Registrant : Organisation or self-employed individual
| Name/company name: |
Chamber of Commerce Belgium-Luxembourg South-Eastern Europe |
| Acronym: |
Chamber CCBLSEE
|
| Legal status: |
ASBL
|
| Website address: |
http://www.chamber.be
|
Sections
| Section: |
II - In-house lobbyists and trade/professional associations |
| and more precisely: |
Trade, business & professional associations |
Person with legal responsibility
| Surname, Name: |
Mr
Milan Jezic von Gesseneck
|
| Position: |
President |
Permanent person in charge of EU relations
| Surname, Name: |
Management Advisory
|
| Position: |
Board |
Contact details:
| Contact details of organisation's head office: |
2 Rue Potagere
Brussels 1210
BELGIUM
|
| Telephone number: |
(+322) 2230724 |
| Fax number: |
(+) |
| Other contact information: |
chamber@chamber.be Fax: 32.70.428329
|
Goals / remit
| Goals / remit of the organisation: |
The Chamber of Commerce Belgium-Luxembourg South-East Europe is an official certified, accredited multilateral Chamber of Commerce and Industry of the Kingdom of Belgium and the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg in charge of Albania, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Croatia, Greece, Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia and Kosovo, and Slovenia, as well as of the regional cooperation with Bulgaria, Hungary, Moldova, Romania and Turkey. Based on this duty, the Chamber is actively engaged in different activities and projects of the economic development of South East Europe.
The Chamber has been one of the inaugurating chambers of the Transnational Chamber of Commerce, the worldwide business chamber led by the World Chambers Federation.
One of the prominent goals of the Chamber is, acting both on the federal levels and on those of the Regions, support of business expansion with the different countries of the South-Eastern Europe.
Due to the specifics of the area that Chamber is covering, but also due to the extensive cooperation with the EU & International institutions based and/or represented in Brussels, the Chamber is also active in the process of EU integration of South-East Europe. The Chamber is active in enhancing the exchange of know-how and expertise, building technical cooperation, as well as by promoting and enhancing the social capital of the South-East Europe. Already for years, the Chamber is operating as networking catalyst bringing together public institutions, private business and non-governmental players. Consequently, the Chamber is recognized as a unique Brussels Based, Public-Private Partnership Platform for South-Eastern Europe.
This quite specific operation is developed and is based on several pillars, namely on: Economic pillar & Infrastructure - Energy pillar & Social capital pillar
The EU as one of the most influential actors The European Union has been a force for stability and the development of political and social prosperity in Europe. Its values, norms and institutions have encouraged people to coalesce around democratic principles, structures, relations and networks working towards the greater good. One of the key priorities in EU external relation policy is and has been to promote stability and peace in Western Balkans, where an important part of the external assistance has been used by the EU since the enlargement process started. The former programme CARDS, (the Community assistance programme for Reconstruction, Development and Stabilisation) which started in 2000, has continued the activities already undertaken by the EU to support civil society development in Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Montenegro and Serbia. In line with the aim of simplifying and co-ordinating the delivery of external assistance, the Commission's major objective in setting up an Instrument for pre-accession assistance (IPA) is to streamline all pre-accession assistance into a single framework for both candidate and potential candidate countries replacing the former PHARE, ISPA, SAPARD, CARDS programmes, and the Turkish pre-accession instrument. Assistance may finance investments, procurement contracts, and grants, including interest rate subsides, special loans, loan guarantees and financial assistance. • Transition Assistance and Institution Building, • Regional and Cross-Border Cooperation, • Regional Development (transport, environment and economic development) • Human Resources Development • Rural Development Two first listed of five components concern all the beneficiary countries, while three other components concern directly only the candidate countries (Croatia, Turkey and Macedonia).
The Chamber news are periodicals edited and published by the Chamber, and are distributed electronically, free of charge to more than 4,950 individuals from the worldwide, community.
|
|
The organisation's fields of interests are:
|
- sub-national
- national
- European
- global
|
Number of persons engaged in activities falling under the scope of the Transparency Register
| Number of persons: |
1
|
|
Complementary information:
|
|
Persons accredited for access to European Parliament premises
Activities
Main EU initiatives covered the year before by activities falling under the scope of the Transparency Register:
|
Lobbying activities for the benefits of the Chamber members
|
Fields of interest for e-mail alerts on consultations and roadmaps;
| Fields declared by the organisation: |
- Climate Action
- Development
- Energy
- Enlargement
- Enterprise
- Environment
- General and Institutional Affairs
- Research and Technology
- Trade
- Trans-European Networks
- Transport
|
Networking
Information on (i) organisation's membership of any associations/federations/confederations or (ii) relationships to other bodies in formal or informal networks.
|
The Chamber is an official certified Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Belgium and Luxembourg in charge of Albania, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Croatia, Greece, Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia and Kosovo, and Slovenia, as well as of cooperation with Bulgaria, Hungary, Moldova, Romania and Turkey.
|
Financial data
| Financial year: |
01/2010
-
12/2010
|
|
Estimated costs to the organisation directly related to representing interests to EU institutions in that year:
|
< 50000
€
|
|
Amount and source of funding received from the EU institutions in financial year n-1 of registration
|
|
Procurement:
|
0 €
|
|
Grants:
|
0 €
|
Other (financial) information provided by the organisation:
|
|
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