottom The Bottom nbsp nbsp French Polynesia Pacific 4 167 km2 1 609 sq mi 275 918 Pape ete Fa a a French nbsp French Republic nbsp nbsp New Caledonia 18 576 km2 7 172 sq mi 268 767 Noumea Noumea nbsp Wallis et Futuna 142 km2 55 sq mi 11 899 Mata Utu Mata Utu nbsp Saint Barthelemy Caribbean 25 km2 10 sq mi 9 279 Gustavia Gustavia nbsp Saint Pierre et Miquelon North Atlantic 242 km2 93 sq mi 6 080 Saint Pierre Saint Pierre nbsp nbsp French Southern and Antarctic Lands Indian Ocean amp Antarctica 439 781 km2 169 800 sq mi 0 e Saint Pierre Port aux Francais base Total 2 630 007 km2 1 015 451 sq mi 945 893Overseas Countries and Territories Association edit The Overseas Countries and Territories Association OCTA is an organisation founded on 17 November 2000 and headquartered in Brussels All OCTs have joined OCTA as of February 2020 Its purpose is to improve economic development in overseas countries and territories as well as cooperation with the European Union On 25 June 2008 a Cooperation Treaty between the EU and OCTA was signed in Brussels 26 The current chairman is Louis Mapou 27 French overseas territories edit The French Southern and Antarctic Lands which also include the French Scattered Islands in the Indian Ocean and the French claim of Adelie Land are a disputed French Overseas Territory embodying the French claims to Antarctica but has no permanent population 28 It has sui generis status within France 29 Saint Pierre and Miquelon Saint Barthelemy French Polynesia and Wallis and Futuna are overseas collectivities formerly referred to as overseas territories of France while New Caledonia is a sui generis collectivity Saint Barthelemy 30 and Saint Pierre and Miquelon use the euro 31 while New Caledonia French Polynesia and Wallis and Futuna use the CFP Franc a currency which is tied to the euro and guaranteed by France Natives of the collectivities are European citizens owing to their French citizenship and elections to the European Parliament are held in the collectivities On 22 February 2007 Saint Barthelemy and Saint Martin were separated from the French overseas department of Guadeloupe to form new overseas collectivities As a consequence their EU status was unclear for a time While a report issued by the French parliament suggested that the islands remained within the EU as outermost regions 14 European Commission documents listed them as being outside the European Community 15 The legal status of the islands was clarified on the coming into force of the Lisbon Treaty which listed them as outermost regions 16 However Saint Barthelemy ceased being an outermost region and left the EU to become an OCT on 1 January 2012 The change was made to facilitate trade with countries outside the EU notably the United States 32 and was made possible by a provision of the Lisbon Treaty which allows the European Council to change the EU status of a Danish Dutch or French territory on the initiative of the member state concerned 33 Dutch overseas territories edit nbsp Willemstad the capital city of Curacao Six territories of the Netherlands all of which are Caribbean islands have OCT status As such they benefit from being able to have their own export and import policy to and from the EU while still having access to various EU funds such as the European Development Fund The inhabitants of the islands are EU citizens owing to their Dutch citizenship with the right to vote in elections to the European Parliament 34 Initially they did not have voting rights for such elections but the European Court of Justice granted them such rights when they ruled their exclusion from the franchise was contrary to EU law as all other Dutch citizens resident outside the EU did have the right to vote 35 None of the islands use the euro as their currency The US dollar is used on Bonaire Sint Eustatius and Saba while Curacao and Sint Maarten utilize their own shared currency the Antillean guilder and finally the currency of Aruba is the Aruban florin 34 Aruba Curacao and Sint Maarten are classified as countries under Dutch law and have considerable internal autonomy In June 2008 the Dutch government published a report on the projected effect on the islands were they to join the EU as outermost regions 36 37 It concluded that the choice would be for the islands themselves to weigh up the advantages and disadvantages of becoming part of the EU as outermost regions and that nothing would be done absent the islands specifically requesting it 38 Bonaire Sint Eustatius and Saba collectively called Caribbean Netherlands are special municipalities of the Netherlands proper Their current OCT status and the prospect of advancing their status to become part of the EU as new OMRs outermost regions was reviewed by the Dutch parliament in 2015 39 as part of the planned review of the Dutch law WOLBES and FINBES concerning the quality of their recently implemented new public administration bodies 40 In October 2015 the review concluded the present legal structures for governance and integration with European Netherlands was not working well within the framework of WolBES but no recommendations were made in regards of whether a switch from OCT to OMR status would help improve this situation 41 42 43 44 The islands inherited their OCT status from the Netherlands Antilles which was dissolved in 2010 The Netherlands Antilles were initially specifically excluded from all association with the EEC by reason of a protocol attached to the Treaty of Rome allowing the Netherlands to ratify on behalf of the Netherlands in Europe and Netherlands New Guinea only which it subsequently did 45 Following the entry into force of the Convention on the association of the Netherlands Antilles with the European Economic Community on 1 October 1964 however the Netherlands Antilles became OCTs Greenland edit Main article Greenland and the European Union nbsp View of Kangertittivaq in eastern Greenland one of the largest sound fjord systems in the worldGreenland joined the then European Community in 1973 as a county along with Denmark but after gaining autonomy with the introduction of home rule within the Kingdom of Denmark Greenland voted to leave in 1982 and left in 1985 to become an OCT The main reason for leaving is disagreements about the Common Fisheries Policy CFP and to regain control of Greenlandic fish resources to subsequently remain outside EU waters Greenlandic nationals OCT nationals are nonetheless EU citizens due to Greenland s associated relationship with the EU within the meaning of EU treaties as well as holding Danish nationality citation needed The EU Greenland relationship is a comprehensive partnership which is complementary to the OCT association arrangements under Council Decision 2013 755 EU based specifically on Council Decision 2014 137 of 14 March 2014 outlining the relations 46 and the Fisheries Partnership Agreement of 30 July 2006 47 Special cases editWhile the outermost regions and the overseas countries and territories fall into structured categories to which common mechanisms apply this is not true of all the special territories 10 member state territories have ad hoc arrangements in their relationship with the EU In those special cases VAT rules do not apply and they may also be exempt from customs or excise rules 48 49 Flag Coat of Arms Name Area Pop Sove reign State Part of the EU Cus toms Union 48 VAT rules 48 Ex cise rules 48 nbsp nbsp Melilla 12 3 km2 5 sq mi 86 384 nbsp Spain Yes No No No nbsp nbsp Ceuta 18 5 km2 7 sq mi 85 144 Yes No No No nbsp nbsp Aland 1 580 km2 610 sq mi 30 129 nbsp Finland Yes Yes No No nbsp nbsp Faroe Islands 1 399 km2 540 sq mi 52 337 nbsp Denmark No No No No nbsp nbsp United Nations Buffer Zone in Cyprus f 346 km2 134 sq mi 8 686 53 nbsp Cyprus de jure Yes Yes g No 55 Yes g nbsp Livigno 227 3 km2 88 sq mi 6 721 nbsp Italy Yes No No No nbsp nbsp Campione d Italia h 2 68 km2 1 sq mi 1 961 Yes Yes 56 No Yes 56 nbsp nbsp Busingen am Hochrhein 7 62 km2 3 sq mi 1 536 nbsp Germany Yes No No No nbsp nbsp Heligoland 1 7 km2 1 sq mi 1 265 Yes No No No nbsp Monastic community of Mount Athos 335 63 km2 130 sq mi 1 811 nbsp Greece Yes Yes No YesTotal 3 930 km2 1 517 sq mi 303 283Aland edit Aland an autonomous archipelago belonging to Finland but with partial autonomy located between Sweden and Finland with a Swedish speaking population joined the EU along with Finland in 1995 The islands had a separate referendum on accession and like the Finnish mainland voted in favour EU law including the fundamental four freedoms applies to Aland 57 However there are some derogations due to the islands special status Aland is outside the VAT area 10 and is exempt from common rules in relation to turnover taxes excise duties and indirect taxation 58 In addition to protect the local economy the treaty of accession allows for a concept of hembygdsratt kotiseutuoikeus regional citizenship Consequently there are restrictions on the holding of property and real estate the right of establishment for business purposes and limitations on who can provide services in Aland for people not holding this status 59 The status may be obtained by any Finnish citizen legally resident in Aland for 5 years who can demonstrate an adequate knowledge of the Swedish language 60 Busingen am Hochrhein edit The German village of Busingen am Hochrhein is an exclave entirely surrounded by Switzerland and as such is for practical purposes in a customs union with the latter non EU country 61 The euro is legal tender though the Swiss franc is preferred 62 Busingen is excluded from the EU customs union and the EU VAT area 10 Swiss VAT generally applies citation needed Busingen was also outside of the Schengen area until Switzerland joined on 12 December 2008 citation needed Campione d Italia and Livigno edit The Italian exclave village of Campione d Italia is enclaved by Switzerland s Ticino canton as well as Lake Lugano or Ceresio and is a comune in the Province of Como whilst Livigno a small and remote mountain resort town is a comune in the Province of Sondrio Both comuni are part of the Lombardy region Although part of the EU Livigno is excluded from the customs union and VAT area with Livigno s tax status dating back to Napoleonic times Campione is excluded from the EU VAT area It was excluded from the EU customs area until the end of 2019 10 63 Shops and restaurants in Campione accept payments in both euros and Swiss francs and prices are displayed in both euros and Swiss francs 64 Ceuta and Melilla edit nbsp Ceuta in Spanish North Africa Ceuta and Melilla are two Spanish cities on the North African coast They are part of the EU but they are excluded from the common agricultural and fisheries policies 65 They are also outside the customs union and VAT area 10 but no customs are levied on goods exported from the Union into either Ceuta and Melilla and certain goods originating in Ceuta and Melilla are exempt from customs charges While nominally part of the Schengen Area Schengen visas are valid Spain performs identity checks on all sea and air passengers leaving the enclaves for elsewhere in the Schengen Area 66 Small islands scattered along the northern coast of Africa collectively known as plazas de soberania are also integral parts of Spain since the 15th century and therefore also part of the European Union citation needed Their currency is the euro They in general need permission to visit so therefore identity is checked upon arrival citation needed They are claimed by Morocco Cyprus edit nbsp The internationally unrecognised Turkish Republic of Northern CyprusWhen the Republic of Cyprus became part of the European Union on 1 May 2004 the northern third of the island was outside of the effective control of its government due to the Turkish invasion of Cyprus a United Nations buffer zone of varying width separated the two parts and a further 3 of the island was taken up by UK sovereign bases under British sovereignty since the Treaty of Establishment in 1960 Two protocols to the Treaty of Accession 2003 numbers 3 and 10 known as the Sovereign Base Areas Protocol and the Cyprus Protocol respectively reflect this complex situation EU law only applies fully to the part of the island that is effectively controlled by the government of the Republic of Cyprus EU law is suspended in the northern third of the island the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus whose independence is recognised only by Turkey by article 1 1 of the Cyprus Protocol 67 If the island is reunified the Council of the European Union will repeal the suspension by a decision Four months after such a decision has been adopted new elections to the European Parliament will be held on the island to elect Cypriot representatives from the whole of the island 68 Cypriot nationality law applies to the entire island and is accordingly available to the inhabitants of Northern Cyprus and the British sovereign base areas on the same basis as to those born in the area controlled by the Republic of Cyprus 69 70 Citizens of the Republic of Cyprus living in Northern Cyprus are EU citizens and are nominally entitled to vote in elections to the European Parliament however elections to that Parliament are not organised in Northern Cyprus as it is governed de facto by a separate state albeit a state recognized only by Turkey 71 Akrotiri and Dhekelia edit The United Kingdom has two sovereign base areas on Cyprus namely Akrotiri and Dhekelia Unlike other British overseas territories their inhabitants who are entitled to British Overseas Territories Citizenship have never been entitled to British citizenship Prior to Cypriot accession to the EU in 2004 although the United Kingdom was an EU member at the time EU law did not apply to the sovereign base areas 72 This position was changed by the Cypriot accession treaty so that EU law while still not applying in principle applied to the extent necessary to implement a protocol attached to that treaty 73 This protocol applied EU law relating to the Common Agricultural Policy customs indirect taxation social policy and justice and home affairs to the sovereign base areas The sovereign base areas authorities also made provision for the unilateral application of directly applicable EU law 74 The UK also agreed in the Protocol to keep enough control of the external i e off island and northern Cyprus borders of the base areas to ensure that the border between the sovereign base areas and the Republic of Cyprus could remain fully open and would not have to be policed as an external EU border Consequently the sovereign base areas would have become a de facto part of the Schengen Area if and when Cyprus implemented it The base areas are already de facto members of the eurozone due to their previous use of the Cypriot pound and their adoption of the euro as legal tender from 2008 75 Because Cypriot nationality law extends to Cypriots in the sovereign base areas Cypriot residents as citizens of the Republic of Cyprus are entitled to EU citizenship Just under half of the population of the sovereign base areas are Cypriots the rest are British military personnel support staff and their dependants 76 In a declaration attached to the Treaty of Establishment of the Republic of Cyprus of 1960 the British government undertook not to allow new settlement of people in the sovereign base areas other than for temporary purposes 77 Under a protocol to the Brexit withdrawal agreement certain provisions of EU law on agriculture customs indirect taxation social security and border control continue to apply to the sovereign base areas 78 United Nations buffer zone edit The United Nations buffer zone between north and south Cyprus ranges in width from a few metres in central Nicosia to several kilometres in the countryside While it is nominally under the sovereignty of the Republic of Cyprus it is effectively administered by the United Nations Peacekeeping Force in Cyprus UNFICYP The population of the zone is 8 686 as of October 2007 needs update and one of the mandates of UNFICYP is to encourage the fullest possible resumption of normal civilian activity in the buffer zone 53 Inhabited villages located in the buffer zone are legally administered by the Republic of Cyprus but policed by UN peacekeepers 50 Article 2 1 of the Cyprus Protocol 67 allows the European Council to determine to what extent the provisions of EU law apply in the buffer zone 79 Faroe Islands edit Main article Faroe Islands and the European Union nbsp Kunoy island Faroe IslandsThe Faroe Islands have never been part of the EU Danish citizens residing on the islands are not considered citizens of a member state within the meaning of the treaties or consequently citizens of the European Union 80 However Faroese people may become EU citizens by changing their residence to the Danish mainland The Faroe Islands are not part of the Schengen Area and Schengen visas are not valid However the islands are part of the Nordic Passport Union and the Schengen Agreement provides that travellers passing between the islands and the Schengen Area are not to be treated as passing the external frontier of the Area 81 This means that there is no formal passport control but an identity check at check in for air or boat travel to the islands where Nordic citizens on intra Nordic travel need no passport only showing the ticket plus identity card 82 Heligoland edit nbsp HeligolandHeligoland is an archipelago of Germany situated in the North Sea 70 km 43 mi off the German north western coast It is part of the EU but is excluded from the customs union and the VAT area 10 Monastic community of Mount Athos edit Monastic community of Mount Athos is an autonomous monastic region of Greece Greece s EU accession treaty provides that Mount Athos maintains its centuries old special legal status 83 guaranteed by article 105 of the Greek Constitution It is part of the customs union but outside the VAT area 10 Notwithstanding that a special permit is required to enter the peninsula and that there is a prohibition on the admittance of women it is part of the Schengen Area 84 The monastery has certain rights to house monks from countries outside the EU A declaration attached to Greece s accession treaty to the Schengen Agreement states that Mount Athos s special status should be taken into account in the application of the Schengen rules 85 Areas of extraterritoriality editThe Saimaa Canal and Varska Ulitina road are two of several distinct travel arrangements that exist or existed because of changes in borders over the course of the 20th century where transport routes and installations ended up on the wrong side of the border Some have become superfluous thanks to the Schengen Agreement These listed examples pass the external EU border Further information Privileged transit traffic Saimaa Canal edit Finland leases the 19 6 kilometres 12 2 mi long Russian part of the Saimaa Canal from Russia and is granted extraterritoriality rights 86 The area is not part of the EU it is a special part of Russia Under the treaty signed by Finnish and Russian governments Russian law is in force with a few exceptions concerning maritime rules and the employment of canal staff which fall under Finnish jurisdiction There are also special rules concerning vessels travelling to Finland via the canal Russian visas are not required for just passing through the canal but a passport is needed and it is checked at the border 86 Euros are accepted for the canal fees Prior to the 50 year lease renewal coming into effect in February 2012 the Maly Vysotsky Island had also been leased and managed by Finland Since then it has been fully managed by Russian authorities and is no longer part of the concession territory Varska Ulitina road edit The road from Varska to Ulitina in Estonia traditionally the only road to the Ulitina area goes through Russian territory for one kilometre 0 6 mi of its length an area called Saatse Boot 87 This road has no border control but there is no connection to any other road in Russia It is not permissible to stop or walk along the road This area is a part of Russia but is also a de facto part of the Schengen area Switzerland edit Some roads railways and tram lines of the system in Basel along the border of Switzerland allow transit between two Swiss places through neighbouring countries without customs controls and before 2008 passport controls or between the border and international airports See Privileged transit traffic Switzerland Non EU countries and territories with partial EU integration editSpecial territories of some other European countries are strongly connected to the European Union These are as follows special areas of the member states of the European Free Trade Association EFTA Norway Jan Mayen Svalbard Not part of the Schengen area Norwegian VAT area 88 or the EU single market free movement of people into the territory regardless of nationality 89 Bouvet Island Peter I Island and Queen Maud Land are disputed Norwegian territories embodying the Norwegian claims to Antarctica but have no permanent population Switzerland Samnaun and Val Sampuoir Outside Swiss VAT area 90 Basel Badischer Bahnhof platforms part of EU Customs Union VAT area and single market the United Kingdom is not a member state of the EU anymore nevertheless it has remained an associated country of the Euratom and is set to continue as participant in the EU s Joint European Torus and Fusion for Energy joint undertakings as well as participant in the Euratom Supply Agency the European Institute of Innovation and Technology and the executive agencies of the EU while some of its territories and the Crown Dependencies are to remain partially integrated with the EU Northern Ireland remains under the Northern Ireland Protocol of the Brexit withdrawal agreement de facto part of the European Single Market and the European Union Customs Union for the purposes of goods only in order to prevent the creation of a customs border on the island of Ireland along with the remainder of the United Kingdom the Crown Dependencies and the Republic of Ireland it has continued to form the Common Travel Area outside of the Schengen Area Akrotiri and Dhekelia a British territory is partially integrated with Cyprus in the areas of agriculture currency customs indirect taxation social security and border control Gibraltar also a British territory is in negotiations with the EU for an arrangement to participate in the Schengen Area and with exceptions the Single Market pending implementation 78 91 Summary editFor sovereign states see European integration Summary of European integration uniformity and progress Special territories of EU member states edit This table summarises the various components of EU laws applied in the special territories of EU member states Member states and territories Application of EU law EURATOM EU citizen ship EU elections Schengen area EU VAT area EU customs territory EU single market Euro zone nbsp Cyprus except Yes Yes Yes Yes Set to implement later i Yes Yes Yes Yes nbsp UN Buffer Zone With exemptions Yes No No No Yes j With exemptions k Yes nbsp Northern Cyprus Suspended No Cypriot citizens l No No No No 93 No 94 De facto TRY nbsp Denmark except Yes m Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes DKK ERM II nbsp Greenland Minimal OCT 24 No 95 Yes No No No No 93 Partial 96 DKK ERM II nbsp Faroe Islands No No 97 No No No No No 93 Minimal FTA 98 99 DKK ERM II nbsp Finland except Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes nbsp Aland Islands With exemptions Yes 100 Yes Yes Yes No Yes 93 With exemptions Yes nbsp France except Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes nbsp French Guiana With exemptions OMR Yes Yes Yes n No 101 VAT free Yes 93 Yes Yes nbsp Guadeloupe With exemptions OMR Yes Yes Yes n No 101 Low rate VAT Yes 93 Yes Yes nbsp Martinique With exemptions OMR Yes Yes Yes n No 101 Low rate VAT Yes 93 Yes Yes nbsp Reunion With exemptions OMR Yes Yes Yes n No 101 Low rate VAT Yes 93 Yes Yes nbsp Mayotte With exemptions OMR Yes Yes Yes n No 101 VAT free Yes 93 Yes Yes nbsp Saint Martin With exemptions OMR 102 Yes Yes Yes n No 101 Low rate VAT Yes 93 Yes Yes 103 nbsp Saint Barthelemy Minimal OCT 24 Yes Yes Yes n No 101 No No Partial 96 Yes 103 nbsp Saint Pierre and Miquelon Minimal OCT 24 Yes Yes Yes n No 101 No No 93 Partial 96 Yes 103 nbsp Wallis and Futuna Minimal OCT 24 Yes Yes Yes n No 101 No No 93 Partial 96 XPF pegged to EUR nbsp French Polynesia Minimal OCT 24 Yes Yes Yes n No 101 No No 93 Partial 96 XPF pegged to EUR nbsp New Caledonia Minimal OCT 24 Yes Yes Yes n No 101 No No 93 Partial 96 XPF pegged to EUR nbsp French Southern and Antarctic Lands Minimal OCT 24 Yes Yes No o No 101 No No 93 Partial 96 Yes 104 nbsp Clipperton Island Yes 105 Yes 104 No o No 101 Yes 104 nbsp Germany except Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes nbsp Busingen am Hochrhein Yes Yes Yes Yes Participating with Switzerland p No No 93 Yes Yes nbsp Heligoland Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes VAT free No 93 Yes Yes nbsp Greece except Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes YesAgio Oros Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes VAT free 10 Yes 93 Yes Yes nbsp Italy except Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes nbsp Livigno Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes VAT free No 93 Yes Yes nbsp Campione d Italia Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes p Low rate VAT Yes 63 Yes Yes nbsp Netherlands except Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes nbsp Bonaire Minimal OCT 24 No q Yes Yes No 101 No No 106 Partial 96 USD 107 nbsp Saba Minimal OCT 24 No q Yes Yes No 101 No No 106 Partial 96 USD 107 nbsp Sint Eustatius Minimal OCT 24 No q Yes Yes No 101 No No 106 Partial 96 USD 107 nbsp Curacao Minimal OCT 24 No 108 Yes Yes No 101 No No 106 Partial 96 ANG r nbsp Sint Maarten Minimal OCT 24 No 108 Yes Yes No 101 No No 106 Partial 96 ANG r nbsp Aruba Minimal OCT 24 97 109 Yes Yes No 101 No No 106 Partial 96 AWG nbsp Portugal except Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes nbsp Azores Yes OMR Yes Yes Yes Yes Local rate Yes Yes Yes nbsp Madeira Yes OMR Yes Yes Yes Yes Local rate Yes Yes Yes nbsp Spain except Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes nbsp Canary Islands With exemptions OMR Yes Yes Yes Yes VAT free Yes Yes Yes nbsp Ceuta With exemptions Yes Yes Yes Partial s VAT free No Yes Yes nbsp Melilla With exemptions Yes Yes Yes Partial s VAT free No Yes YesMember states and territories Application of EU law EURATOM EU citizen ship EU elections Schengen area EU VAT area EU customs territory EU single market Euro zoneLegend for the Application of EU law column Full Part of the EU 111 Minimal or none Not part of the EU territory Special territories of other European states edit Special territories of EFTA states and some other European countries also have a special status in regard to EU laws applied 98 Countries and territories Application of EU law EURATOM Schengen area EU VAT area EU customs territory EU single market Adoption of euro nbsp Norway except Partial No Yes No No With exemptions in EEA 112 NOK nbsp Svalbard Partial No No 113 VAT free 88 No No 112 114 NOK nbsp Jan Mayen Partial No Yes 113 115 VAT free 88 No Like rest of Norway 112 NOK nbsp Bouvet Island No No No No No No NOK nbsp Peter I Island No No No No No No NOK nbsp Queen Maud Land No No No No No No NOK nbsp Switzerland except Partial Associated state Yes Swiss Liechtenstein VAT area Swiss Liechtenstein customs territory With exemptions not in EEA 116 CHF nbsp Samnaun and Val Sampuoir Partial Associated state Yes VAT free 90 Swiss Liechtenstein customs territory With exemptions not in EEA 116 CHF nbsp Basel Badischer Bahnhof platforms Partial Associated state Yes Yes 90 Yes Yes 116 CHF nbsp United Kingdom and Crown Dependencies except No Associated state CTA No No No GBP including GGP JEP IMP Northern Ireland Partial t Associated state CTA Goods only de facto Goods only de facto Goods only de facto GBP nbsp Akrotiri and Dhekelia Partial 78 Associated state Set to implement later i Yes 78 Yes 78 Partial u Yes 118 nbsp Gibraltar Partial Associated state Set to implement later 119 No Set to implement later 119 Partial GIPOther British Overseas Territories No Associated state No No No No Various currenciesCountries and territories Application of EU law EURATOM Schengen area EU VAT area EU customs territory EU single market Adoption of euroFormer special territories editMany currently independent states or parts of such were previously territories of the following EU members since the latter joined the EU or previously the European Coal and Steel Community ECSC Belgium with multiple territories from ECSC formation until 1962 France with multiple territories from ECSC formation Italy with Italian Somaliland from ECSC formation until 1960 The Netherlands with multiple territories from ECSC formation Portugal with multiple territories from 1986 enlargement until 2002 United Kingdom with multiple territories from 1973 enlargement Most of these territories seceded before the implementation of the Maastricht Treaty in 1993 and the following years meaning that cooperation like the EU citizenship the VAT union or the Eurozone did not exist so it made less difference to be a special territory then These were Cambodia gained independence from France in 1953 no Community treaty applied there besides ECSC preferences 120 Laos gained independence from France in 1954 no Community treaty applied there besides ECSC preferences 120 Vietnam gained independence from France in 1954 no Community treaty applied there besides ECSC preferences 120 Tunisia gained independence from France in 1956 no Community treaty applied there besides ECSC preferences 120 Morocco gained independence from France in 1956 no Community treaty applied there besides ECSC preferences 120 Guinea gained independence from France in 1958 had OCT status 121 Cameroon French administered part gained independence from France in 1960 along with some of UK administered parts had OCT status for the French part 121 Togo gained independence from France in 1960 had OCT status 121 Mali gained independence from France in 1960 had OCT status 121 Senegal gained independence from France in 1960 had OCT status 121 Madagascar gained independence from France in 1960 had OCT status 121 DR Congo gained independence from Belgium in 1960 had OCT status 121 Somalia Italian administered part gained independence from Italy in 1960 along with UK administered part had OCT status for the Italian part 121 Benin gained independence from France in 1960 had OCT status 121 Niger gained independence from France in 1960 had OCT status 121 Burkina Faso gained independence from France in 1960 had OCT status 121 Ivory Coast gained independence from France in 1960 had OCT status 121 Chad gained independence from France in 1960 had OCT status 121 Central African Republic gained independence from France in 1960 had OCT status 121 Congo gained independence from France in 1960 had OCT status 121 Gabon gained independence from France in 1960 had OCT status 121 Mauritania gained independence from France in 1960 had OCT status 121 Burundi gained independence from Belgium in 1962 had OCT status 121 Rwanda gained independence from Belgium in 1962 had OCT status 121 Netherlands New Guinea transferred from the Netherlands to UN in 1962 later annexed by Indonesia had OCT status 121 Suriname gained independence from the Netherlands in 1975 had OCT status 120 122 123 EURATOM application unsure 124 Algeria gained independence from France in 1962 had a status similar to OMR 125 Bahamas gained independence from the UK in 1973 had OCT status 126 Grenada gained independence from the UK in 1973 had OCT status 126 Comoros gained independence from France in 1975 had OCT status 121 Seychelles gained independence from the UK in 1976 had OCT status 126 French Somaliland gained independence from France as Djibouti in 1977 had OCT status 121 Solomon Islands gained independence from the UK in 1978 had OCT status 126 Tuvalu gained independence from the UK in 1978 had OCT status 126 Dominica gained independence from the UK in 1978 had OCT status 126 Saint Lucia gained independence from the UK in 1979 had OCT status 126 Kiribati gained independence from the UK in 1979 had OCT status 126 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines gained independence from the UK in 1979 had OCT status 126 Zimbabwe gained de jure independence from the UK in 1980 no Community treaty applied there besides ECSC preferences 120 127 Vanuatu gained independence from the UK and France in 1980 generally had OCT status 128 Belize gained independence from the UK in 1981 had OCT status 126 Antigua and Barbuda gained independence from the UK in 1981 had OCT status 126 Saint Kitts and Nevis gained independence from the UK in 1983 had OCT status 126 Brunei gained independence from UK in 1984 had OCT status 126 Hong Kong sovereignty transferred from the UK to China in 1997 no Community treaty applied there 127 besides ECSC preferences 120 Macao sovereignty transferred from Portugal to China in 1999 EURATOM was applicable 129 besides the ECSC preferences 120 Timor Leste East Timor gained independence from Indonesia in 2002 considered under Portuguese administration before that no Community treaty applied there v The United Kingdom left the EU in 2020 When it was a member some of its Crown Dependencies and Overseas Territories were partially integrated with the EU Gibraltar was part of the EU and partially inside its single market Jersey Guernsey and the Isle of Man were not part of the EU but were in its customs union and enjoyed free trade Akrotiri and Dhekelia continue to have partial integration with Cyprus an EU member state even after the UK is no longer an EU member Other territories which were Overseas Territories that year had OCT status Additionally in Europe there were special territories in the past that had different status than their mainland because of various reasons but now are part of a member state Some of these territories were as follows The Austrian areas of Kleinwalsertal and Jungholz formerly enjoyed a special legal status The two areas have road access only to Germany and not directly to other parts of Austria They were in customs and currency union with Germany and there were no border controls between Kleinwalsertal and Jungholz respectively and Germany When Austria entered the EU and its customs union in 1995 the customs union became defunct The entry into force of the Schengen Agreement for Austria 1997 and the introduction of the euro 2002 caused Kleinwalsertal and Jungholz to lose their remaining legal privileges It is now legally treated in the same manner as the rest of Austria Saar merged with the Federal Republic of Germany on 1 January 1957 was fully part of the Community as French administered European territory 130 West Berlin merged with the Federal Republic of Germany on 3 October 1990 was subject to the full application of the treaties w German Democratic Republic East Germany was until 1972 on paper a part of one Germany and the European Community since West Germany the NATO countries and the European Community did not recognize the German Democratic Republic East Germany until 1972 East Germany did not recognize any membership of the EC The West German government treated trade with East Germany as inter German trade and not subject to the EC trade tariffs nbsp Sermiligaaq GreenlandThe following areas are still special member state territories but have changed their status See their entries in the article for details Greenland Saint Barthelemy MayotteSee also editDependent territory Elections to the European Parliament Enlargement of the European Union European Union Association Agreement European Union law Eurosphere Eurozone Foreign relations of the European Union Freedom of movement for workers in the European Union Free economic zone Area of a country where companies are very lightly taxed Future enlargement of the European Union History of the European Union Member state of the European Union Microstates and the European Union Opt outs in the European Union Outline of the European Union Withdrawal from the European Union Portals nbsp European Union nbsp EuropeNotes edit Saint Pierre and Miquelon Saint Barthelemy and the French Southern and Antarctic Lands Aland Ceuta Melilla Heligoland Livigno and Mount Athos de jure in Busingen am Hochrhein and Campione d Italia as well as in the UN Buffer Zone in Cyprus Although most people pay with Swiss Francs in those 2 enclaves only the euro has legal tender The Faroese krona is not a separate currency but a local issue of the Danish krone The Clipperton Island is a private property of the French State The Scattered Islands were regarded as residual territories of the Republic until 2007 They are now a district of the French Southern and Antarctic Lands 150 non permanent in winter 310 in summer research and military personnel Villages in the buffer zone are legally administered by the Republic of Cyprus 50 The application of EU acquis communautaire is suspended in territories where the Republic of Cyprus does not exercise effective control 51 Northern Cyprus is a de facto state that is partially dependent on Turkey 52 a b With exceptions 54 Including the Italian national waters of Lake Lugano a b Akrotiri and Dhekelia and Cyprus should implement together the Schengen area 117 Exceptions may be in place for Turkish goods and services destined for Pyla Due to the military nature of zone the UN requires permits for some economic activity to ensure that the fundamental nature of the area as a buffer zone is not compromised 92 Cypriot nationality law extends to Northern Cyprus meaning citizens of the Republic of Cyprus residing in Northern Cyprus are entitled to EU citizenship Opt outs in force for some treaty provisions and legislations a b c d e f g h i j k Part of the former Outre Mer electoral constituency now part of the single national constituency a b No permanent population not part of any of the eight former European Parliament electoral constituencies of France a b Together with Switzerland a b c Bonaire Saba and Sint Eustatius Inherited status as non member from the Netherlands Antilles a b The Netherlands Antillean guilder was supposed to be replaced by the Caribbean guilder as early as 2012 but introduction is still expected in 2018 a b The full Schengen acquis applies to all Spanish territories but there are border checks on departure from Ceuta and Melilla to Spain or other Schengen countries because of specific arrangements for visa exemptions for Moroccan nationals resident in the provinces of Tetuan and Nador 66 110 The Northern Ireland Protocol applies EU law only to the extent necessary to prevent a customs border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland In a declaration attached to the Treaty of Establishment of the Republic of Cyprus of 1960 the British government undertook not to allow new settlement of people in the sovereign base areas other than for temporary purposes meaning at present free movement of people is limited When Portugal became a Community member in 1986 East Timor was considered a non self governing territory under Portuguese administration by the United Nations despite Indonesian occupation of East Timor between 1975 and 1999 None of the EC laws were ever in force but EURATOM and ECSC preferences were to apply if not for the Indonesian occupation The de jure Portuguese administration formally ceased on 20 May 2002 when Portugal recognised East Timor s independence Until the unification of Germany in 1990 the de jure status of West Berlin was that of French UK and US occupied zones with West German civilian administration The treaties applied fully during 1952 1990 given the Federal German and French treaty responsibilities European Coal and Steel Community Treaty Art 79 and during 1973 1990 given the British treaty responsibilities 131 clarification needed For the 1979 1984 and 1989 European Parliaments three MEPs were appointed on the nomination of the Berlin House of Representatives rather than being directly elected From 3 October 1990 West Berlin was fully integrated in Berlin in the Federal Republic of Germany along with the former East Germany References edit a b The Maastricht Treaty of 1992 Treaty on European Union Declaration on the outermost regions of the Community a b AFP 29 October 2010 La collectivite de Saint Barthelemy obtient un nouveau statut europeen Ministere de l Outre Mer in French Retrieved 8 April 2011 a b Council Decision of 27 November 2001 on the association of the overseas countries and territories with the European Community Overseas Association Decision 2001 822 EC Murray Fiona 2012 The European Union and Member State Territories A New Legal Framework Under the EU Treaties Springer Science amp Business Media p 172 ISBN 978 90 6704 826 2 a b Article 349 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union Council Directive 2013 61 EU of December 2013 17 December 2013 Retrieved 1 January 2014 Regional policy amp outermost regions ec europa eu Retrieved 10 July 2020 Case search Competition European Commission ec europa eu Retrieved 7 February 2020 Case search Competition European Commission ec europa eu Retrieved 7 February 2020 a b c d e f g h i Article 6 of Council Directive 2006 112 EC of 28 November 2006 as amended on the common system of value added tax OJ L 347 11 December 2006 p 1 Eur lex europa eu Article 3 1 of Council Regulation 2913 92 EEC of 12 October 1992 establishing the Community Customs Code as amended OJ L 302 19 October 1992 pp 1 50 Eur lex europa eu Council Directive 2013 61 EU of December 2013 17 December 2013 Retrieved 1 January 2014 Outermost regions Fact Sheets on the European Union European Parliament Retrieved 6 November 2019 a b Rapport d information nombre 329 2004 2005 de MM Jean Jacques Hyest Christian Cointat et Simon Sutour fait au nom de la commission des lois depose le 10 mai 2005 in French a b Guidelines on Trading with the European Community EC PDF January 2008 Retrieved 26 July 2011 a b See Articles 349 and 355 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union OCTA Presentation www octassociation org Retrieved 12 March 2018 Article 202 ex Article 186 Article 199 5 ex Article 183 5 Article 200 1 ex Article 184 1 Article 200 3 and 200 5 ex Article 184 3 and 5 COUNCIL DECISION 2013 755 EU of 25 November 2013 On the association of the overseas countries and territories with the European Union Overseas Association Decision Official Journal of the European Union 19 December 2013 EU relations with Overseas Countries and Territories European Commission 4 June 2014 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Overseas Countries and Territories OCTs EU Directorate General for International Cooperation and Development Retrieved 9 January 2019 Overseas Countries and Territories Trade Helpdesk 8 December 2016 Retrieved 10 July 2020 Future relations between the EU and the Overseas Countries and Territories PDF Brussels Commission of the European Communities 25 May 2008 p 17 About the Overseas Countries and Territories Association overseas association eu Retrieved 25 July 2022 French Southern and Antarctic Lands The Central Intelligence Agency Retrieved 8 February 2010 Art 9 Loi n 55 1052 du 6 aout 1955 modifiee portant statut des Terres australes et antarctiques francaises et de l ile de Clipperton Decret du 31 janvier 2008 relatif a l administration de l ile de Clipperton Council Decision of 12 July 2011 on the signing and conclusion of the Monetary Agreement between the European Union and the French Republic on keeping the euro in Saint Barthelemy following the amendment of its status with regard to the European Union OJ L 189 20 July 2011 pp 1 2 Council Decision 1999 95 EC of 31 December 1998 concerning the monetary arrangements in the French territorial communities of Saint Pierre et Miquelon and Mayotte OJ L 30 4 February 1999 pp 29 30 AFP 29 October 2010 La collectivite de Saint Barthelemy obtient un nouveau statut europeen Ministere de l Outre Mer in French Retrieved 8 April 2011 See Article 355 6 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union The relevant decision of the European Council was made on 29 October 2010 1 a b The Kingdom of the Netherlands One Kingdom Four Countries European and Caribbean Ministerie van Buitenlandse Zaken April 2015 Judgments of the Court in Cases C 145 04 and C 300 04 Kingdom of Spain v United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and M G Eman and O B Sevinger v College van burgemeester en wethouders van Den Haag 2 Schurende rechtsordes Over juridische implicaties van de UPG status voor de eilandgebieden van de Nederlandse Antillen en Aruba Rijksuniversiteit Groningen PDF in Dutch Eerstekamer nl 19 June 2008 Economische gevolgen van de status van ultraperifeer gebied voor de Nederlandse Antillen en Aruba SEOR PDF in Dutch Eerstekamer nl 19 June 2008 Tweede Kamer vergaderjaar 2008 2009 31700 IV nr 3 Brief van de staatssecretaris van Binnenlandse Zaken en Koninkrijksrelaties met het kabinetsstandpunt over de rapporten over de UPG status voor de eilandgebieden van de Nederlandse Antillen en Aruba PDF in Dutch Eerstekamer nl 21 October 2008 Kamerstuk 31954 nr 7 Regels met betrekking tot de openbare lichamen Bonaire Sint Eustatius en Saba Wet openbare lichamen Bonaire Sint Eustatius en Saba in Dutch Overheid nl 14 October 2009 Kamerstuk 31954 31958 D BRIEF VAN DE MINISTER VAN BINNENLANDSE ZAKEN EN KONINKRIJKSRELATIES in Dutch Overheid nl 9 March 2012 Pro Facto Rijksuniversiteit Groningen August 2015 Vijf jaar Caribisch Nederland De werking van wetgeving PDF in Dutch DSP Groep 23 September 2015 Vijf jaar Caribisch Nederland Werking van de nieuwe bestuurlijke structuur PDF in Dutch Sociaal en Cultureel Planbureau October 2015 Vijf jaar Caribisch Nederland Gevolgen voor de bevolking PDF in Dutch Evaluatiecommissie Caribisch Nederland 12 October 2015 VIJFJAAR VERBONDE BONAIRE SINT EUSTATIUS SABA EN EUROPEES NEDERLAND Rapport van de commissie evaluatie uitwerking van de nieuwe staatkundige structuur Caribisch Nederland PDF in Dutch Treaty Establishing the EEC Protocol on the Application of the Treaty Establishing the European Economic Community to the non European parts of the Kingdom of the Netherlands The High Contracting Parties Anxious at the time of signature of the Treaty establishing the European Economic Community to define the scope of the provisions of Article 227 of this Treaty in respect of the Kingdom of the Netherlands Have agreed upon the following provisions which shall be annexed to this Treaty The Government of the Kingdom of the Netherlands by reason of the constitutional structure of the Kingdom resulting from the Statute of 29 December 1954 shall by way of derogation from Article 227 be entitled to ratify the Treaty on behalf of the Kingdom in Europe and Netherlands New Guinea only Done at Rome this twenty fifth day of March in the year one thousand nine hundred and fifty seven Treaty establishing the EEC COUNCIL DECISION 2014 137 EU of 14 March 2014 On relations between the European Union on the one hand and Greenland and the Kingdom of Denmark on the other Official Journal of the European Union 15 March 2014 Protocol Setting out the fishing opportunities and financial contribution provided for in the Fisheries Partnership Agreement between the European Community 1 on the one hand and the Government of Denmark and the Home Rule Government of Greenland 2 on the other hand Official Journal of the European Union 23 October 2012 a b c d Anonymous 13 September 2016 Territorial status of EU countries and certain territories Taxation and Customs Union European Commission Retrieved 16 July 2020 Annex 1 to SAD Guidelines TAXUD 1619 08 rev 3 4 Overview of European Union countries Archived 4 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 20 August 2016 a b Mixed village in Cyprus buffer zone looks to offer hope France 24 23 January 2018 Retrieved 16 July 2020 Murray Fiona 2012 The European Union and Member State Territories A New Legal Framework Under the EU Treaties Springer Science amp Business Media p 3 ISBN 978 90 6704 825 5 Bahcheli Tozun Bartmann Barry Srebrnik Henry 2004 De Facto States The Quest for Sovereignty Routledge pp 24 25 ISBN 978 1 135 77121 8 a b UNFICYP Civil Affairs United Nations Peacekeeping Force in Cyprus 2008 Archived from the original on 15 October 2008 Retrieved 15 November 2008 Council Regulation EC No 866 2004 of 29 April 2004 on a regime under Article 2 of Protocol No 10 of the Act of Accession 30 April 2004 Chesham Mark 2017 VAT and Financial Services 3rd ed Spiramus Press Ltd p 253 ISBN 978 1 910151 52 5 a b EUR Lex 32019R0474 EN EUR Lex eur lex europa eu Retrieved 16 July 2020 Live and work on Aland Naringsliv ax Archived from the original on 1 December 2012 Retrieved 16 February 2013 Article 2 of Protocol 2 on the Aland Islands of the Finnish accession treaty OJ C 241 29 August 1994 3 Article 1 of Protocol 2 on the Aland Islands of the Finnish accession treaty OJ C 241 29 August 1994 4 Aland and EU Naringsliv ax Archived from the original on 11 May 2013 Retrieved 16 February 2013 Treaty of 23 November 1964 between the Federal Republic of Germany and the Swiss Confederation on the inclusion of the municipality of Busingen am Hochrhein in the customs territory of the Swiss Confederation as referred to in Article 3 1 of Council Regulation 2913 92 EEC of 12 October 1992 establishing the Community Customs Code as amended OJ L 302 19 October 1992 pp 1 50 5 From http www buesingen de click Touristik and Hotel Gasthauser and find that every hotel and restaurant quote prices in SFr only a b Regulation EU 2019 474 of the European Parliament and of the 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in a Changing Europe Martinus Nijhoff Publishers p 94 ISBN 978 90 411 0271 3 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Schengen Borders Code Article 21 Treaty of Lisbon Article 2 points 287 and 293 Retrieved 31 January 2008 a b c summaries economic and monetary affairs institutional and economic framework l25042 en htm Agreements concerning the French territorial communities a b c Art 1 1 6 Loi n 55 1052 du 6 aout 1955 portant statut des Terres australes et antarctiques francaises et de l ile de Clipperton Article 108 of the Euratom Treaty a b c d e f customs common glossary customs index en htm Customs territory of the Community Archived from the original on 14 February 2007 a b c Article 16 of the law on the monetary system BES Dutch Wet geldstelsel BES stipulates the use of the Netherlands Antillean guilder as official tender until the official introduction of the US Dollar probably on 1 January 2011 a b Rijkswet aanpassing rijkswetten nr 3 MEMORIE VAN TOELICHTING in Dutch Retrieved 6 November 2010 van het Verdrag tot oprichting van de Europese Gemeenschap voor Atoomenergie Euratom Tr 1957 92 Dit verdrag geldt niet voor Curacao en Sint Maarten See the PRO PRI htm Protocol on the application of the Treaty establishing the European Atomic Energy Community to the non European parts of the Kingdom of the Netherlands and Act ratifying the EAEC Treaty in the Netherlands The protocol on non application of EURATOM by derogation was abrogated by Article 8 III of the Treaty of Amsterdam which entered into force in 1999 but there is no evidence that the EURATOM treaty was ever extended to other countries within the Kingdom now Aruba Curacao and Sint Maarten formerly the Netherlands Antilles and Suriname Declaration on the towns of Ceuta and Melilla regarding Schengen Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union Article 355 a b c European Economic Area agreement a b Agreement concluded by the Council of the European Union and the Republic of Iceland and the Kingdom of Norway concerning the latters association with the implementation application and development of the Schengen acquis Final Act EUR Lex 10 July 1999 Agreement on the European Economic Area Protocol 40 on Svalbard and Declaration for activation of Protocol 40 exclusion The Schengen Area Council of the European Union 2015 a b c Through multiple sectoral agreements Foreign Minister says Cyprus not to join Schengen before 2010 Embassy of the Republic of Cyprus in Berlin Retrieved 3 February 2010 By the third protocol to the Cyprus adhesion Treaty to EU and British local ordinance see 7 a b Deal between Spain and UK plans to eliminate Gibraltar border checkpoint a b c d e f g h i Treaty establishing the European Coal and Steel Community Paris 18 April 1951 CVCE EU by UNI LU 11 September 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Annex IV Overseas countries and territories Up to 1 September 1962 no Community treaty applied there besides ECSC preferences Between that date and 16 July 1976 Suriname had OCT status The provisions of Part Four of the Treaty were applied to Surinam by virtue of a Supplementary Act of the Kingdom of the Netherlands page29 to complete its instrument of ratification from 1 September 1962 to 16 July 1976 in eur lex europa eu Treaty establishing the European Community consolidated version Text of the Treaty See the Protocol on the application of the Treaty establishing the European Atomic Energy Community to the non European parts of the Kingdom of the Netherlands and Act ratifying the EAEC Treaty in the Netherlands The protocol on non application of EURATOM by derogation was abrogated by Article 8 III of the Treaty of Amsterdam which entered into force in 1999 but there is no evidence that the EURATOM treaty was ever extended to other countries within the Kingdom now Aruba Curacao and Sint Maarten formerly the Netherlands Antilles and Suriname European Economic Community Treaty Art 227 a b c d e f g h i j k l m EUR Lex 11972B024 EN eur lex europa eu a b According to Art 227 EEC and Art 198 EURATOM these Treaties shall not apply to those overseas countries and territories having special relations with the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland which are not listed in Annex IV to the EEC Treaty Zimbabwe and Hong Kong are not listed in the annex New Hebrides had ECSC preferences and EURATOM application 1952 1973 stemming from the French administration in the territory from 1973 to 1980 from both the French and British administrations no EEC law applied 1958 1973 EEC OCT status 1973 1980 Art 198 of the EURATOM Treaty states that the treaty applies to non European territories under jurisdiction of Member States So far there is no reference for Macau exclusion thus considering it included between 1986 and 1999 Treaty establishing the European Coal and Steel Community Paris 18 April 1951 11 September 2015 EUR Lex 11972B AFI DCL 06 EN Official Journal L 073 27 March 1972 p 0195 External links editOfficial website Information on the Territorial status of EU countries and certain territories from the European Commission Review of CARIFORUM EU EPA and Implications for the British and Dutch Caribbean Octs What the CARIFORUM EU trade deal means for current EU territories Regional policy amp outermost regions Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Special territories of members of the European Economic Area amp oldid 1196357037 Outermost regions, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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