2011 discharge: EU general budget, Court of Justice

2012/2170(DEC)

The European Parliament adopted by 553 votes to 45, with 11 abstentions, a decision to grant the Registrar of the Court of Justice discharge in respect of the implementation of the Court of Justice's budget for the financial year 2011.

In its resolution accompanying the discharge decision, Parliament notes that the Court of Auditors concluded that the payments as a whole for the year ended on 31 December 2011 for administrative and other expenditure of the institutions and bodies were free from material error. The Court of Auditors observed that no significant weaknesses had been identified in respect of the audited topics related to human resources and procurement for the Court of Justice.

Parliament also notes that the Court of Justice had commitment appropriations amounting to EUR 336 million (more than 98% implementation rate).

On an operational level, Parliament expresses concern that the amount of pending cases in the General Court is still very high in 2011 (i.e. 1300 pending cases in 2010 and 1308 pending cases in 2011). It urges the Court of Justice to examine what type of organisational changes could lead to a the reduction in the number of pending cases and also believes that the General Court needs human resources reinforcement. Members note that the Court of Justice completed 550 cases in 2011, an appreciable increase compared with the previous year (522 cases completed in 2010).

Overall, Parliament supports the initiative taken by the Court of Justice to reform its Statute and Rules of Procedure in light of the challenges it faces in connection with the increased number of cases.

eCuria: welcoming the e-Curia application, which came into operation in November 2011, enabling procedural documents to be lodged and notified electronically, Parliament asks to be informed of the measures taken to resolve informatics breakdowns which can affect the e-Curia performance. It stresses that e-Curia must, in due course, make it possible to do away with a great proportion of exchanges of correspondence and with the scanning of documents coming in and going out, and enable the optimisation of internal work flows and asks Parliament's Committee on Budgetary Control to be given an accurate description of costs relating to the creation, maintenance and updating of the e-Curia application. It considers very positive that by the end of 2012, 14 Member States, two European Free Trade Association countries and five European institutions (in particular Parliament, the Council and the Commission) were active users of e-Curia.

Lastly, Members find the engagement of the Court of Justice in holding a collection of works of art representative of the Union's artistic heritage an ambitious project requiring specialised resources. They invite the Court of Justice to explain how this project articulates with the traditional activities of the Court of Justice. They take note that in 2012, the Court of Justice paid EUR 7500 to insure a collection valued at EUR 2 400 000.