EUROMONTANA calls on mountain actors to uptake the cohesion policy funds to meet the challenges of our regions
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The Montana174 project publishes a set of educational factsheets explaining how mountain communities can make use of the 2021-2027 Cohesion Policy to meet their specific needs.
21st April 2022
Mountain areas cover nearly 29% of the European Union and 13% of its population. This means that about one citizen every sixth lives in mountains. These regions provide several ecosystem services to all European’s population such as quality food and fresh water as well as they are they are biodiversity hotspot and carbon sinks. Today, mountains face many of the challenges of our century: from the alarming impacts of climate change to brain drain, ageing and outward migration.
However, mountains have also showed that they can address these challenges and become places of resilience and innovation. Its inhabitants have built on their creativity to cultivate innovation, accelerate climate mitigation and adaptation, support tourism, foster youth and employment, and enhance mobility. The European Union contributed to make this real through the funds of the Cohesion Policy. Since 2009, the European Union decided to pay “a particular attention to mountain regions” via the Article 174 of EU Treaty on Functioning of the European Union.
The European-funded Montana174 project has published a set of educational factsheets illustrating the resources that the 2021-2027 Cohesion Policy will channel in mountain areas via the Operational Programmes as well as Interreg programmes.
From these factsheets, it emerges that some resources of the 2021-2027 Cohesion Policy will finance the transition of mountain tourism towards an all-year tourism, to support investments to bridge the quality gap between educational facilities in rural and urban areas, to preserve mountain biodiversity, among many others. Some Operational Programmes, such as the one of the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes Region in France foresees specific “interregional sections” dedicated to the Massif Central. In other cases, cross-border, transnational and interregional Interreg programmes can be used to finance new projects in Europe’s mountains. Overall, a large part of the budget can be used to finance green and digital transition in mountains and mountain residents.
Euromontana believes the 2021-2027 Cohesion Policy is a huge opportunity for mountain regions and calls on mountain stakeholders to take advantage of these funds to meet the challenges of our regions. To this end, Montana174 will organise a series of local workshops to prepare mountain stakeholders to uptake these funds between April and July 2022.
Background: Montana174 is a European-funded communication campaign which runs from October 2021 until September 2022 and aims to raise awareness on the impacts Cohesion Policy in mountains. It is coordinated by Euromontana, the European association of mountain areas, and involves a total of 5 other partners across Europe.
Contact: Carla Lostrangio carla.lostrangio@euromontana.org