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    HomeEUSix European economies vow to drive progress on stalled projects

    Six European economies vow to drive progress on stalled projects

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    By Maria Martinez and Victoria Waldersee

    BERLIN, ​Jan 28 (Reuters) - Ministers from six leading European economies including Germany and France vowed to be the drivers of European progress as they tackled how to advance projects stalled by the EU's complex decision-making process at a time of geopolitical ⁠upheaval.

    The video conference including finance and economy ministers from Poland, Spain, Italy and the Netherlands followed ridicule from U.S. President Donald Trump's administration over the time it takes the 27-country European Union to make decisions.

    "As six major economies in Europe, ‍we now want to be the drivers," German Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil said after the call. "We are providing momentum; others can join. What matters is ​strengthening our competitiveness and our defence capability."

    The idea of forging ad-hoc coalitions allowing some EU countries to pursue projects without the need for agreement from all 27 has long tempted some members and has already been applied to key projects including ​the euro currency.

    But it is gaining new momentum as Europe confronts widening insecurity, sluggish growth and deep political divergences but without effective joint action to overcome geopolitical challenges from Trump's U.S., Russia and China.

    CAPITAL MARKETS UNION, RARE EARTHS AMONG OBJECTIVES

    No concrete decisions were made during Wednesday's call, rather just an agreement to focus on a mooted capital markets union; the international role of the euro, including having an independent European payment system; coordinating defence investments; and securing access to ‌critical minerals through coordinated purchasing, emergency reserves and trade partnerships worldwide.

    "In view of global uncertainties, we are placing greater emphasis ‌on European sovereignty," Klingbeil said.

    Earlier in the week, he had mentioned setting up a two-speed Europe. He did not use those words in Wednesday's statement.

    It was not ​clear yet at what stage other countries could join, nor what precisely the six, who are due to meet again, want to achieve, and if that would happen outside of the EU's usual glacial decision-making channels.

    One EU source said it ‌would be an informal, ad hoc group that would convene when needed. Another said this would not be an exclusive club.

    MOVE AHEAD

    German ⁠Chancellor Friedrich Merz has shown a growing willingness to press ahead in Europe without the traditional ‌EU unanimity, be it on the Mercosur trade deal or Ukraine.

    France ​has for years pushed to move ahead in smaller groups on policies ranging from steel import safeguards to nuclear energy that remain blocked at the broader EU level. And several of those invited to the call agreed with the approach.

    "The European ⁠economy needs to accelerate. Changes are happening ⁠too slowly," Polish Finance Minister Andrzej Domański told Reuters.

    (Additional reporting by Andreas Rinke in Berlin, Giuseppe Fonte in Rome, Leigh Thomas ​in Paris, Jan Strupczewski and Kate Abnett in Brussels, Emma Pinedo in Madrid, Simon Johnson in Stockholm, Barbara Erling and Pawel Florkiewicz in Warsaw; writing by Ingrid Melander; ‌editing by Philippa Fletcher, Joe Bavier and Mark Heinrich)

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