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Article by Giulia Casula – Journalist, Fanpage.it

European leaders met in Brussels to discuss Ukraine , defense, competitiveness, immigration, and the latest developments in the Middle East. The EU Council approved the part of the conclusions on renewing support for Kiev, approved by the 26 EU members, excluding Viktor Orbán’s Hungary. The 26 committed to “addressing Ukraine’s urgent financial needs for the period 2026-2027, including those related to military and defense efforts.”

Therefore, the “European Council invites the Commission to present, as soon as possible, proposals for financial support based on an assessment of Ukraine’s needs, and invites the Commission and the Council to take this work forward so that the European Council can return to this issue at its next meeting,” the text of the conclusions just released reads.

The issue of using Russian assets to continue supporting Ukraine’s war effort is central. “Without prejudice to EU law, Russia’s assets should remain immobilized until Russia ends its war of aggression against Ukraine and compensates for the damage caused by its war,” the statement reads. For the time being, therefore, the Council has avoided providing a full and detailed mandate on the exploitation of assets, postponing the matter to the next meeting, scheduled for December.

“Today, the European Council delivered an important message: the EU is committed to meeting Ukraine’s urgent financial needs for the next two years, including supporting its military and defense efforts,” President Antonio Costa wrote in X. “Russia,” he added, “must end the war immediately.”

Decisions on competitiveness, defense and climate

Competitiveness was one of the topics addressed at today’s summit. The Council’s conclusions highlight passages on climate, including the review clause on the 2040 climate target and the reference to technology neutrality. This includes the intention to advance the revision of the regulation on emissions standards for cars and vans, which is the basis for the ban on the sale of new internal combustion engines from 2035. The Council also requests “a swift presentation of this proposal, taking into account technology neutrality and European content.”

Regarding climate objectives, the approved conclusions reiterate three key conditions in writing: the contribution of CO2 absorption, which must be “realistic” and must take into account “uncertainties related to natural removal,” ensuring that any shortfalls “do not come at the expense of other economic sectors”; the contribution of international credits, which must be “ambitious and cost-effective, in particular by defining an adequate level of high-quality international credits”; and the need for a review clause, “in light of the latest scientific evidence, technological advances, and evolving challenges and opportunities for the EU’s global competitiveness.” In short, the Twenty-Seven agreed to call on the EU to review the pathways to the intermediate objectives of the green transition, to introduce adjustments and reduce any negative impacts on businesses and competitiveness.

On the defense front, EU leaders confirmed their determination “to rapidly and comprehensively achieve” defense objectives by 2030 “so that Europe is better equipped to act and address immediate and future challenges and threats in an autonomous, coordinated, and holistic manner,” according to the conclusions adopted this afternoon. The Council called for “the Member State-led work on all priority capability areas identified at EU level to be operationalized, with the support of the European Defence Agency and based on a coherent overall approach, so that Europe develops the full spectrum of necessary modern capabilities, in full coherence with NATO,” the conclusions read. Finally, it recognized “the work already done by Member States and called on them to complete the process of building capability coalitions in all priority areas by the end of the year and to advance concrete projects to be launched in the first half of 2026.”

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