For the purposes of this Regulation the following definitions shall apply:
1
‘aid’ means any measure fulfilling all the criteria laid down in Article 107(1) of the Treaty;
2
‘small and medium-sized enterprises’ or ‘SMEs’ means undertakings fulfilling the criteria laid down in
Annex I;
3
‘worker with disabilities’ means any person who:
b
has long-term physical, mental, intellectual or sensory impairment(s) which, in interaction with various barriers, may hinder their full and effective participation in a work environment on an equal basis with other workers;
4
‘disadvantaged worker’ means any person who:
a
has not been in regular paid employment for the previous 6 months; or
b
is between 15 and 24 years of age; or
c
has not attained an upper secondary educational or vocational qualification (International Standard Classification of Education 3) or is within two years after completing full-time education and who has not previously obtained his or her first regular paid employment; or
d
is over the age of 50 years; or
e
lives as a single adult with one or more dependents; or
f
works in a sector or profession in a Member State where the gender imbalance is at least 25 % higher than the average gender imbalance across all economic sectors in that Member State, and belongs to that underrepresented gender group; or
g
is a member of an ethnic minority within a Member State and who requires development of his or her linguistic, vocational training or work experience profile to enhance prospects of gaining access to stable employment;
5
‘transport’ means
transport of passengers by aircraft, maritime
transport, road, rail, or by inland waterway or freight
transport services for hire or reward;
6
‘transport costs’ means the costs of
transport for hire or reward actually paid by the beneficiaries per
journey, comprising:
a
freight charges, handling costs and temporary stocking costs, in so far as these costs relate to the
journey;
b
insurance costs applied to the cargo;
d
safety and security control costs, surcharges for increased fuel costs;
8
‘marketing of agricultural products’ means holding or display with a view to sale, offering for sale, delivery or any other manner of placing on the market, except the first sale by a primary producer to resellers or processors and any activity preparing a product for such first sale; a sale by a primary producer to final consumers shall be considered to be marketing if it takes place in separate premises reserved for that purpose;
9
‘primary agricultural production’ means production of products of the soil and of stock farming, listed in
Annex I to the Treaty, without performing any further operation changing the nature of such products;
10
‘processing of agricultural products’ means any operation on an
agricultural product resulting in a product which is also an
agricultural product, except on-farm activities necessary for preparing an animal or plant product for the first sale;
11
‘agricultural product’ means the products listed in
Annex I to the Treaty, except fishery and aquaculture products listed in Annex I to
Regulation 2013/1379 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 11 December 2013;
12
‘outermost regions’ means regions as defined in Article 349 of the Treaty. In accordance with European Council Decision 2010/718/EU, from 1 January 2012, Saint-Barthélemy ceased to be an
outermost region. In accordance with European Council Decision 2012/419/EU on 1 January 2014, Mayotte became an
outermost region;
13
‘coal’ means high-grade, medium-grade and low-grade category A and B
coal within the meaning of the international codification system for
coal established by the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe and clarified in the Council decision of 10 December 2010 on State
aid to facilitate the closure of uncompetitive
coal mines ( 36 ) ;
ii
awards of
aid to individual beneficiaries on the basis of an
aid scheme;
15
‘aid scheme’ means any act on the basis of which, without further implementing measures being required, individual
aid awards may be made to undertakings defined within the act in a general and abstract manner and any act on the basis of which
aid which is not linked to a specific project may be granted to one or several undertakings for an indefinite period of time and/or for an indefinite amount;
16
‘evaluation plan’ means a document containing at least the following minimum elements: the objectives of the
aid scheme to be evaluated, the evaluation questions, the result indicators, the envisaged methodology to conduct the evaluation, the data collection requirements, the proposed timing of the evaluation including the date of submission of the final evaluation report, the description of the independent body conducting the evaluation or the criteria that will be used for its selection and the modalities for ensuring the publicity of the evaluation;
17
‘ad hoc aid’ means
aid not granted on the basis of an
aid scheme;
18
‘undertaking in difficulty’ means an undertaking in respect of which at least one of the following circumstances occurs:
a
In the case of a limited liability company (other than an SME that has been in existence for less than three years or, for the purposes of eligibility for risk finance
aid, an SME within 7 years from its
first commercial sale that qualifies for
risk finance investments following due diligence by the selected
financial intermediary), where more than half of its subscribed share capital has disappeared as a result of accumulated losses. This is the case when deduction of accumulated losses from reserves (and all other elements generally considered as part of the own funds of the company) leads to a negative cumulative amount that exceeds half of the subscribed share capital. For the purposes of this provision, ‘limited liability company’ refers in particular to the types of company mentioned in Annex I of
Directive 2013/34 ( 37 ) and ‘share capital’ includes, where relevant, any share premium.
b
In the case of a company where at least some members have unlimited liability for the debt of the company (other than an SME that has been in existence for less than three years or, for the purposes of eligibility for risk finance
aid, an SME within 7 years from its
first commercial sale that qualifies for
risk finance investments following due diligence by the selected
financial intermediary), where more than half of its capital as shown in the company accounts has disappeared as a result of accumulated losses. For the purposes of this provision, ‘a company where at least some members have unlimited liability for the debt of the company’ refers in particular to the types of company mentioned in Annex II of
Directive 2013/34.
c
Where the undertaking is subject to collective insolvency proceedings or fulfils the criteria under its domestic law for being placed in collective insolvency proceedings at the request of its creditors.
d
Where the undertaking has received rescue
aid and has not yet reimbursed the
loan or terminated the guarantee, or has received restructuring
aid and is still subject to a restructuring plan.
e
In the case of an undertaking that is not an SME, where, for the past two years:
1
the undertaking's book debt to equity ratio has been greater than 7,5 and
2
the undertaking's EBITDA interest coverage ratio has been below 1,0.
19
‘territorial spending obligations’: mean the obligations imposed by the authority granting the
aid on beneficiaries to spend a minimum amount and/or conduct a minimum level of production activity in a particular territory;
20
‘adjusted aid amount’ means the maximum permissible
aid amount for a
large investment project, calculated according to the following formula: maximum
aid amount = R × (A + 0,50 × B + 0 × C) where: R is the maximum
aid intensity applicable in the area concerned established in an approved regional map and which is in force on the date of granting the
aid, excluding the increased
aid intensity for SMEs; A is the initial EUR 50 million of eligible costs, B is the part of eligible costs between EUR 50 million and EUR 100 million and C is the part of eligible costs above EUR 100 million
21
‘repayable advance’ means a
loan for a project which is paid in one or more instalments and the conditions for the reimbursement of which depend on the outcome of the project;
22
‘gross grant equivalent’ means the amount of the
aid if it had been provided in the form of a grant to the beneficiary, before any deduction of tax or other charge;
23
‘start of works’ means the earlier of either the start of construction works relating to the investment, or the first legally binding commitment to order equipment or any other commitment that makes the investment irreversible. Buying land and preparatory works such as obtaining permits and conducting
feasibility studies are not considered
start of works. For take-overs, ‘start of works’ means the moment of acquiring the assets directly linked to the acquired establishment;
24
‘large enterprises’ means undertakings not fulfilling the criteria laid down in
Annex I;
25
‘fiscal successor scheme’ means a scheme in the form of tax advantages which constitutes an amended version of a previously existing scheme in the form of tax advantages and which replaces it.
26
‘aid intensity’ means the gross
aid amount expressed as a percentage of the eligible costs, before any deduction of tax or other charge;
27
‘assisted areas’ means areas designated in an approved regional
aid map for the period 1.7.2014 - 31.12.2020 in application of Articles
107(3) (a) and (c) of the Treaty;
28
‘date of granting of the aid’ means the date when the legal right to receive the
aid is conferred on the beneficiary under the applicable national legal regime;
29
‘tangible assets’ means assets consisting of land, buildings and plant, machinery and equipment;
30
‘intangible assets’ means assets that do not have a physical or financial embodiment such as patents, licences, know-how or other intellectual property;
31
‘wage cost’ means the total amount actually payable by the beneficiary of the
aid in respect of the employment concerned, comprising over a defined period of time the gross wage before tax and compulsory contributions such as social security, child care and parent care costs;
32
‘net increase in the number of employees’ means a
net increase in the number of employees in the establishment concerned compared with the average over a given period in time, and that any posts lost during that period must therefore be deducted and that the number of persons employed full-time, part-time and seasonal has to be considered with their annual labour unit fractions;
33
‘dedicated infrastructure’ means infrastructure that is built for ex-ante identifiable undertaking(s) and tailored to their needs.
34
‘financial intermediary’ means any financial institution regardless of its form and ownership, including fund-of-funds, private
equity investment funds, public investment funds, banks, micro-finance institutions and guarantee societies;
36
‘fair rate of return (FRR)’ means the expected rate of return equivalent to a risk-adjusted discount rate which reflects the level of risk of a project and the nature and level of capital the private investors plan to invest;
37
‘total financing’ means the overall investment amount made into an eligible undertaking or project under Section 3 or under Articles
16 or
39 of this Regulation to the exclusion of entirely private investments provided on market terms and outside the scope of the relevant State
aid measure;
38
‘competitive bidding process’ means a non-discriminatory bidding process that provides for the participation of a sufficient number of undertakings and where the
aid is granted on the basis of either the initial bid submitted by the bidder or a clearing price. In addition, the budget or volume related to the bidding process is a binding constraint leading to a situation where not all bidders can receive
aid;
39
‘operating profit’ means the difference between the discounted revenues and the discounted operating costs over the relevant lifetime of the investment, where this difference is positive. The operating costs include costs such as
personnel costs, materials, contracted services, communications, energy, maintenance, rent, administration, but exclude, for the purpose of this Regulation, depreciation charges and the costs of financing if these have been covered by investment
aid.
Definitions applying to regional
aid Definitions applying to regional
aid 40
Definitions applying to
aid for broadband infrastructures (Section 10) are applicable to the relevant regional
aid provisions.
41
‘regional investment aid’ means regional
aid granted for an initial investment or an initial investment in favour of a new economic activity;
42
‘regional operating aid’ means
aid to reduce an undertaking's current expenditure that is not related to an initial investment. This includes cost categories such as
personnel costs, materials, contracted services, communications, energy, maintenance, rent, administration, etc., but excludes depreciation charges and the costs of financing if these have been included in the eligible costs when granting investment
aid;
43
‘steel sector’ means all activities related to the production of one or more of the following products:
a
pig iron and ferro-alloys: pig iron for steelmaking, foundry and other pig iron, spiegeleisen and high-carbon ferro-manganese, not including other ferro-alloys;
b
crude and semi-finished products of iron, ordinary steel or special steel: liquid steel whether or not cast into ingots, including ingots for forging semi- finished products: blooms, billets and slabs; sheet bars and tinplate bars; hot-rolled wide coils, with the exception of production of liquid steel for castings from small and medium-sized foundries;
c
hot finished products of iron, ordinary steel or special steel: rails, sleepers, fishplates, soleplates, joists, heavy sections of 80 mm and over, sheet piling, bars and sections of less than 80 mm and flats of less than 150 mm, wire rod, tube rounds and squares, hot-rolled hoop and strip (including tube strip), hot-rolled sheet (coated or uncoated), plates and sheets of 3 mm thickness and over, universal plates of 150 mm and over, with the exception of wire and wire products, bright bars and iron castings;
d
cold finished products: tinplate, terneplate, blackplate, galvanised sheets, other coated sheets, cold-rolled sheets, electrical sheets and strip for tinplate, cold-rolled plate, in coil and in strip;
e
tubes: all seamless steel tubes, welded steel tubes with a diameter of over 406.4 mm;
44
‘synthetic fibres sector’ means:
a
extrusion/texturisation of all generic types of fibre and yarn based on polyester, polyamide, acrylic or polypropylene, irrespective of their end-uses; or
b
polymerisation (including polycondensation) where it is integrated with extrusion in terms of the machinery used; or
c
any ancillary process linked to the contemporaneous installation of extrusion/texturisation capacity by the prospective beneficiary or by another company in the group to which it belongs and which, in the specific business activity concerned, is normally integrated with such capacity in terms of the machinery used;
45
‘transport sector’ means the
transport of passengers by aircraft, maritime
transport, road or rail and by inland waterway or freight
transport services for hire or reward; more specifically, the ‘transport sector’ means the following activities in terms of NACE Rev. 2:
a
NACE 49: Land
transport and
transport via pipelines, excluding NACE 49.32 Taxi operation, 49.42 Removal services, 49.5
Transport via pipeline;
46
‘scheme targeted at a limited number of specific sectors of economic activity’ means a scheme which covers activities falling within the scope of less than five classes (four-digit numerical code) of the NACE Rev. 2 statistical classification.
47
‘tourism activity’ means the following activities in terms of NACE Rev. 2:
b
NACE 56: Food and beverage service activities;
c
NACE 79: Travel agency, tour operator reservation service and related activities;
d
NACE 90: Creative, arts and entertainment activities;
e
NACE 91: Libraries, archives, museums and other cultural activities;
f
NACE 93: Sports activities and amusement and recreation activities;
48
‘sparsely populated areas’ means those areas which are recognized by the Commission as such in the individual decisions on regional
aid maps for the period 1.7.2014-31.12.2020;
49
‘initial investment’ means:
a
an investment in tangible and
intangible assets related to the setting-up of a new establishment, extension of the capacity of an existing establishment, diversification of the output of an establishment into products not previously produced in the establishment or a fundamental change in the overall production process of an existing establishment; or
b
an acquisition of assets belonging to an establishment that has closed or would have closed had it not been purchased, and is bought by an investor unrelated to the seller and excludes sole acquisition of the shares of an undertaking;
50
‘the same or a similar activity’ means an activity falling under the same class (four-digit numerical code) of the NACE Rev. 2 statistical classification of economic activities as laid down in
NACE of the European Parliament and of the Council of 20 December 2006 establishing the statistical classification of economic activities NACE Revision 2 and amending Council Regulation (EEC) No 3037/90 as well as certain EC Regulations on specific statistical domains ( 38 ) ;
51
‘initial investment in favour of new economic activity’ means:
a
an investment in tangible and
intangible assets related to the setting up of a new establishment, or to the diversification of the activity of an establishment, under the condition that the new activity is not
the same or a similar activity to the activity previously performed in the establishment;
b
the acquisition of the assets belonging to an establishment that has closed or would have closed had it not been purchased, and is bought by an investor unrelated to the seller, under the condition that the new activity to be performed using the acquired assets is not
the same or a similar activity to the activity performed in the establishment prior to the acquisition;
52
‘large investment project’ means an initial investment with eligible costs exceeding EUR 50 million, calculated at prices and exchange rates on the date of granting the
aid;
53
‘point of destination’ means the place where the goods are unloaded;
54
‘point of origin’ means the place where the goods are loaded for
transport;
55
‘areas eligible for operating
aid’, means an
outermost region referred to in Article 349 of the Treaty or a
sparsely populated area, as determined in the approved regional
aid map for the Member State concerned for the period 1.7.2014-31.12.2020;
57
‘urban development fund’ (‘UDF’) means a specialised investment vehicle set up for the purpose of investing in urban development projects under an urban development
aid measure. UDFs are managed by an
urban development fund manager;
58
‘urban development fund manager’ means a professional management company with legal personality, selecting and making investments in eligible urban development projects;
59
‘urban development project’ (‘UDP’) means an investment project that has the potential to support the implementation of interventions envisaged by an integrated approach to sustainable urban development and contribute to achieving of the objectives defined therein, including projects with an internal rate of return which may not be sufficient to attract financing on a purely commercial basis. An urban development project may be organised as a separate block of finance within the legal structures of the beneficiary private investor or as a separate legal entity, e.g. a special purpose vehicle;
60
‘integrated sustainable urban development strategy’ means a strategy officially proposed and certified by a relevant local authority or public sector agency, defined for a specific urban geographic area and period, that set out integrated actions to tackle the economic, environmental, climate, demographic and social challenges affecting urban areas;
61
‘in-kind contribution’ means the contribution of land or real estate where the land or real estate forms part of the urban development project;
Definitions for
Aid to SMEs Definitions for
Aid to SMEs
62
‘employment directly created by an investment project’ means employment concerning the activity to which the investment relates, including employment created following an increase in the utilisation rate of the capacity created by the investment;
63
‘organisational cooperation’ means the development of joint business strategies or management structures, the provision of common services or services to facilitate cooperation, coordinated activities such as research or marketing, the support of networks and clusters, the improvement of accessibility and communication, the use of joint instruments to encourage entrepreneurship and trade with SMEs;
64
‘advisory services linked to cooperation’ means consulting, assistance and training for the exchange of knowledge and experiences and for improvement of cooperation;
65
‘support services linked to cooperation’ means the provision of office space, websites, data banks, libraries, market research, handbooks, working and model documents;
Definitions for
Aid for access to finance for SMEs Definitions for
Aid for access to finance for SMEs
66
‘quasi-equity investment’ means a type of financing that ranks between equity and debt, having a higher risk than senior debt and a lower risk than common equity and whose return for the holder is predominantly based on the profits or losses of the underlying target undertaking and which are unsecured in the event of default.
Quasi-equity investments can be structured as debt, unsecured and subordinated, including mezzanine debt, and in some cases convertible into equity, or as preferred equity;
67
‘guarantee’ in the context of sections 1, 3 and 7 of the Regulation means a written commitment to assume responsibility for all or part of a third party's newly originated
loan transactions such as debt or lease instruments, as well as quasi-equity instruments.;
68
‘guarantee rate’ means the percentage of loss coverage by a public investor of each and every transaction eligible under the relevant State
aid measure;
69
‘exit’ means the liquidation of holdings by a
financial intermediary or investor, including trade sale, write-offs, repayment of shares/loans, sale to another
financial intermediary or another investor, sale to a financial institution and sale by public offering, including an initial public offering (IPO);
70
‘financial endowment’ means a repayable public investment made to a
financial intermediary for the purposes of making investments under a risk finance measure, and where all the proceeds shall be returned to the public investor;
71
‘risk finance investment’ means equity and
quasi-equity investments,
loans including leases, guarantees, or a mix thereof to eligible undertakings for the purposes of making new investments;
72
‘independent private investor’ means a private investor who is not a shareholder of the eligible undertaking in which it invests, including business angels and financial institutions, irrespective of their ownership, to the extent that they bear the full risk in respect of their investment. Upon the creation of a new company, private investors, including the founders, are considered to be independent from that company;
73
‘natural person’ for the purpose of Articles
21 and
23 means a person other than a legal entity who is not an undertaking for the purposes of Article 107(1) of the Treaty;
74
‘equity investment’ means the provision of capital to an undertaking, invested directly or indirectly in return for the ownership of a corresponding share of that undertaking;
75
‘first commercial sale’ means the first sale by a company on a product or service market, excluding limited sales to test the market;
78
‘replacement capital’ means the purchase of existing shares in a company from an earlier investor or shareholder;
79
‘entrusted entity’ means the European Investment Bank and the European Investment Fund, an international financial institution in which a Member State is a shareholder, or a financial institution established in a Member State aiming at the achievement of public interest under the control of a public authority, a public law body, or a private law body with a public service mission: the
entrusted entity can be selected or directly appointed in accordance with the provisions of
Directive 2004/18 on the coordination of procedures for the award of public works contracts, public supply contracts and public service contracts, ( 39 ) or any subsequent legislation replacing that Directive in full or in part;
80
‘innovative enterprise’ means an enterprise:
a
that can demonstrate, by means of an evaluation carried out by an external expert that it will in the foreseeable future develop products, services or processes which are new or substantially improved compared to the
state of the art in its industry, and which carry a risk of technological or industrial failure, or
b
the research and development costs of which represent at least 10 % of its total operating costs in at least one of the three years preceding the granting of the
aid or, in the case of a start-up enterprise without any financial history, in the audit of its current fiscal period, as certified by an external auditor;
81
‘alternative trading platform’ means a multilateral trading facility as defined in
Article 4(1) (15) of
MIFID where the majority of the financial instruments admitted to trading are issued by SMEs;
82
‘loan’ means an agreement which obliges the lender to make available to the borrower an agreed amount of money for an agreed period of time and under which the borrower is obliged to repay the amount within the agreed period. It may take the form of a
loan, or another funding instrument, including a lease, which provides the lender with a predominant component of minimum yield. The refinancing of existing
loans shall not be an eligible
loan.
Definitions for
Aid for research and development and innovation Definitions for
Aid for research and development and innovation
83
‘research and knowledge-dissemination organisation’ means an entity (such as universities or research institutes, technology transfer agencies, innovation intermediaries, research-oriented physical or virtual collaborative entities), irrespective of its legal status (organised under public or private law) or way of financing, whose primary goal is to independently conduct
fundamental research,
industrial research or
experimental development or to widely disseminate the results of such activities by way of teaching, publication or knowledge transfer. Where such entity also pursues economic activities the financing, the costs and the revenues of those economic activities must be accounted for separately. Undertakings that can exert a decisive influence upon such an entity, in the quality of, for example, shareholders or members, may not enjoy preferential access to the results generated by it;
84
‘fundamental research’ means experimental or theoretical work undertaken primarily to acquire new knowledge of the underlying foundations of phenomena and observable facts, without any direct commercial application or use in view;
85
‘industrial research’ means the planned research or critical investigation aimed at the acquisition of new knowledge and skills for developing new products, processes or services or for bringing about a significant improvement in existing products, processes or services. It comprises the creation of components parts of complex systems, and may include the construction of prototypes in a laboratory environment or in an environment with simulated interfaces to existing systems as well as of pilot lines, when necessary for the
industrial research and notably for generic technology validation;
86
‘experimental development’ means acquiring, combining, shaping and using existing scientific, technological, business and other relevant knowledge and skills with the aim of developing new or improved products, processes or services. This may also include, for example, activities aiming at the conceptual definition, planning and documentation of new products, processes or services;
Experimental development may comprise prototyping, demonstrating, piloting, testing and validation of new or improved products, processes or services in environments representative of real life operating conditions where the primary objective is to make further technical improvements on products, processes or services that are not substantially set. This may include the development of a commercially usable prototype or pilot which is necessarily the final commercial product and which is too expensive to produce for it to be used only for demonstration and validation purposes.
Experimental development does not include routine or periodic changes made to existing products, production lines, manufacturing processes, services and other operations in progress, even if those changes may represent improvements;
87
‘feasibility study’ means the evaluation and analysis of the potential of a project, which aims at supporting the process of decision-making by objectively and rationally uncovering its strengths and weaknesses, opportunities and threats, as well as identifying the resources required to carry it through and ultimately its prospects for success;
88
‘personnel costs’ means the costs of researchers, technicians and other supporting staff to the extent employed on the relevant project or activity;
89
‘arm's length’ means that the conditions of the transaction between the contracting parties do not differ from those which would be stipulated between independent enterprises and contain no element of collusion. Any transaction that results from an open, transparent and non-discriminatory procedure is considered as meeting the
arm's length principle;
90
‘effective collaboration’ means collaboration between at least two independent parties to exchange knowledge or technology, or to achieve a common objective based on the division of labour where the parties jointly define the scope of the collaborative project, contribute to its implementation and share its risks, as well as its results. One or several parties may bear the full costs of the project and thus relieve other parties of its financial risks. Contract research and provision of research services are not considered forms of collaboration.
91
‘research infrastructure’ means facilities, resources and related services that are used by the scientific community to conduct research in their respective fields and covers scientific equipment or sets of instruments, knowledge-based resources such as collections, archives or structured scientific information, enabling information and communication technology-based infrastructures such as grid, computing, software and communication, or any other entity of a unique nature essential to conduct research. Such infrastructures may be ‘single-sited’ or ‘distributed’ (an organised network of resources) in accordance with Article 2(a) of Council
ERIC of 25 June 2009 on the Community legal framework for a European
Research Infrastructure Consortium (ERIC) ( 40 ) ;
92
‘innovation clusters’ means structures or organised groups of independent parties (such as innovative start-ups, small, medium and
large enterprises, as well as research and knowledge dissemination organisations, non-for-profit organisations and other related economic actors) designed to stimulate innovative activity through promotion, sharing of facilities and exchange of knowledge and expertise and by contributing effectively to knowledge transfer, networking, information dissemination and collaboration among the undertakings and other organisations in the cluster;
93
‘highly qualified personnel’ means staff having a tertiary education degree and at least 5 years of relevant professional experience which may also include doctoral training;
94
‘innovation advisory services’ means consultancy, assistance and training in the fields of knowledge transfer, acquisition, protection and exploitation of
intangible assets, use of standards and regulations embedding them;
95
‘innovation support services’ means the provision of office space, data banks, libraries, market research, laboratories, quality labelling, testing and certification for the purpose of developing more effective products, processes or services;
96
‘organisational innovation’ means the implementation of a new organisational method in an undertaking's business practices, workplace organisation or external relations, excluding changes that are based on organisational methods already in use in the undertaking, changes in management strategy, mergers and acquisitions, ceasing to use a process, simple capital replacement or extension, changes resulting purely from changes in factor prices, customisation, localisation, regular, seasonal and other cyclical changes and trading of new or significantly improved products;
97
‘process innovation’ means the implementation of a new or significantly improved production or delivery method (including significant changes in techniques, equipment or software), excluding minor changes or improvements, increases in production or service capabilities through the addition of manufacturing or logistical systems which are very similar to those already in use, ceasing to use a process, simple capital replacement or extension, changes resulting purely from changes in factor prices, customisation, localisation, regular, seasonal and other cyclical changes and trading of new or significantly improved products;
98
‘secondment’ means temporary employment of staff by a beneficiary with the right for the staff to return to the previous employer;
99
‘severely disadvantaged worker’ means any person who:
a
has not been in regular paid employment for at least 24 months; or
b
has not been in regular paid employment for at least 12 months and belongs to one of the categories (b) to (g) mentioned under the definition of ‘disadvantaged worker’.
101
‘environmental protection’ means any action designed to remedy or prevent damage to physical surroundings or natural resources by a beneficiary's own activities, to reduce risk of such damage or to lead to a more efficient use of natural resources, including energy-saving measures and the use of renewable sources of energy;
102
‘Union standard’ means:
a
a mandatory Union standard setting the levels to be attained in environmental terms by individual undertakings; or
b
the obligation under
IEIPPCD of the European Parliament and of the Council ( 41 ) to use the best available techniques (BAT) and ensure that emission levels of pollutants are not higher than they would be when applying BAT; for the cases where emission levels associated with the BAT have been defined in implementing acts adopted under
IEIPPCD, those levels will be applicable for the purpose of this Regulation; where those levels are expressed as a range, the limit where the BAT is first achieved will be applicable;
103
‘energy efficiency’ means an amount of saved energy determined by measuring and/or estimating consumption before and after implementation of an energy-efficiency improvement measure, whilst ensuring normalisation for external conditions that affect energy consumption;
104
‘energy efficiency project’ means an investment project that increases the
energy efficiency of a building;
106
‘energy efficiency fund manager’ means a professional management company with a legal personality, selecting and making investments in eligible
energy efficiency projects;
107
‘high-efficiency cogeneration’ means cogeneration which satisfies the definition of high efficiency cogeneration as set out in Article 2(34) of
EED of the European Parliament and of the Council of 25 October 2012 on
energy efficiency, amending Directives 2009/125/EC and 2010/30/EU and repealing Directives 2004/8/EC and 2006/32/EC ( 42 ) ;
108
‘cogeneration’ or combined heat and power (CHP) means the simultaneous generation in one process of thermal energy and electrical and/or mechanical energy;
109
‘energy from renewable energy sources’ means energy produced by plants using only
renewable energy sources, as well as the share in terms of calorific value of energy produced from
renewable energy sources in hybrid plants which also use conventional energy sources. It includes renewable electricity used for filling storage systems, but excludes electricity produced as a result of storage systems;
110
‘renewable energy sources’ means the following renewable non-fossil energy sources: wind, solar, aerothermal, geothermal, hydrothermal and ocean energy, hydropower,
biomass, landfill gas, sewage treatment plant gas and biogases;
112
‘sustainable biofuel’ means a
biofuel fulfilling the sustainability criteria set out in Article 17 of
PUEFRSD;
113
‘food based biofuel’ means a
biofuel produced from cereal and other starch rich crops, sugars and oil crops as defined in the Commission's Proposal for a Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council amending
QPDFD relating to the quality of petrol and diesel fuels and amending
PUEFRSD on the promotion of the use of energy from renewable sources ( 43 ) ;
114
‘new and innovative technology’ means a new and unproven technology compared to the
state of the art in the industry, which carries a risk of technological or industrial failure and is not an optimisation or scaling up of an existing technology;
115
‘balancing responsibilities’ means responsibility for imbalances (deviations between generation, consumption and commercial transactions) of a market participant or its chosen representative, referred to as the ‘Balance Responsible Party’, within a given period of time, referred to as the ‘Imbalance Settlement Period’;
116
‘standard balancing responsibilities’ means non-discriminatory
balancing responsibilities across technologies which do not exempt any generator from those responsibilities;
117
‘biomass’ means the biodegradable fraction of products, waste and residues from agriculture (including vegetal and animal substances), forestry and related industries including fisheries and aquaculture, as well as biogases and the biodegradable fraction of industrial and municipal waste;
118
‘total levelized costs of producing energy’ is a calculation of the cost of generating electricity at the point of connection to a load or electricity grid. It includes the initial capital, discount rate, as well as the costs of continuous operation, fuel, and maintenance;
119
‘environmental tax’ means a tax with a specific tax base that has a clear negative effect on the environment or which seeks to tax certain activities, goods or services so that the environmental costs may be included in their price and/or so that producers and consumers are oriented towards activities which better respect the environment;
120
‘Union minimum tax level’ means the minimum level of taxation provided for in the Union legislation; for energy products and electricity it means the minimum level of taxation laid down in Annex I to Council
Directive 2003/96 of 27 October 2003 restructuring the Community framework for the taxation of energy products and electricity ( 44 ) ;
121
‘contaminated site’ means a site where there is a confirmed presence, caused by man, of hazardous substances of such a level that they pose a significant risk to human health or the environment taking into account current and approved future use of the land;
122
‘polluter pays principle’ or ‘PPP’ means that the costs of measures to deal with
pollution should be borne by the
polluter who causes the
pollution;
123
‘pollution’ means the damage caused by a
polluter directly or indirectly damaging the environment, or by creating conditions leading to such damage to physical surroundings or natural resources;
124
‘energy efficient district heating and cooling’ means a district heating and cooling system which satisfies the definition of efficient district heating and cooling system set out in
Article 2(41) and (42) of
EED. The definition includes the heating/cooling production plants and the network (including related facilities) necessary to distribute the heat/cooling from the production units to the customer premises;
125
‘polluter’ means someone who directly or indirectly damages the environment or who creates conditions leading to such damage.
126
‘re-use’ means any operation by which products or components that are not waste are used again for the same purpose for which they were conceived;
127
‘preparing for re-use’ means checking, cleaning or repairing recovery operations, by which products or components of products that have become waste are prepared so that they can be re-used without any other pre-processing;
128
‘recycling’ means any recovery operation by which waste materials are reprocessed into products, materials or substances whether for the original or other purposes. It includes the reprocessing of organic material but does not include energy recovery and the reprocessing into materials that are to be used as fuels or for backfilling operations;
129
‘state of the art’ means a process in which the
re-use of a waste product to manufacture an end product is economically profitable normal practice. Where appropriate, the concept of
state of the art must be interpreted from a Union technological and internal market perspective;
130
‘energy infrastructure’ means any physical equipment or facility which is located within the Union or linking the Union to one or more third countries and falling under the following categories:
a
concerning electricity:
i
infrastructure for transmission, as defined in
Article 2(3) by
CRIMIED of 13 July 2009 concerning common rules for internal market in electricity ( 45 ) ;
iii
electricity storage, defined as facilities used for storing electricity on a permanent or temporary basis in above-ground or underground infrastructure or geological sites, provided they are directly connected to high-voltage transmission lines designed for a voltage of 110 kV or more;
iv
any equipment or installation essential for the systems defined in points (i) to (iii) to operate safely, securely and efficiently, including protection, monitoring and control systems at all voltage levels and substations; and
v
smart grids, defined as any equipment, line, cable or installation, both at transmission and low and medium voltage distribution level, aiming at two-way digital communication, real-time or close to real-time, interactive and intelligent monitoring and management of electricity generation, transmission, distribution and consumption within an electricity network in view of developing a network efficiently integrating the behaviour and actions of all users connected to it — generators, consumers and those that do both — in order to ensure an economically efficient, sustainable electricity system with low losses and high quality and security of supply and safety;
i
transmission and distribution pipelines for the
transport of natural gas and bio gas that form part of a network, excluding high-pressure pipelines used for upstream distribution of natural gas;
ii
underground storage facilities connected to the high-pressure gas pipelines mentioned in point (i);
iii
reception, storage and regasification or decompression facilities for liquefied natural gas (‘LNG’) or compressed natural gas (‘CNG’); and
iv
any equipment or installation essential for the system to operate safely, securely and efficiently or to enable bi-directional capacity, including compressor stations;
ii
pumping stations and storage facilities necessary for the operation of crude oil pipelines; and
iii
any equipment or installation essential for the system in question to operate properly, securely and efficiently, including protection, monitoring and control systems and reverse-flow devices;
d
concerning CO 2 : networks of pipelines, including associated booster stations, for the
transport of CO 2 to storage sites, with the aim to inject the CO 2 in suitable underground geological formations for permanent storage;
131
‘internal energy market legislation’ includes
CRIMIED of the European Parliament and of the Council of 13 July 2009 concerning common rules for the internal market in electricity,
CRIMINGD of the European Parliament and of the Council of 13 July 2009 concerning common rules for the internal market in natural gas ( 46 ) ,
EACERR of the European Parliament and of the Council of 13 July 2009 establishing an Agency for the Cooperation of Energy Regulators ( 47 ) ;
Regulation 2009/714 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 13 July 2009 on conditions for access to the network for cross-border exchanges ( 48 ) and
CANGTNR of the European Parliament and of the Council of 13 July 2009 on conditions for access to the natural gas transmission networks ( 49 ) or any subsequent legislation replacing these acts in full or in part;
132
‘normal residence’ means the place where a natural person lives for at least 185 days, in each calendar year, because of personal and occupational ties; in the case of a person whose occupational ties are in a different place from his/her personal ties and who lives in two or more Member States, the place of
normal residence is regarded as the place of his/her personal ties provided that he/she returns there regularly; where a person is living in a Member State in order to carry out a task of a set duration, the place of residence is still regarded as being the place of his/her personal ties, irrespective of whether he/she returns there during the course of this activity; attendance at a university or school in another Member State does not constitute a transfer of
normal residence; alternatively, ‘normal residence’ shall have the meaning attributed to it in Member States' national law.
Definitions for
aid for broadband infrastructures Definitions for
aid for broadband infrastructures
133
‘basic broadband’‘Basic broadband networks’ means networks with basic functionalities which are based on technology platforms such as asymmetric digital subscriber lines (up to ADSL2+ networks), non-enhanced cable (e.g. DOCSIS 2.0), mobile networks of third generation (UMTS) and satellite systems;
134
‘broadband-related civil engineering works’ means the civil engineering works which are necessary for the deployment of a broadband network, such as digging up a road in order to enable the placement of (broadband)
ducts.
135
‘ducts’ means underground pipes or conduits used to house (fibre, copper or coax) cables of a broadband network.
136
‘physical unbundling’ grants access to the end-consumer access line and allows competitors' own transmission systems to directly transmit over it.
137
‘passive broadband infrastructure’ means a broadband network without any active component. It typically comprises civil engineering infrastructure,
ducts and dark fibre and street cabinets.
138
‘next generation access (NGA) networks’ means advanced networks which have at least the following characteristics: (a) deliver services reliably at a very high speed per subscriber through optical (or equivalent technology) backhaul sufficiently close to user premises to guarantee the actual delivery of the very high speed; (b) support a variety of advanced digital services including converged all-IP services, and (c) have substantially higher upload speeds (compared to basic broadband networks). At the current stage of market and technological development,
NGA networks are: (a) fibre-based access networks (FTTx), (b) advanced upgraded cable networks and (c) certain advanced wireless access networks capable of delivering reliable high-speeds per subscriber.
139
‘wholesale access’ means access which enables an operator to utilise the facilities of another operator. The widest possible access to be provided over the relevant network shall include, on the basis of the current technological developments, at least the following access products. For FTTH/FTTB networks:
ducts access, access to dark fibre, unbundled access to the local loop, and bitstream access. For cable networks:
duct access and bit-stream access. For FTTC networks:
duct access, sub-loop unbundling and bit-stream access. For passive network infrastructure:
duct access, access to dark fibre and/or unbundled access to the local loop. For ADSL-based broadband networks: unbundled access to the local loop, bit-stream access. For mobile or wireless networks: bit-stream, sharing of physical masts and access to the backhaul networks. For satellite platforms: bit-stream access.
Definitions for
aid for culture and heritage conservation Definitions for
aid for culture and heritage conservation
140
‘difficult audiovisual works’: means the works identified as such by Member States on the basis of pre-defined criteria when setting up schemes or granting the
aid and may include films whose sole original version is in a language of a Member State with a limited territory, population or language area, short films, films by first-time and second-time directors, documentaries, or low budget or otherwise commercially difficult works.
141
Development Assistance Committee (DAC) List of the OECD: means all countries and territories that are eligible to receive official development assistance and included in the list compiled by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD);
142
‘reasonable profit’ shall be determined with respect to the typical profit for the sector concerned. In any event, a rate of return on capital that does not exceed the relevant swap rate plus a premium of 100 basis points will be considered to be reasonable.
Definitions for
aid for sport and multifunctional recreational infrastructures Definitions for
aid for sport and multifunctional recreational infrastructures
143
‘professional sport’ means the practice of sport in the nature of gainful employment or remunerated service, irrespective of whether or not a formal labour contract has been established between the professional sportsperson and the relevant sport organisation, where the compensation exceeds the cost of participation and constitutes a significant part of the income for the sportsperson. Travel and accommodation expenses to participate to the sport event shall not be considered as compensation for the purposes of this Regulation.