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EU accused of stalling on aid targets

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The European Union stumped up €55bn last year, but figures show the world's biggest aid donor is not keeping its promises

Europe maintained its position as the world's biggest aid donor last year, stumping up €55.2bn of overseas assistance, but the bloc has made no progress towards its target of providing 0.7% of gross national income (GNI) in aid by 2015, according to a yearly audit.

The European commission's 2013 annual development aid report, published last week, highlights the "swift and decisive support" Europe has offered those affected by drought in the Sahel and conflict in Syria and Mali, in the form of overseas development aid (ODA). But "the EU still has some way to go to reach its 0.7% ODA/GNI collective target by 2015", the report says. The 2015 goal was set in 2005.

The figures show that, at 0.43% of collective GNI, aid commitments by the EU and its member states have not increased since 2010, when they fell well short of an interim 0.56% target.

"We are only two or three years from deadline and the EU has still not even met its interim target for 2010 so they are really off-track," Catherine Olier, a spokeswoman for the aid campaign group Oxfam told EurActiv. "It is all very well saying Europe is the world's biggest donor but they are still not delivering on their promises."

Much of the report focuses on European initiatives such as the Agenda for Change and a communication on increasing resilience among the 870 million food vulnerable people.

The Agenda for Change is a strategic attempt to improve EU poverty-reduction efforts by: a differentiated approach that directs EU aid to where it is most needed and can have greatest impact; concentration on a maximum of three sectors per country; a clearer focus on good governance, growth, democracy and human rights; greater use of innovative financing mechanisms; improved policy coherence and member state co-ordination.

**Increasing resilience**

The EU's October communication outlined "10 critical steps to increase resilience among the world's most vulnerable people", ranging from disaster management plans to efficient early-warning systems in disaster-prone countries.

The commission has also rolled out funding for programmes such as the UN's sustainable energy for all initiative, and the scaling-up nutrition movement, as well as providing support for work reviewing progress on the UN's millennium development goals.

"The EU has shown a strong commitment in developing the post-2015 sustainable development agenda," said Melanie Brooks, a spokeswoman for Care International. "In order to renew its commitment and maintain its international role and to ensure the achievement of all millennium development goals, the EU should guarantee adequate funding, with a special focus on gender equality and women's empowerment in the next multi-annual financial framework 2014-2020 [the EU's seven-year budget], currently under discussion."

** Reported by guardian.co.uk 1 hour ago.

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