| Dokumendiregister | Justiitsministeerium |
| Viit | 7-1/10224 |
| Registreeritud | 19.12.2025 |
| Sünkroonitud | 22.12.2025 |
| Liik | Sissetulev kiri |
| Funktsioon | 7 EL otsustusprotsessis osalemine ja rahvusvaheline koostöö |
| Sari | 7-1 EL institutsioonide otsustusprotsessidega seotud dokumendid (eelnõud, töögruppide materjalid, õigustiku ülevõtmise tähtajad) (Arhiiviväärtuslik) |
| Toimik | 7-1/2025 |
| Juurdepääsupiirang | Avalik |
| Juurdepääsupiirang | |
| Adressaat | Riigikantselei |
| Saabumis/saatmisviis | Riigikantselei |
| Vastutaja | Kristiina Krause (Justiits- ja Digiministeerium, Kantsleri vastutusvaldkond, Üldosakond, Kommunikatsiooni ja väliskoostöö talitus) |
| Originaal | Ava uues aknas |
EN EN
EUROPEAN COMMISSION
HIGH REPRESENTATIVE OF THE UNION FOR
FOREIGN AFFAIRS AND SECURITY POLICY
Brussels, 3.12.2025
JOIN(2025) 977 final
JOINT COMMUNICATION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE
COUNCIL
Strengthening EU economic security
1
1. Introduction
The increasingly frequent and targeted use of economic tools to advance strategic
objectives has become a defining feature of today’s geopolitical landscape. From disruptive
tariffs and the weaponisation of dependencies to the arbitrary deployment of trade defence
measures, major players are using economic levers to pursue their strategic and geopolitical
objectives, putting the EU’s security, public order, competitiveness and economy at risk.
The risks to the EU’s economic security are not new but have recently intensified:
vulnerabilities are now more visible, more pressing, and more difficult to overlook. These
risks include:
- a growing instability in the global trade and investment environment, marked by the
rise of disruptive trade measures and export restrictions to weaponise dependencies;
- a proliferation of predatory practices targeting critical supply chains and technologies,
undermining our industrial base, some of which (such as State-funded overcapacities)
creating new dependencies;
- the continued deterioration of the security landscape, including in the context of Russia’s
continuing war of aggression against Ukraine and the rise in hybrid attacks.
The 2023 European Economic Security Strategy set out the EU’s initial response to these
challenges.1 It outlined a series of actions – grounded in risk assessments – to strengthen the
EU’s economic security by promoting competitiveness, protecting against risks and
partnering with those who share our concerns. These three pillars remain at the core of our
economic security approach and the Commission together with Member States work to
integrate them into any policy considerations and actions. Moreover, economic security is
essential for the EU to maintain its values, its principles and the wellbeing of its citizens, as
well as to reinforce our economic independence.
However, since the adoption of the 2023 strategy, the need for the EU to act with greater
boldness, speed and unity has become even stronger. This Communication outlines a more
strategic and assertive use of the Union’s tools – complementing their original policy
objectives - to support Europe’s economic security, which concerns the Union’s ability to
ensure security, alongside other objectives, through a strong, dynamic and resilient economy
by anticipating, deterring and responding to potential or actual threats, linked to the EU’s
economic relationships with the wider world. The EU can do this, in particular, by ensuring it
stays ahead in terms of critical technologies, industries and services. It reflects a paradigm
shift, moving from a reactive posture towards a more proactive and systematic deployment of
our toolbox. Moreover, in certain cases, the EU, its Member States and industry will
increasingly need to be ready to accept economic costs for the benefit of reduced
vulnerabilities and enhanced overall security.
This call to action includes improving information gathering, monitoring and analysis, as
well as the capacity to anticipate emerging threats; deterring third countries from
1 JOIN(2023) 20 final.
2
weaponising the Union’s dependencies; reducing our exposure to third countries that may
weaponise such dependencies; and preventing efforts to undermine our derisking actions.
Importantly, this call to action also recognises the need to play to the EU’s strengths in terms
of, among others, the unparalleled weight of the EU’s single market, our technological and
industrial capabilities as well as access to EU funding and programmes. This includes
identifying, the EU’s economic opportunities as well as those areas where others are
dependent on the EU. Therefore, this communication makes the case for an integrated,
whole-of-government and business approach, improved governance as well as even
closer cooperation with like-minded partners and, where appropriate, joint action. It is
complementary to the comprehensive EU Preparedness Union Strategy. The EU’s economic
security is underpinned by that of its Member States. It is also intrinsically linked with its
broader relations with the world and therefore the Common Foreign and Security Policy,
which will be used more systematically to support the stated objectives.
On this basis, anchored in a risk-based analysis, this Communication focuses on six high-risk
areas outlined in Section 3, applies the tools at our disposal and outlines how they can be
further improved.
2. A proactive approach to economic security
The EU has a wide range of tools that contribute to its economic security. It must now deploy
them more strategically, efficiently and proactively to strengthen its economic security.
While most of these tools were not originally developed with economic security in mind, they
are nevertheless highly relevant to advance the Union’s economic security objectives.
A non-exhaustive list of key tools is set out in Figure 1, and their coordinated application
further articulated in section 3.
3
Figure 1: List of tools which support economic security, non-exhaustive
To advance the EU’s economic security, the Commission will deploy these tools, in
coordination with Member States, as follows:
• Trade and competition tools will be used to gradually reduce the EU’s exposure to
risks and to prevent the EU’s derisking objectives from being undermined. This includes
expanding diversification opportunities and thus our broader security under EU trade
agreements, making strategic use of customs toolbox and addressing distortions caused
by foreign subsidies, both within the Single Market and through subsidies or dumped
imports.
• Resilience and cybersecurity tools will focus on preparing for and managing
emergency situations, as well as on reducing exposure to external threats, such as
cyberthreats.
• Security and public order tools will be used to reduce the EU’s excessive exposure to
risks to, inter alia, ensure the normal functioning of society, while supporting actions
aimed at developing its position in critical technologies and industries, as well as
preventing its derisking objectives from being undermined.
• Anti-coercion and restrictive measures will aim at deterrence and dealing with
situations where third countries attempt to coerce the EU as well as shielding the EU’s
businesses from extraterritorial measures imposed by third countries and, where
relevant, triggering a change in behaviour of the country concerned.
• Funding and restrictions through EU tools like the NDICI (Global Gateway), Horizon
Europe, NextGenerationEU, InvestEU, Digital Europe Programme, Connecting Europe
Facility, Instruments for Pre-Accession Assistance (IPAs), Growth Plans for the Western
Trade and competition
- Anti-subsidy measures
- Anti-dumping measures
- Safeguards
- Foreign Subsidies Regulation
- Other competition tools
- Customs procedures and controls
- Trade agreements
- Standards based trade
Resilience / cyber- security
- Internal Market Emergency and Resilience Act
- Regulation on common rules for exports
- Stockpiling strategy
- Resilience of Critical Entities Directive
- Cyber Resilience Act
- NIS2 Directive
- 5G toolbox
- Cyber Security Act (revision)
- Cyber Solidarity Act
- Public Procurement Directive
Security and public order
- FDI Screening Regulation
- Regulation on Dual Use Export Controls
- Recommendation on outbound investment monitoring
- Council Recommendation on Research Security
Anti-coercion and restrictive measures
- Anti-Coercion Instrument
- Sanctions / restrictive measures
- Blocking Statute Regulation
Funding and restrictions
- Global Gateway
- EU funding restrictions in Horizon Europe, Digital Europe Programme, Connecting Europe Facility
- Economic security restrictions (post- 2027 MFF)
- High-risk supplier restrictions (post- 2027 MFF)
- Competitiveness Coordination Tool
- Article 136 of the Financial Regulation
Selected sectoral initiatives
- ResourceEU
- CHIPS Act 2.0
- Quantum Strategy
- Industrial Accelerator Act
- Data Union Strategy
- CRM Act / CRM Centre
- EU startup scaleup strategy
- European Innovation Act
- EU Port Strategy
- Drone Strategy 2.0
4
Balkans and Moldova, as well as the Ukraine Facility, EU4Health and the future
European Competitiveness Fund should strengthen the EU’s economic security or, as a
minimum, not weaken it, in line with the programmes’ rules.
• Sectoral initiatives – will be used to build up the EU’s own capacity and strategic
capabilities in the high-risk areas identified in the risk assessment process.
Close cooperation and coordination with countries that assign similar importance to economic
security and a rules-based global order, is more important than ever. The EU will work to
strengthen international cooperation on economic security issues, particularly with trusted
partners, including through focused economic security dialogues conducted both
bilaterally and in plurilateral settings. Such cooperation will support joint action on shared
economic security interests or concerns. It will also deepen the collective understanding of
risks, help anticipate threats, enable the design of mitigation measures that minimise negative
externalities, contribute to building and maintaining reliable and resilient supply chains in
key strategic sectors, and help to avoid negative impacts on our like-minded international
partners.
The Commission will seek cooperation
with third countries, bilaterally, through
the G7, and in frameworks such as the
Comprehensive and Progressive Trans-
Pacific Partnership and other relevant
fora. It will work with partners on the
development and deployment of
economic security standards for resilient
supply chains. Closer cooperation may
include coordinated deployment of
tools and coalition building with
partners who share similar economic
security objectives or face similar
challenges.
The relevance of, and impact on, the
EU’s neighbourhood and enlargement
policy must also be adequately factored
in. Risks and opportunities for the EU’s
economic security will be integrated in the Commission’s implementation of policies and
programmes with these regions. Candidate countries are on a path to become future EU
Member States; their alignment on economic security policy as well as gradual integration
into the Single Market, is essential to ensure their successful accession, while enhancing the
EU’s ability to address both existing and new risks. It is therefore important that candidate
countries reflect the EU’s economic security approach and, where appropriate, gradually align
with EU legislation of relevance to economic security objectives.
3. Advancing Europe’s economic security: high-risk areas
Deploying economic security standards
Building on work in the G7 on standards-based
trade, the Commission will encourage the
development and use of economic security
standards. They will be:
→ focused on action to diversify critical supply
chains by creating the conditions for new
suppliers to enter the market or limiting access
of dominant suppliers;
→ guided by the principles of transparency,
interoperability and compliance with
international rules;
→ targeted and tailor-made, factoring in the
specific risks, economic impacts and business
realities of each supply chain.
This work will focus as a matter of priority on
critical raw materials and semiconductor supply
chains, while exploring further collaboration in
other areas.
5
Non-cumulative indicators of a high-risk
dependency:
- 60% or more of EU supply is controlled
by a single third country or operators;
- input/service has systemic value for the
EU’s economy due to their role in multiple
sectors, e.g. critical raw materials,
semiconductors;
- input/service is critical to the EU’s
defence industry/strategic capacities or
specific critical technology supply chains,
such as clean energy technologies;
- the third country has already weaponised
economic dependencies or threated to do
so, e.g. through export restrictions;
- there is already non-market overcapacity
or it is being created.
The 2023 Strategy launched risk assessments covering supply chain resilience and energy
security, critical infrastructure, weaponisation of economic dependencies, and technology
security and technology leakage. Four critical technologies – AI, quantum technologies,
semiconductors, and biotechnology - have already been assessed. Building on this work, the
Commission has identified six high-risk areas where it will concentrate its efforts in
immediate to short term, in close cooperation with Member States, industry and trusted
partners. At the same time, the Commission will continue to monitor developments and,
where needed, assess and act on newly emerging high-risk areas.
Overview of six high-risk areas
3.1. Strengthening supply chain resilience and counteracting high-risk dependencies in critical
goods and services
The risk. Modern economies are deeply
interconnected and rely on a wide range of
inputs, intermediate goods and essential services
from partners globally. In some cases, supply is
highly concentrated – often in countries that do
not share the same strategic interests and that
have the capability and willingness to increase
and weaponise such dependencies. These risks
to the EU’s supply chains are particularly visible
in our reliance on certain critical raw,
processed and advanced materials, clean tech
components, and mainstream
semiconductors, as well as in financial
services, pharmaceuticals, aeronautics,
digital and space technologies. They are also
Strengthening supply chain resilience and
counteracting strategic dependencies in goods
and services
Attracting value-added inbound investment
that reinforces the EU's economic security
Supporting a vibrant defence and space
industrial base, and other high-risk
industrial sectors
Developing and maintaining leadership
across critical technologies
Preventing access to sensitive information and data that could undermine the EU’s economic security
Preventing and mitigating disruptions to EU critical infrastructure
affecting the EU economy
6
visible in the agri-food sector, where the Vision for Agriculture and Food2 sets out the need
to reduce strategic dependencies, notably where the EU relies on a handful of partners for
imports of feed and feed additives as well as fertilisers.
High-risk dependencies can: (i) be weaponised for coercion purposes (e.g. critical raw
materials, mainstream semiconductors, advanced materials, energy products, threats of
disabling certain services); (ii) create
systemic economic vulnerability or
systemic risk to public order and public
health protection in crises (e.g. personal
protective equipment, critical medicines
supply, food supplies); (iii) create the risk of
large-scale, cross-sector disruption (e.g. by
penetrating telecom networks, reliance on a
single cloud provider, kill switches of digital
services); (iv) affect the EU´s
competitiveness, slowing down the green
and digital transitions if supply is disrupted
(e.g. batteries, permanent magnets, clean
tech products and components, advanced
materials); (v) affect Member States’s
autonomy to develop and operate military
capabilities; or (vi) threaten EU’s food
sovereignty.
Objective. The Commission and Member States will seek to minimise the potential for
short-term disruption while putting in motion measures to progressively reduce current
high-risk dependencies in the single market and counter efforts to create new ones. It
will use its tools to monitor the supply chain, create a framework to support supply
diversification and prevent the undermining of EU action by addressing distortions of
competition in the single market. Actions in the context of advancing towards the Circular
Economy will also play an important role.
The Commission will take the necessary action to ensure its alternative supply chains are not
being undermined by dumping and price manipulation.
The Commission will assist Member States in deploying fully and effectively existing tools,
notably the resilience criteria that will have to be applied as of January 2026 by Member
States in public procurement, auctions and public support schemes under the Net Zero
Industry Act.
The Commission will also take measures to both develop the EU’s internal capacity and
capability and to diversify supply through cooperation with partners, including by
building on its extensive network of trade agreements and other forms of bilateral and
2 COM/2024/75 of 19 February 2025.
Application example: mainstream
semiconductors
Risk: structural reliance on a single third
country supplier for the manufacturing of
essential low margin chips puts several
European industries at risk. Such
semiconductors form a critical part of multiple
supply chains.
Use of tools: the Commission will work with
trusted partners to diversify sources of supply
and will seek to encourage the ramping up of
production within the EU. The upcoming
revision of the Chips Act will set out effective
mitigation measures. The cyber security of
imported mainstream semiconductors used in
security-related applications should be further
assessed under the Cyber Resilience Act.
7
plurilateral forms of cooperation. This will include considering the production of certain
critical products in our candidate countries and our partner countries more broadly, including
with regions, such as the Middle East and North Africa. This will reinforce the resilience of
the EU’s diversified supply chains and open further opportunities for EU businesses. The
Commission will continue to identify and continuously monitor supply chain vulnerabilities
and high-risk dependencies through its risk assessment process and engagement with
Member States and industry. .
3.2. Attracting value-added inbound investment that reinforces the EU’s economic security
The risk. Inbound investments boost EU resilience and competitiveness by creating jobs,
developing industrial capabilities, tapping into financing and scale, supporting innovation and
technology transfer. However, certain forms of inbound investments may pose risks. The risks
include: (i) risks to security and public order, including access to sensitive data (e.g. geo-
localisation, biometric data, trade secrets), access to critical infrastructure, access to dual-use
and other critical technologies; and (ii) economic resilience risks, such as deeper
dependencies or a single point of failure in critical supply chains controlled by high-risk
entities or third countries which undermine our economic security interests (e.g. batteries,
CRM, software and components), which render the EU vulnerable to economic disruptions or
weaponisation; and (iii) low
competitiveness challenges, such as
lack of technological transfer, limited
added value creation (e.g. assembly
lines only), hiring workers from the
investing country and thereby
impacting, among others, the local
labour market.
Objective. The Commission’s focus
will be on ensuring that the EU remains
open and attractive to foreign
investments. It will seek to balance this
openness, where necessary for the EU’s
economic security, against the need to
avoid deepening dependencies or
creating new ones. Moreover, it is
crucial to preserve the ability of EU
companies to innovate, including
through foreign acquisition of key
intellectual property from emerging
champions, and ensuring security of supply and continuity of service. The Commission will
use its tools and initiatives to set out and implement targeted measures such as inbound
investment conditioning that encourage technology transfer for entities in countries that
purposefully undermine our economic security.
Example: battery electric vehicles (BEVs)
Risk. The dominant position of certain suppliers of
BEVs and strict controls on the technologies needed for
BEV production risk undermining the key role of the
automotive sector in the EU economy, while benefiting
from the EU market. There are also inherent
cybersecurity risks associated with connected vehicles.
Use of tools: The Commission is exploring ways in
which value-added investments can be encouraged,
including through the use of trade and competition
policy initiatives. It will continue monitoring trade
flows and deploy its risk mitigating toolbox to de-risk
connectivity elements, support investment in the next
generation of BEV technologies to ensure Europe
remains resilient and competitive and where necessary
limit exposure to high-risk entities in relevant
connected components of BEVs. The Commission will
also incentivise the sharing of technology and related
know-how that can strengthen the EU’s economic
security objectives.
8
3.3. Supporting a vibrant defence and space industrial base and other high-risk industrial
sectors
The risk. Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine, rising geopolitical tensions and policy-
driven action to weaponise trade dependencies highlight the importance of investing in a
vibrant domestic industrial base, notably in the defence and space sectors as well as strategic
dual-use sectors, such as transport (e.g. aviation, aeronautics, shipbuilding and ports), that
fuels the EU’s economy and supports its strategic autonomy. Risks in this area include: (i)
insufficient (internal) investment; (ii) low production volumes combined with insufficient
procurement of domestic technology for institutional infrastructure; (iii) third-country non-
market policies and practices that lead to distortions in global and regional markets; (iv)
unjustified or disproportionate export controls from third-countries imposed on European
products and technologies (extraterritoriality of third-country export regimes); (v) loss of
ownership and control due to foreign acquisitions, including in certain cases through portfolio
acquisitions; (vi) rigid regulatory framework and fragmented capital markets that neither
facilitate flow of funds nor promote the start-up and scale-up of high-risk / high-reward
technologies with dual-use capabilities.
Certain components in critical sectors
such as defence are sourced from high-
risk entities, which could prevent the
access to and use of defence
equipment, dual use technologies and
military mobility assets if a situation
of geopolitical tension arises. Moreover,
it is crucial that the EU maintains a
highly skilled workforce and does not
fall behind the innovation curve in the
technologies underpinning strategic
sectors. Effectively mitigating these
risks by swiftly mobilising targeted and
effective tools is essential for defence
and military capabilities in the EU.
Objective. The Commission will use its
tools to maintain and develop strategic
manufacturing capacity and capabilities
in the EU, notably by: (i) promoting
and, where relevant, derisking public
and private investment; (ii) supporting
demand (incentives) also through
aggregation or joint purchasing; (iii)
preventing the relocation of strategic capabilities and sectors; (iv) phasing out potentially
hostile actors from defence and other critical supply chains including limiting the
procurement of restricted critical defence and space technologies from outside the EU; (v)
mitigating threats posed by foreign direct investments into companies supplying critical
Application example: Key components for drones
and counter drones systems
Risk: Dependence on third-countries suppliers for
key components of drones, batteries and counter
drones systems; extremely short innovation cycle to
keep drone solution operationally effective, based
on real battlefield experience (counted in months
sometimes in weeks).
Use of tools: the Commission will use its tools
under the European defence industrial programmes
to secure EU-made production capacity and the
shortening of innovation cycles for drone
technologies based on real operational experience.
It will continue to strengthen cooperation and
information exchange on a voluntary basis between
relevant bodies (e.g. national procurement agencies,
international procurement organisations - OCCAR,
EDA, NATO) and within European defence
industrial programmes instruments/actions. In order
to ensure supply chain resilience, it will establish
targeted mapping of supply chains for specific
products and equipment, including dual-use items,
and support production through co-investment.
9
products or technologies, (vi) support the development of critical technologies,
components and materials in the EU following long term objectives as well as their
domestic procurement for institutional infrastructures; (vii) ensuring that EU start-ups and
businesses have the conditions needed to scale up, for example, through adequate financing
and via a temporary favourable tariff treatment for certain inputs as well as a favourable
capital markets ecosystem.
The priority will be to support the defence and space industrial base. While the immediate
focus will be on the specific high-risk situations identified in the risk assessment process, the
Commission will closely monitor from an economic security perspective all key industries
such as clean tech, energy and energy-intensive and circular industries, agri-food, digital and
electronics, aviation (incl. aeronautics), shipbuilding, automotive and health.
3.4. Developing and maintaining leadership across critical technologies
The risk. Certain third countries and businesses have demonstrated their interest in acquiring
control of nascent or advanced EU technology and know-how. In some instances, such actions
have been aimed at compromising the
Union’s ability to compete in the
technology. They are pursuing this aim
by, for instance, acquisitions, R&D
cooperation, reverse engineering, or
industrial espionage. It is also done by
artificially taking market share away
from more innovative companies, which
in turn results in less revenue for them to
invest in cutting-edge R&D. In the long
term, the EU’s economic performance,
security and geopolitical standing will
depend on maintaining and developing
our technological capabilities. Therefore,
preserving EU capabilities across these
technologies, by enhancing dedicated
EU funding tools and addressing
technology security and leakage, is of
strategic importance. At the same time, a
close attention must be paid to the
increasingly fragmentated
implementation and enforcement of
dual-use export controls.
Objective. The Commission will use its
tools to support a positive framework environment to for the development of critical
technologies in the EU and prevent action that undermines the EU’s efforts by addressing
distortions. It will monitor market developments and provide further support for research and
innovation in the EU by start-ups and scale-ups, established businesses, research and
Application example: quantum
Risk: Foreign state-backed or high-risk entities seek
access to EU quantum computing, communication,
and sensing know-how and infrastructures via
investments, acquisitions or R&D partnerships,
accelerating sensitive military/intelligence uses
abroad and eroding EU technological sovereignty.
Use of tools: the Commission will continue to map
key EU quantum actors/infrastructures and track
foreign investments, partnerships and IP flows to
feed FDI screening, export control and research-
security risk assessments. It will use its tools to
investigate investments that pose risks and to work
with Member States to coordinate rapid responses
to attempted hostile takeovers or leakage cases. In
order to support economic security objectives, it
will prioritise EU/like-minded funding and
suppliers for critical quantum components and
services, and limit reliance on high-risk
quantum/cloud providers in sensitive sectors. It will
further seek to ensure that entities under undue
foreign influence cannot access sensitive quantum
projects.
10
innovation organisations and academia. It will focus on ensuring the industrial deployment
and valorisation of RDI achievements in the single market’s industrial base. The 28th regime,
providing businesses with a single, harmonised set of EU-wide rules for company formation,
governance, mobility and access to finance, will strengthen the EU’s economic resilience by
enabling more secure cross-border operations and more robust, diversified supply chains.
The Commission will advance research and innovation security and take the flanking
measures needed to mitigate the risk of leakage of technology or know-how, for example
through predatory acquisitions, R&D cooperation and investment in strategic and emerging
EU markets in sensitive destinations or sectors while continuing to promote trusted
international research and innovation partnerships that are crucial for the Union’s economic
security objectives. It will explore how to ensure that businesses and research and innovation
organisations in the EU can scale up and avoid acquisitions/ownership transfers exclusively
driven by insufficient financing opportunities from trusted sources. At the same time, the
Commission will seek to prevent access by high-risk entities to Union supported actions in the
critical technology sphere, which can potentially be weaponised against the EU.
3.5. Prevent access to sensitive information and data that could undermine the EU’s economic
security
The risk. Third countries gain access to
sensitive information/data of the EU or its
Member States, either as a result of industrial
espionage, their supply of hardware or software
used in certain products (e.g. connected
vehicles, 5G/other telecommunication systems,
electricity grid infrastructure, DNA sequencing
platforms) or due to their ownership and control
of certain businesses possessing sensitive
information/data (e.g. port, airport and traffic
operators, financial networks, AI models, data
portals, telecom, personal data or sensitive
market information). There are clear
implications on security and public order,
further compounded by potential economic
impacts, for example linked to the
fragmentation of supply chains. In the energy
sector, for example, this risk extends to the
acquisition by non-EU investors of EU
companies that hold advanced technologies for
monitoring and processing operational data
from critical energy infrastructure.
Objective. Lower and where possible eliminate
the risk of access by high-risk entities and
related entities to sensitive information/data of
Example: detection equipment at EU
borders (ports, airports, land borders etc.)
Risk: lack of common practice across the
EU, dependency on a single or limited
number of suppliers, unauthorised access
(including through authorized channels, e.g.
maintenance) that impacts the performance
of the detection equipment and the integrity
and/or confidentiality of related sensitive
information, vulnerability to malware that
could compromise or distort the related
information/systems/networks through the
equipment
Use of tools: based on the cybersecurity risk
assessment under the NIS2 Directive, the
Commission will seek to mitigate identified
risks through the identification of high-risk
suppliers, use cybersecurity certification
schemes, strengthening cybersecurity
standards and embedding security
requirements in procurement calls for
tenders. The Commission will assess the
potential role of foreign subsidies in giving
competitive advantage to certain suppliers.
11
the EU or its Member States and thereby limit the potential negative impacts on the EU
economy and security. Attention will also be given to the risk potentially posed by foreign
workers in strategic sectors and foreign students at higher education, including in Science,
Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) in line with relevant procedures.
3.6. Prevent and mitigate disruptions to EU critical infrastructure affecting the EU economy
The risk. The EU’s critical infrastructure - including critical transport, space systems, energy
and communications infrastructure, in particular those that are identified as strategic to
military mobility - being disrupted by foreign actors, which could lead to cascade effects on
the European economy. The focus will be on ensuring the stability of services provided.
Disruptions could occur through physical-, cyber- or hybrid-attacks, including the sabotage of
entire facilities or their parts/subcomponents. They could also be linked to ICT supply chains,
which underly critical components or services to critical infrastructures. There is also a risk of
pre-positioning of high-risk third countries and operators in the EU’s critical infrastructure
with a view to gaining the capacity to disrupt them (when and if needed). In addition, there is
a reputational and credibility risk if certain infrastructure is threatened or actually impacted.
Finally, there is a risk linked to third countries taking a leading role in setting international
standards, which may affect critical infrastructure.
Objective. In line with relevant EU
strategies for defence, internal
security and preparedness, to
enforce existing rules to lower the
risk of data leakage/espionage and
of physical and cyber-disruption,
notably by: (i) limiting
ownership/control/operation by
high-risk entities of European
critical infrastructure; (ii) increasing
physical protection measures; (iii)
limiting cyber-vulnerabilities; and
(iv) limiting dependencies on
single suppliers or high-risk
suppliers, as well as concealed
vulnerabilities, backdoors or
potential systemic ICT supply
disruptions, particularly in cases of
technological lock-in or supplier
dependency; (v) reserving critical
EU manufacturing capacities with
the potential to scale up in times of
global supply chain disruptions or health crises; (vi) the Commission will prevent access by
high-risk entities to Union supported actions, including those actions supported by public
financial institutions and instruments; ; (vii) support the development of trusted suppliers of
Example: solar inverters
Risk: increasing reliance on a single supplier; cyber
risks - manipulating electricity production parameters,
preventing electricity production, access to operational
data, infiltrating supply chain actors.
Use of tools: the Commission will continue to assess
cyber risks through a coordinated assessment under the
framework of the NIS2 Directive (to be concluded in
2026). On this basis it will deploy mitigation measures
focused both on strengthening preparedness (e.g.
Electricity Risk Preparedness Regulation, Critical
Entities Directive) and to address identified
vulnerabilities through for example: certification and
standardisation under the Cyber Resilience Act and non-
price criteria under the Net-Zero Industry Act. The
Commission will monitor market developments and
seek to prevent or mitigate high-risk investments. The
Commission will continue to assess the role of foreign
subsidies that may distort the level playing field in solar
energy markets, notably through subsidised imports.
12
critical subcomponents in the EU and in trusted third countries so that there are viable
alternatives; (viii) supporting flagship initiatives in defence and related domains (Eastern
Flank Watch, European Drone Defence Initiative).
4. Actions to strengthen EU economic security
Access to quality information and its thorough analysis is the starting point for an effective
and well-informed EU economic security policy and decision-making. The risk assessment
system launched by the 2023 Strategy will remain at the heart of these efforts. The existing
assessments will be updated, deepened, and complemented by new ones across critical
technologies and supply chains.
The Commission will further develop its economic security information gathering capability.
It will speed up the mapping of strategic dependencies along value chains that lead to
vulnerabilities for the Union’s economy and strengthen monitoring and anticipation of
third country actions to create new dependencies or sustain existing ones.
Furthermore, the success of the EU’s economic security policy will depend on greater
coordination both at EU level and with Member States. This includes building a common
understanding of the economic security threats, identifying concrete risks, and developing
mitigation measures. This should be underpinned by better information flows, a full
understanding of the costs and benefits of EU action, and a willingness to act jointly when
needed, putting the EU in a position of strength. The Commission has taken the necessary
internal organisational steps. But this also requires a new way of working with Member
States, and increasingly among and within the Member States themselves, especially with
regards to policy areas that are increasingly strategic but have been traditionally decentralised
such as research and innovation.
The EU will continue to engage closely with industry, by ensuring secure information
exchange and a more structured engagement. Industry is in the front line of the EU’s
economic security. Businesses must become more resilient and diversify their critical supply
chains, notably by eliminating a complete reliance on a single high-risk supplier. It is also
crucial to integrate in their business models the costs that come with greater diversification
recognising the benefit that resilience to geopolitical risks brings. This must be a two-way
process and a responsibility that must be shared between the public and private sector,
allowing policymakers to improve the EU’s threat assessment and business intelligence
capacity and equip it for action, while helping industry to pursue company-level mitigation
measures.
The Commission, supported by the High Representative, will:
→ Improve its information gathering and analysis capacity by advancing risk assessments
more rapidly on specific critical supply chains, critical infrastructure and critical
technologies, and launching regular calls for evidence to obtain industry and stakeholder
input into supply chain vulnerabilities and exposure to external pressure.
→ Promote greater coordination and information exchange through its Economic
Security Network with Member States. The Commission will use the Network to
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promote scenario development, align understanding of threats, risks and scope for
mitigation, facilitate information exchange and support implementation, particularly in the
use of the tools that are in the remit of Member State responsibilities. In this context, the
Commission will ensure that there are suitable information systems available to support
the rapid and secure exchange of classified information among and with Member
States on economic security issues – including on risk assessments, critical and high-risk
entities, and transactions of potential concern. This will complement the work of the EU
stockpiling network, which focuses on ensuring the supply of essential goods in crisis
situations.
→ Create an Economic Security Information Hub where with the support of EEAS,
INTCEN/SIAC3, the EU’s Delegation network and Member States, as well as existing
Single Market economic monitoring tools like the Supply Chain Alert Notification
(SCAN); it will map and consolidate available information under existing public and
private mechanisms and coordinate the collection of additional information relevant for
economic security. This will include a market monitoring mechanism to collect
information on developments in high-risk areas, including rapid information on trade
flows in sectors subject to diversification to ensure that EU action isn’t undermined. It will
also consolidate information on high-risk entities to support the process of assessing
eligibility for EU funding and participation in an EU investment or procurement process.
In addition, the European Customs Authority and the EU Customs Data Hub would allow
to efficiently support and enforce the implementation of the related EU economic
security initiatives facilitating also the exchange of relevant information.
→ Intensify structured engagement by EU Delegations, liaising with Member State
Missions, other EU bodies and the EU business community present in third countries; to
ensure effective contributions to risk assessments, monitoring and mitigation with regard
to economic security, including by facilitating business-to-business and business-to-
government exchanges.
→ Assess by Q3 2026 the extent to which the Internal Market Emergency and Resilience Act
(IMERA) allows to gather company level supply chain information from businesses in
high-risk sectors. In light of this analysis, the Commission will assess the necessity for
further measures.
→ Recommend that Member States nominate senior-level National Economic Security
Advisers responsible for cross-government coordination of economic security risk
assessment and mitigation. The Commission will promote greater policy coordination and
joint actions by regularly bringing these advisers together. It also invites the Council of
the EU to consider regularly convening the relevant Council formations for political-level
3 The EU Intelligence and Situation Centre (EU INTCEN) at the European External Action Service is part of the EU’s Single Intelligence Analysis Capacity (SIAC), and is the civilian intelligence centre of the EU, providing in- depth analysis for decision makers in all EU Institutions.
14
discussions.
→ Create a trusted adviser group drawn from EU business representatives to, among
others, advise on specific risks and potential responses as well as discuss de-risking
strategies. The Commission will regularly invite industry representatives to participate in
sector-specific discussions of the Economic Security Network and, where relevant, debrief
European Commissioners.
→ Set up a Trade Resilience Information Portal to provide EU businesses with up-to-date
information, as part of the Access to Markets (A2M) portal, on export restrictions and
other restrictive measures imposed by third countries, as well as on the potential risks
linked to the need to build EU resilience.
→ Expand the Observatory on Critical Technologies to identify, monitor and analyse the
defence and space industry and related supply chains, and to cover emerging technologies
and to support implementation at EU and national level of the resulting EU technology
roadmaps.
→ Use the future Centre of Expertise on Research Security to promote research security
and increase the research community’s resilience, including by developing a due diligence
platform to support universities in choosing their international partners.
→ Explore ways to align and integrate candidate countries with our economic security
approach, especially in those areas where their economic security vulnerabilities can pose
a security risk to the EU.
Building on a strengthened analysis and governance, the EU can better pursue its economic
security objectives by (i) clarifying and improving the deployment of existing tools and (ii)
developing new tools where needed.
First, the Commission will adapt how it uses some of its tools to make them more effective
in managing economic security risks and will seek to improve coordination between these
tools.
The Commission will take the following steps to improve the use of tools:
→ EU funding:
• Going forward, the Commission will incentivise in its funding activities projects
that support the EU’s economic security.
• In particular it should mobilise a sufficient level of funding for reducing
dependencies of critical technologies, components and materials especially in
strategic sectors as space and defence, including to fully implement the
Observatory for Critical Technologies’ (OCT) technology roadmaps.
• The Commission, Member States and implementing partners should seek to
prevent access by high-risk entities to sensitive Union supported actions. Article
136 of the Financial Regulation provides a horizontal legal base to protect the
EU’s security and public order when the Commission and implementing partners
15
implement the EU budget. This allows preventing high-risk entities from
benefitting from EU funds as well as restricting access to EU funds in the strategic
sectors and areas of critical technology and infrastructure by entities coming from
third countries which undermine the EU economic security interests. For the
avoidance of doubt implementing partners should refrain from supporting projects
that contradict the above, including in operations at own risk. To that end and to
ensure better policy alignment between EU programmes and economic security
aims guidance will be made available in Q1 2026, thereby supporting the
development of a more cohesive and effective approach. Furthermore, the
Commission will encourage the Member States, the EIB group and other
IFIs/national promotional banks and institutions that are implementing
national or EU budgets to prioritise support to EU businesses that reduce foreign
dependencies in critical sectors, especially for specific projects, critical
technologies and critical infrastructure identified as high-risk. Similarly, third-
country high-risk suppliers should be prevented from accessing EU and national
funding where those third countries, based on specific criteria, are identified as
undermining EU economic security interests.
→ FDI screening:
• Develop guidelines drawing on the experience of implementing the current FDI
Screening Regulation to ensure national screening authorities approach screening
consistently, including in strategic sectors. The guidelines would also set out how
to take account of the potential cumulative risk of multiple investments. This will
be complemented by guidance on the interplay between any EU level requirements
and the application of national screening mechanisms in the financial sector.
→ Export Controls of Dual-Use items:
• Carry out an overall evaluation of the Dual-Use Export Control Regulation. As
part of this evaluation, the Commission will assess whether the Regulation
achieves its objectives in the context of the new geopolitical and geoeconomic
realities, including the impacts of increasing recourse to unilateral controls that
may also impact the Single Market. It will continue exploring with Member States
how to efficiently adopt European controls in emerging technology areas in this
new context. During the evaluation process, the Commission will ensure active
outreach to stakeholders from the Member States, industry, research institutes and
academia.
→ Trade defence instruments:
• When a case of relevance for the EU’s economic security is initiated, the EU’s
economic security will be reflected in the conduct of the investigation and in
the design of possible measures.
→ Internal Market, Customs and Competition tools:
• Make full use of the Foreign Subsidies Regulation to maintain fair competition in
16
areas where foreign subsidies lead to distortions that pose economic security risks.
• Encourage Member States to make full use of existing State aid possibilities, such
as the Clean Industrial State Aid Framework, the Regional Aid Guidelines, the
Research Development and Innovation framework, the General Block Exemption
Regulation and important projects of common European interest as instruments to
build greater resilience.
• Review the use of strategic customs instruments (tariff suspensions,
autonomous quotas) for key inputs with the view to support the competitiveness
of Union enterprises.
Second, the Commission will develop new measures to advance the EU’s economic security.
The Commission will:
→ Explore putting in place on a pilot basis an EU-level start-up monitoring mechanism
aimed at identifying startups in critical technology areas that are vulnerable to the
risk of hostile foreign acquisitions, redirecting them to EU investment alternatives and
other forms of support (e.g., advisory, capacity-building, matchmaking with investors).
The mechanism would work in lockstep with existing initiatives, such as the EU Startup
and Scaleup Strategy.
→ Work with supervisory authorities to monitor portfolio investments, (that fall outside the
scope of the FDI coordination mechanism), in areas identified as high-risk for economic
security purposes.
→ Include an economic security component for key strategic sectors in the upcoming
Competitiveness Coordination Tool.
→ Strengthen the EU’s industrial base and supply chains resilience through the Industrial
Accelerator Act.
→ As outlined in ResourceEU, further develop secondary markets for critical raw materials,
including through the Circular Economy Act, to make it easier to finance strategic CRM
projects in areas identified as high-risk for economic security purposes.
→ Assess by Q3 2026 ways of strengthening the protection of the industry from unfair
trade policies and negative global market developments, such as overcapacity. Here,
the Commission will evaluate the effectiveness and adequacy of the existing tools and
consider the necessity of possible new measures.
→ Review the Blocking Statute to simplify its application and reduce compliance costs for
EU persons and businesses and create a credible deterrent against the extra-territorial
application of third-country sanctions. This will strengthen European economic security
by better protecting EU operators from conflicting third-country measures and by ensuring
a more predictable, effective and assertive framework.
→ Explore the modalities of encouraging companies in specific high-risk sectors to ensure
that supplies are sourced from at least two different suppliers and limit exposure to a
17
single dominant supplier.
→ Explore the scope to provide financial support to companies subject to FDI screening
decisions in situations where their financial viability may be at risk absent an investment,
without prejudice to State aid rules.
→ As part of the review of the Public Procurement Directives, propose European
preference criteria in specific strategic sectors in which our public procurement
stimulates demand for European industrial leadership, increases our resilience and
mitigates risks for security.
→ Incentivise companies to reduce dependencies in emerging technology areas as part of
the upcoming Chips Act 2.0, Quantum Act, Cloud and AI Development Act and
Commission Strategy on Open Source.
→ Use the upcoming review of the Cybersecurity Act to enact at EU level restrictions on
access of high-risk suppliers to critical infrastructure.
5. Conclusion
The EU remains firmly committed to open and rules-based trade, investment relations and
international cooperation. It will therefore continue to support and benefit from open trade
and investment with partners around the world. At the same time, in today’s geopolitical
environment, safeguarding the EU’s economic security is imperative. Addressing the risks that
come with openness is key to preserving it, as well as our broader security and the
competitiveness of our industry.
The EU already has many tools at its disposal to pursue this goal. These instruments must
now be used strategically and, where needed, further improved, both to credibly deter threats
to the EU’s economic security before they arise and respond effectively when they do.
Achieving this requires the Commission, European Parliament and Member States to work in
lockstep and to cooperate closely with industry, towards an efficient and informed decision-
making.
The EU is determined to make a more proactive, strategic and coordinated use of all available
tools to build a strong, secure and resilient economy for the long term, and to operate
effectively in the new geopolitical and geoeconomic conditions shaping global trade.
Resolutsiooni liik: Riigikantselei resolutsioon Viide: Välisministeerium / / ; Riigikantselei / / 2-5/25-02365
Resolutsiooni teema: ELi majandusjulgeoleku tugevdamise teatis
Adressaat: Välisministeerium Ülesanne: Tulenevalt Riigikogu kodu- ja töökorra seaduse § 152` lg 1 p 2 ning Vabariigi Valitsuse reglemendi § 3 lg 4 palun valmistada ette Vabariigi Valitsuse seisukoha ja otsuse eelnõu järgneva algatuse kohta, kaasates seejuures olulisi huvigruppe ja osapooli: - JOINT COMMUNICATION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL Strengthening EU economic security, JOIN(2025)977.
EISi toimiku nr: 25-0591 Tähtaeg: 13.02.2026
Adressaat: Haridus- ja Teadusministeerium, Justiits- ja Digiministeerium, Kaitseministeerium, Kliimaministeerium, Majandus- ja Kommunikatsiooniministeerium, Majandus- ja Kommunikatsiooniministeerium, Regionaal- ja Põllumajandusministeerium, Riigikantselei, Siseministeerium, Sotsiaalministeerium Ülesanne: Palun esitada oma sisend Välisministeeriumile seisukohtade kujundamiseks antud eelnõu kohta (eelnõude infosüsteemi (EIS) kaudu). Tähtaeg: 26.01.2026
Lisainfo: Eelnõu on kavas arutada valitsuse 26.02.2026 istungil ja Vabariigi Valitsuse reglemendi § 6 lg 6 kohaselt sellele eelneval nädalal (18.02.2026) EL koordinatsioonikogus. Esialgsed materjalid EL koordinatsioonikoguks palume esitada hiljemalt 13.02.2026.
Kinnitaja: Nele Grünberg, Euroopa Liidu asjade direktori asetäitja Kinnitamise kuupäev: 19.12.2025 Resolutsiooni koostaja: Sandra Metste [email protected],
.
18.12.2025
ELi majandusjulgeoleku tugevdamise teatis JOIN(2025) 977 final
Otsuse ettepanek koordinatsioonikogule
Kujundada seisukoht
Kaasvastutaja sisendi tähtpäev 26.01.2026
KOKi esitamise tähtpäev 18.02.2026
VV esitamise tähtpäev 26.02.2026
Peavastutaja: Välisministeerium
Kaasvastutajad: Majandus- ja Kommunikatsiooniministeerium, Justiits- ja Digiministeerium, Kliimaministeerium, Siseministeerium, Haridus- ja Teadusministeerium, Regionaal- ja Põllumajandusministeerium, Kaitseministeerium, Sotsiaalministeerium, Riigikantselei (julgeoleku ja riigikaitse koordinatsioonibüroo)
Seisukoha valitsusse toomise alus ja põhjendus
Algatuse vastuvõtmisega kaasneks oluline majanduslik või sotsiaalne mõju (RKKTS § 152¹ lg 1 p 2);
Seisukoha võtmist peab oluliseks peaminister või minister (VVS § 20¹ lg 2);
Sisukokkuvõte
Ühisteatis tugineb 2023. aasta majandusjulgeoleku strateegiale, milles seati üldisteks majandusjulgeoleku eesmärkideks edendada tööstuse tugevaid külgi, kaitsta Euroopa huve ja teha koostööd sarnaselt meelestatud riikidega. Riskid on viimastel aastatel paraku muutunud veelgi intensiivsemaks ning tänapäeva geopoliitilise maastiku üheks tunnuseks on saanud majanduslie vahendite üha sagedasem ja sihipärasem kasutamine strateegiliste eesmärkide saavutmamiseks. Seetõttu esitatakse ühisteatises jätkuvalt sihipärased, proportsionaalsed ja keskendatud konkreetsetele suure riskiga olukordadel. Julgeoleku ja vastupanuvõime tagamisega tuleb nii liidul, liikmesriikidel kui ettevõtjatel arvestada samas ka kaasnevate majanduslike kuludega.
Tuginedes koos liikmesriikidega tehtavale riskihindamisele, keskendub komisjon praegu kuuele prioriteetsele suure riskiga valdkonnale:
1) väiksem strateegiline sõltuvus kaupadest ja teenustest;
2) turvaliste investeeringute ligimeelitamine ELi;
2
3) elujõulise Euroopa kaitse- ja kosmosetööstuse ning muude elutähtsate tööstussektorite toetamine;
4) ELi juhtpositsiooni kindlustamine elutähtsate tehnoloogiate valdkonnas;
5) tundliku teabe ja andmete kaitse;
6) Euroopa elutähtsa taristu kaitsmine.
Kas EL algatus reguleerib karistusi või haldustrahve? Ei
Kas lahenduse rakendamine vajab IT-arendusi? Ei
Eesmärgid
1. Vähendada strateegilisi sõltuvusi
2. Tagada ELi juhtroll kriitilistes tehnoloogiates
3. Meelitada ELi turvalisi investeeringuid
4. Kaitsta tundlikke andmeid ja informatsiooni
5. Edendada tugevat Euroopa kaitse- ja kosmosetööstust
6. Kaitsta Euroopa kriitilist taristut
Mõju ja sihtrühm
Haridus
Sihtrühm: Teadusasutused
Mõju sihtrühmale: Soovitakse pakkuda rohkem tuge kriitiliste tehnoloogiatega seotud teadustööle ja innovatsioonile
Sihtrühm: Kõrgkoolid
Mõju sihtrühmale: Tahetakse pöörata senisest suuremat tähelepanu teadus- ja innovatsioonijulgeolekule, sh välistudengitele ja nendega seonduvatele riskidele eriti tundlike valdkondade puhul
Majandus
Ettevõtlus
Sihtrühm: Ettevõtjad erinevates valdkondades, sh teatud kriitilistes sektorites nt kaitsetööstus; investorid
Mõju sihtrühmale: Soovitakse tõhustada olemasolevate vahendite kasutamist majandusjulgeoleku tagamiseks, suurendada riskide kaardistust; ettevõtjatele võib selle tulemusel tekkida uusi kohustusi ja vajadust tarneahelaid ümber kujundada. Samuti
3
puudutab algatus välisinvesteeringuid – nii turvaliste investeeringute ELi meelitamist kui ka välisinvesteeringute paremat jälgimist. Oluline fookus on ka iduettevõtete rahastamist puudutaval, eriti kriitilistes sektorites.
Infotehnoloogia ja infoühiskond
Küberkeskkond ja -hügieen
Sihtrühm: Kriitilise taristu pakkujad
Mõju sihtrühmale: Soovitakse ELi küberturvalisuse määruse ülevaatuse raames viia sisse piirangud kõrge riskiga teenusepakkujate ligipääsule kriitilisele taristule
Riigikaitse ja välissuhted
Suhted välisriikide ja organisatsioonidega
Mõju sihtrühmale: Algatus näeb ette nii süvendatud koostööd samameelsete riikidega kui ka riskide maandamist ja kaubandusega seotud meetmete aktiivsemat kasutamist, millel võib olla ka mõju laiemalt ELi suhetele teatud riikidega
Siseturvalisus
Sisejulgeolek
Mõju sihtrühmale: Algatus peaks aitama maandada riske sisejulgeolekule
Kaasamine
Kaasata kõik asjassepuutuvad huvirühmad, sh ettevõtjate liidud (sh Kaubandus- Tööstuskoda, Eesti Tööandjate Keskliit, Eesti Kaitse- ja Kosmosetööstuse Liit), teadusasutused jne.
Eelnõude infosüsteemis (EIS) on antud täitmiseks ülesanne. Eelnõu toimik: 3.1.1/25-0591 - JOIN(2025) 977 JOINT COMMUNICATION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL Strengthening EU economic security Arvamuse andmine eelnõu kohta Välisministeeriumile vastavalt Riigikantselei 19.12.2025 resolutsioonile. Osapooled: Haridus- ja Teadusministeerium; Justiits- ja Digiministeerium; Riigikantselei; Kaitseministeerium; Siseministeerium; Regionaal- ja Põllumajandusministeerium; Sotsiaalministeerium Tähtaeg: 26.01.2026 23:59 Link eelnõu toimiku vaatele: https://eelnoud.valitsus.ee/main/mount/docList/aeff6e5b-89e9-4eeb-8c0e-e9fad3f141ae Link menetlusetapile: https://eelnoud.valitsus.ee/main/mount/docList/aeff6e5b-89e9-4eeb-8c0e-e9fad3f141ae?activity=2 Eelnõude infosüsteem (EIS) https://eelnoud.valitsus.ee/main