The European Commission pledges to make an "unprecedented effort" to cut red tape in the European Union in a draft of its economic policy programme to be presented on Wednesday. Fewer, simpler rules are intended to accelerate competitiveness in the bloc and ultimately boost innovation,
France is pushing to cut red tape at European Union level, calling for a "massive pause" in new EU regulations, a delay in rules requiring companies to report on their environmental footprint, and changes to even freshly passed laws.
AI, biotech and affordable clean energy will be the focus of an EU drive to make the bloc globally competitive and ensure it keeps pace with rivals the United States and China, according to a draft European Commission paper seen by Reuters.
Speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Trump said he had once sought approval for a project in Ireland, but ditched it once he was told that it would take “five to six years ... And I said, ‘You have to be kidding.'"
A leaked draft of the European Commission’s competitiveness compass — an economic doctrine to guide the EU executive’s work for the coming five years — points toward widespread deregulation targeting the European Green Deal in particular.
Ericsson AB’s head urged European politicians to cut red tape in the technology and telecommunications sectors to avoid a widening gap with the US that he said will likely get worse under incoming US President Donald Trump.
The European Union is focusing on AI, biotech, and clean energy to enhance global competitiveness, as revealed in a draft European Commission paper. The paper aims to simplify business regulations, counter US and China competition,
BRUSSELS: Artificial intelligence (AI), biotech and affordable clean energy will be the focus of a European Union (EU) drive to make the bloc globally competitive and ensure it keeps pace with rivals the United States and China,
France urges the EU to delay new environmental and human rights regulations, citing concerns over excessive burdens on businesses
Jonathan Reynolds told the BBC doing a deal to ease UK exports of food would not cross the government's red lines