This conference brought together representatives of EU institutions, public administrations and think tanks, as well as the broader research communities to reflect on how regulatory scrutiny has functioned in the EU since the establishment of the Board. The event also explored the roles of quantification and stakeholder consultation in impact assessment and evaluation. Speakers came from the European Commission, Member State authorities, European Parliament and from academia.
- Thursday 19 September 2019, 09:00 - 16:30 (CEST)
- Brussels, Belgium
Programme
- 19 Sep 2019, 08:00 - 09:00 (CEST)
Registration and welcome coffee
- 09:20 - 09:45 (CEST)
Welcome address
- Veronica Gaffey, European Commission, Chair, RSB
"Three years of the RSB: Taking stock and looking forward"
Documents
- 09:45 - 11:00 (CEST)
Panel I — How regulatory scrutiny helps
Outline: The RSB has exercised quality control over Commission impact assessments and key evaluations since 2016. It has issued hundreds of written opinions, including many negative ones. Is scrutiny leading to better policy proposals? Is the process delivering higher quality EU regulation? What can still be improved?
Moderator
- Nils Björksten, European Commission, RSB
Panellists
- John Berrigan, European Commission Deputy Director General, DG FISMA
- Anthony Teasdale, Director General of the European Parliamentary Research Service (EPRS)
- Kai Härmand, Deputy Secretary General, Legislative Policy Department of Estonian Ministry of Justice
Documents
- 11:00 - 11:30 (CEST)
Coffee break
- 11:30 - 13:00 (CEST)
Panel II — Quantification, scope of impacts and proportionality
Outline: The Board has observed very different degrees of quantification, both of impacts and of costs. The introduction of a quantification table has helped to improve impact assessments. It has in particular led to more quantification of benefits. Few people think that quantification is done “whenever possible,” as prescribed by the Better Regulation guidelines. The session will discuss limits to quantification. It will present the changing consensus on what are the best methods. It will consider the difficult question of what is ‘proportionate’ when assessing impacts.
Moderator
- Andreas Kopp, European Commission, RSB
Panellists
Magda Kopczynska, European Commission, Director, DG MOVE
Hans Bruyninckx, Executive Director, EEA
Sofia Ranchordas, University of Groningen
- Robert Hahn, University of Oxford
Documents
- 13:00 - 14:30 (CEST)
Buffet Lunch
- 14:30 - 16:00 (CEST)
Panel III — Using stakeholder consultations better
Outline: Systematic stakeholder consultation at various stages of EU policy development was a key innovation of the 2015 Better Regulation agenda. The OECD’s Regulatory Policy Outlook has given the highest rank to the Commission’s new stakeholder engagement system. However, the Commission’s Better Regulation stocktaking found that the system, while advanced, is not delivering to its potential.Well-conducted public and targeted consultations are an important source of information for impact assessments and evaluations. The RSB sees the end result of the consultation and how it is used in impact assessments and evaluations. The Board has sometimes noted insufficient participation in public consultations and incomplete coverage of targeted consultations. It has also found that reports have not always fully reflected or made maximum use of consultations. What further steps could be taken to get still more out of consultations?
Moderator
- Bernard Naudts, European Commission, RSB
Panellists
- Adriana Bunea, University of Bergen
- Petra van Nierop, ICF Brussels
- Artur Runge-Metzger, European Commission, Director, DG CLIMA
- Sile Lane, Sense about Science
Documents
- 16:00 - 16:30 (CEST)
Closing remarks
- Pascal Leardini, European Commission, Deputy Secretary General
- Veronica Gaffey, European Commission, Chair, RSB
Practical information
- When
- Thursday 19 September 2019, 09:00 - 16:30 (CEST)
- Where
- Charlemagne BuildingCharlemagne Building, Rue de la Loi 170, 1000 Brussels, Belgium
Description
Registration
To register click here.
Organiser
Regulatory Scrutiny Board
Please be advised that photographs, audio and video recordings will be taken at this event and may be used on RSB online platforms, publications and promotional material. Participants who object to being
photographed and/or webstreamed and/or recorded have the possibility to follow the event from a listening room. More information about Commission privacy policy concerning this event you can find in the invitation privacy statement attached here.