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Europe now

Europe comes to the aid of islands and mountains (part 1)

Europe now

France Médias Monde

News & Politics

2.25 Ratings

🗓️ 10 March 2023

⏱️ 18 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Whether they're islands, mountains or territories far from the mainland, such areas are considered by the EU to be regions with a strong natural geographical handicap. The EU's cohesion policy, with its powerful budget, gives these regions substantial resources to help them try to catch up with metropolitan areas. The Europe Now team travels to the French overseas department of Guadeloupe to take a closer look.

With the goal of "levelling up" in mind, nine Ultra-Peripheral Regions, or UPRs, have received €13 billion over the last seven years. Six of these UPRs are French. In the case of France, around 18 percent of the total EU Structural Funds goes to 3 percent of the population. On the face of it, that's a major boost for UPRs. But is that money being used optimally?

We went to see for ourselves in Guadeloupe, an archipelago nearly 7,000 kilometres from the French mainland. It is set to receive a billion euros from the EU in 2021-2027. Unemployment is around twice the national rate; a third of the population lives below the poverty line and water shortages are frequent. So why does more EU investment not necessarily translate into better living standards?

In the first part of the show, we travel to the fishing port of Sainte-Rose to meet Charly Vincent, who represents hundreds of fishermen and is a staunch supporter of small-scale, non-industrial fishing. We also interview the president of the Guadeloupe region, Ary Chalus, who sets out the benefits but also the limits of what EU funding can do.

Nearly two-thirds of water held in ageing pipes leaks before it reaches consumers. After years of neglect, the EU is contributing to major new efforts to improve the situation  but is it enough? FRANCE 24's roving Europe reporter Luke Brown meets people who have had enough of decades of bad management.

And with one in three locals under the age of 30 unemployed, what difference is the EU making? Luke Brown visits the St Jean Bosco school, which is giving hope to young people who feel they've been left behind by society.

>> Watch part two of the show

Show presented by Armen Georgian, produced by Johan Bodin, filmed on location by Johan Bodin and Stéphane Bodenne, with Luke Brown. Editor in chief, Caroline de Camaret.

Co-funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the DG Regional and Urban Policy. Neither the European Union nor the DG Regional and Urban Policy can be held responsible for them.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

I'm going to be able to be.

0:03.0

You know,

0:06.0

and

0:07.0

you're going to Hello and welcome to Europe now. In this series, we've been exploring the idea of leveling up, that's to say, reducing

0:37.6

inequalities across the European Union. And that is a hugely relevant question here in

0:43.9

Guadeloupe. Believe it or not, this is actually European Union territory, although it's

0:49.2

more than 6,000 kilometres away from metropolitan France. And yet, Guadeloupe is very much on the radar of the European Union.

0:58.0

It's been designated one of the nine ultra-peripheral regions of the EU, or UPRs.

1:04.0

And these UPRs benefit from special funding arrangements with the EU,

1:08.0

so Guadalupe is going to receive around a billion euros in EU funding over the next five years.

1:13.6

The GDP per capita here is significantly lower than both the French and the EU averages.

1:20.6

We'll be showing you many of these problems, but we'll also bring you the success stories here in this French overseas department.

1:29.3

I'm just outside the port of Saint-Rose with Charlie Vincent, who is a fisherman himself.

1:46.6

Charlie Vincent, good.

1:48.1

And you tell us about how your industry is doing in general.

1:52.9

All our fishing is small scale.

1:55.2

Our boats are less than 12 metres long.

1:57.9

We have about 600 boats and 850 personnel, captains and sailors. We produce around 3,500

2:04.9

tons of fish in Guadalupe. Charlie, let's talk about the Claudecone contamination scandal.

2:12.0

This is a pesticide that was used for 20 years in Guadeloupe and the broader region.

2:18.3

It was banned in America but continued to be used here in Guadalupe.

2:23.3

It's obviously contaminated crops, rivers, the soil.

...

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