The European Security and Defence Union Issue 33

Page 52

THE EUROPEAN – SECURITY AND DEFENCE UNION

CONFERENCE REPORT EU CBRN Centres of Excellence Initiative

7th International Meeting of National Focal Points

photo: Hartmut Bühl

by Nannette Cazaubon, Paris

H

ow should we fight jointly against Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear (CBRN) risks and threats around the world? These challenges go beyond national borders and cannot be tackled alone, as recent CBRN attacks and events in Europe, its neighbouring countries and the use of chemical weapons in Syria showed. This is also true for the re-emergence of epidemic diseases like Ebola in Africa, or the increasingly devastating effects of natural disasters and climate change. In answer to this urgent problem, the European Union launched in 2010 an initiative called “European Union CBRN Risk Mitigation Centres of Excellence” (EU CBRN CoE). Within this initiative, there are currently 61 partner countries grouped around 8 Regional Secretariats1, collaborating with the aim of fostering national, regional and interregional cooperation around the world to better prevent CBRN incidents or disasters.

The initiative is well on track Led by the European Commission’s Directorate-General for International Cooperation and Development (DG DEVCO), the EU CBRN COE initiative is now well on track, as was highlighted during the “7th International meeting of National Focal Points” that took place from 12th to 14th June in La Hulpe, near Brussels. This international three-day meeting gathered about 180 participants from countries involved in the EU CBRN CoE Initiative, who all agreed that the initiative has reached a turning point. Organised by DG DEVCO and the United Nations Interregional Crime and Justice Research Institute (UNICRI), with the support of the European External Action Service (EEAS), the meeting in La Hulpe was the opportunity for fruitful discussion among the participants from Africa, Asia, the Middle-East, South East and Eastern Europe, as well as observers from Kazakhstan, the USA, and regional and international organisations. Plenary

Regional Roundtable meetings were held on the second day of the conference

Presentation of a mobile biosafety laboratory photo: Devco

52

photo: Devco


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Articles inside

Interview with Bruce R. Eggers, Andover, MA The Future of European Integrated Air and Missile Defence The Patriot partnership community

5min
pages 50-51

Last but not least

5min
pages 57-60

Conference report by Hartmut Bühl, Brussels Life Support Solutions – Field Camp Services International workshop at Kärcher Futuretech

2min
page 56

Dirk Zickora, Munich The importance of a European Air Power solution The role of space and cyberspace

8min
pages 38-41

Raymond Hernandez, Erkrath No more dead through contaminated water! Potable water – easily produced everywhere

5min
pages 54-55

Round table interview with Patrick Bellouard, Paris, Hans-Christoph Atzpodien, Berlin, and Trevor Taylor, London Germany – a touchstone for the arms export policy of the European Union

18min
pages 44-49

Conference report by Nannette Cazaubon, Paris The EU CBRN Centres of Excellence Initiative 7 th meeting of National Focal Points

5min
pages 52-53

Timo Kivinen, Helsinki Finland promotes an EU defence cooperation Make European forces more operational

6min
pages 42-43

Carlos Bandin Bujan, Brussels We need more efficient cybersecurity building worldwide A transversal issue in development and cooperation

5min
pages 28-29

Rob Wainwright, Amsterdam, and Beth McGrath, Washington The new role of the Defence Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) CISOs are more than technology officers

6min
pages 36-37

Documentation 5G networks, “fake news” and disinformation

5min
pages 32-33

Wolfgang Röhrig, Brussels Cyber defence in the European Union is part of its defence capabilities Cyber strongly influences capability development

5min
pages 34-35

Secunet, Essen NAPMA further expands its SINA Secure Remote Access capability Advertorial

5min
pages 30-31

Peter Martini, Bonn The crucial role of cybersecurity for a resilient energy supply Vulnerability will increase with digitalisation

3min
page 21

Interview with Arne Schönbohm, Bonn Europe needs coherent national strategies and EU operational concepts Make cybersecurity a top priority

12min
pages 24-27

Michael Singh, Washington, DC The world needs the EU as a global player Europe strategic dependence

4min
pages 14-15

Jean-Louis Gergorin /Léo Isaac Dognin, Paris Democracies must learn to withstand, in peacetime, a permanent war in cyberspace Governance remains the number one challenge

8min
pages 18-20

Angelika Niebler MEP, Brussels/Strasbourg How MEPs work to boost Europe’s cybersecurity Cyber resilience is a top issue in the EU

6min
pages 16-17

Roberto Viola, Brussels Taking a cyber leap forward A European response to cyber threats

6min
pages 22-23

Guest commentary by Jean-Dominique Giuliani, Paris Our freedom starts with Hong kong

3min
page 12

Commentary by Hartmut Bühl, Paris Security must be palpable

2min
page 13
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