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Review of Data Protection Directive postponed

Posted by: Sue Barnes Posted Date: 06/10/2011
After several delays already The European Commission has once again postponed the adoption of a legislative proposal for the review of the Data Protection Directive. The text, which was planned to be published by November this year, is now set for the end of the year, and more than likely it slip into early January 2012.We can probably assume that the longer the text is delayed, the more issues regarding data protection the European Commission is going to be looking at.   The draft, which is developed by the Data protection unit, within the European Commission, still has to be circulated internally among all the Commission’s Directorates General for comments, in the so-called inter-service consultation before publication. We will be keeping an interested watch on the future developments of this legislative proposal.    

Directive on Consumer Rights has now been adopted

Posted by: Sue Barnes Posted Date: 19/07/2011
The Directive on Consumer Rights has now been adopted

European Commission legislative proposal for Data Protection

Posted by: Sue Barnes Posted Date: 19/07/2011
The European Commission legislative proposal for Data Protection

Postal Markets open up in a further 11 EU countries

Posted by: Sue Barnes Posted Date: 31/01/2011

On January 1, 11 member states of the European Union ended their postal monopolies, Under the terms of the European Union's Third Postal Directive, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Denmark, France, Ireland, Italy, Portugal, Slovenia and Spain joined the other six countries that have already ended the postal monopoly rights for their traditional national carrier -  Estonia, Finland, Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden and the United Kingdom. In these nations, the last and largest reserved area of the mail – letters up to 50 grams – are open to competition. As a result, some 95 percent of the EU’s internal postal market is liberalized.

With a further 11 European countries ending their postal monopolies, this should be good news for direct mailers.  In theory over the longer term, as competition develops, this should bring lower postage costs as has already been seen in the UK. However, to date this has been slow to develop in many of the other liberalized countries.

The remaining ten EU member states, who are new entrants to the European Union – Cyprus, Czech Republic, Luxemburg, Greece, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, and Slovakia however, have been granted an additional two years to implement full liberalization in their countries.