European Union Open Data Portal - Custom query: Themes filters: Government and public sectortag:data.europa.eu,2012:/feeds/custom.atom?vocab_theme=http%3A%2F%2Fpublications.europa.eu%2Fresource%2Fauthority%2Fdata-theme%2FGOVE2024-03-18T15:33:20ZEuropean Publications Officehttps://data.europa.eu/euodpRecently created or updated datasets on European Union Open Data Portal. Custom query: Themes filters: Government and public sectorConsolidated list of persons, groups and entities subject to EU financial sanctionsEuropean Commission- DG Financial Stability, Financial Services and Capital Markets Uniontag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/consolidated-list-of-persons-groups-and-entities-subject-to-eu-financial-sanctionsIn its policy, the European Union intervenes when necessary to prevent conflict or in response to emerging or actual crises. In certain cases, EU intervention can take the form of restrictive measures or 'sanctions'. The application of financial sanctions and more precisely the freezing of assets constitutes an obligation for both the public and private sector. In this regard, a particular responsibility falls on credit and financial institutions, since they are involved in the bulk of financial transfers.
In order to facilitate the application of financial sanctions, the European Banking Federation, the European Savings Banks Group, the European Association of Co-operative Banks, the European Association of Public Banks ("the EU Credit Sector Federations") and the European Commission recognised the need for an EU consolidated list of persons, groups and entities subject to financial sanctions and more precisely the freezing of assets. The Credit Sector Federations set up an initial database containing the consolidated list. The European Commission subsequently took over this database and is responsible for its maintenance and for keeping the consolidated list of sanctions up-to-date. In this respect, the European Commission launched a new Web page in June 2017, where the consolidated lists of financial sanctions consisting in freezing of assets are published in different formats (see link below).
Disclaimer: While every effort is made to ensure that the database and the consolidated list correctly reproduce all relevant data of the officially adopted texts published in the Official Journal of the European Union, neither the Commission nor the EU Credit Sector Federations accepts any liability for possible omissions of relevant data or mistakes, and nor for any use the database or of the consolidated list. Only the information published in the Official Journal of the EU is deemed authentic. 2024-02-28T16:39:35Z2016-05-31T12:12:13ZTenders Electronic Daily (TED) - public procurement notices from the EU and beyondPublications Office of the European Uniontag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/ted-1TED (Tenders Electronic Daily) is the 'Supplement to the Official Journal of the EU ("OJ S"), dedicated to European public procurement.
You will find information on public procurement contracts, according to the EU rules on public procurements, of notices published in EU Member States, European Economic Area (EEA) and beyond.
You can browse, search and sort procurement notices by country, region, business sector and more.
TED (Tender Electronic daily) website currently offers bulk downloads of XML packages, for registered users, in the page "Download XML Packages" (https://ted.europa.eu/en/simap/xml-bulk-download) .
The XML packages are divided into:
• daily editions of the Supplement of the Official Journal;
• monthly collections, starting from January 2011.
A subset of Tenders Electronic Daily (TED) data covering most important fields from contract notices and contract award notices in CSV format is available at https://data.europa.eu/euodp/en/data/dataset/ted-csv”).
2024-02-28T11:17:15Z2015-07-27T16:42:35ZCORDIS - EU research projects under Horizon 2020 (2014-2020)cordis@publications.europa.eutag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/cordisH2020projectsThis dataset contains information about projects and their results funded by the European Union under the Horizon 2020 framework programme for research and innovation from 2014 to 2020.
The dataset is composed of six (6) different sub-set (in different formats):
- H2020 projects – which includes participating organisations, legal basis information, topic information, project URLs and classification with the European Science Vocabulary (EuroSciVoc)
- H2020 project IPRs (Intellectual Property Rights)
- H2020 project deliverables (meta-data and links to deliverables included since May 2019)
- H2020 project publications (meta-data and links to publications included since May 2019)
- H2020 report summaries (periodic or final publishable summaries included since September 2018)
- Principal Investigators in Horizon 2020 ERC projects
Reference data (programmes, topics, topic keywords funding schemes (types of action), organisation types and countries) can be found in this dataset: https://data.europa.eu/euodp/en/data/dataset/cordisref-data
EuroSciVoc is available here: https://data.europa.eu/data/datasets/euroscivoc-the-european-science-vocabulary
CORDIS datasets are produced monthly. Therefore, inconsistencies may occur between what is presented on the CORDIS live website and the datasets.
2024-03-18T15:31:39Z2015-07-29T10:12:18ZTenders Electronic Daily (TED) (csv subset) – public procurement noticesDirectorate-General (DG) for Internal Market, Industry, Entrepreneurship and SMEsGROW-G4@ec.europa.eutag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/ted-csvA subset of Tenders Electronic Daily (TED) data covering public procurement for the European Union and beyond from 2006-01-01 to 2023-12-31 in comma separated value (CSV) format. This data includes the most important fields from the contract notice and contract award notice standard forms, such as who bought what from whom, for how much, and which procedure and award criteria were used.
Generally, the data consists of tenders above the procurement thresholds. However, publishing below threshold tenders in TED is considered good practice, and thus a non-negligible number of below threshold tenders is present as well.
Please see the documentation below for important information on the data and its usage, including a version history of the export.
The European Commission is interested in the results of research on public procurement coming from the re-use of this data. Thus, we will be grateful to receive links to any papers, reports, or applications at GROW-G4@ec.europa.eu.
TED with broader coverage is also available in XML format at https://data.europa.eu/euodp/en/data/dataset/ted-1.
eForms
On 14 November 2022, the format of notices published in TED changed: the Publications Office displays both the current standard forms and eForms and makes them available for reuse. If you reuse TED data, your systems must be ready to process both types of notices. To help adapt your systems, you can find resources, models and schemas in the eForms Software Development Kit on GitHub (https://github.com/OP-TED/eForms-SDK/https://github.com/OP-TED/eForms-SDK/). Documentation is available on the Ted Developers Documentation site (https://docs.ted.europa.eu/), including eForms FAQs (https://docs.ted.europa.eu/home/FAQ/eforms.html).2024-02-28T11:09:50Z2015-07-27T14:27:36ZEuroVocPublications Office of the European Unionop-info-helpdesk@publications.europa.eutag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/eurovoc EuroVoc is a multilingual, multidisciplinary thesaurus covering the activities of the EU. It contains terms in 24 EU languages (Bulgarian, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Estonian, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Irish, Italian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Maltese, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Slovak, Slovenian, Spanish and Swedish), plus in three languages of countries which are candidate for EU accession: Albanian, Macedonian and Serbian. EuroVoc is managed by the Publications Office of the European Union, which moved forward to ontology-based thesaurus management and semantic web technologies conformant to W3C recommendations as well as latest trends in thesaurus standards. The thesaurus is disseminated on the EU Vocabularies website. EuroVoc users include the European Union institutions, the Publications Office of the EU, national and regional parliaments in Europe, plus national governments and private users around the world. 2024-02-16T10:03:08Z2014-05-26T06:46:36ZTransparency RegisterTRANSPARENCY REGISTERtag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/transparency-registerThe Transparency Register is a public database listing interest representatives (organisations, formal or informal groups, associations or networks, self-employed individuals) that carry out activities to influence the EU law or policy-making or the decision-making processes of the EU institutions. It is designed to show what interests are being represented at EU level, by whom and on whose behalf – and the resources devoted to such interest representation activities (including financial support and sponsorship).
Following the entry into force of a new Interinstitutional Agreement on the Transparency Register on 01/07/2021, the registration form has changed. For a transition period lasting until 19 March 2022 included, registrants are entitled to amend their existing registration to satisfy the new requirements in order to remain on the register. For technical reasons and until the end of that transition period, the daily datasets on existing and new registrants shall be published following the structure of the previous registration form.
The datasets published below allow you to download in XML or Excel format a list of registered interest representatives (updated daily), a list of persons accredited for access to the European Parliament (updated daily) and a list of registered interest representatives since January 2015 (published twice a year).
*Due to overloading, the download of a file may fail. Please try again later.*
2024-02-08T18:21:55Z2024-02-08T18:21:55ZCORDIS - EU research projects under FP7 (2007-2013)cordis@publications.europa.eutag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/cordisfp7projectsThis dataset contains projects funded by the European Union under the seventh framework programme for Research and technological development (FP7) from 2007 to 2013.
The file 'FP7 Projects' contains the public grant information for each project, including the following information: Record Control Number (RCN), project ID (grant agreement number), project acronym, project status, funding programme, topic, project title, project start date, project end date, project objective, project total cost, EC max contribution (commitment), call ID, funding scheme (type of action), coordinator, coordinator country, participants (ordered in a semi-colon separated list), participant countries (ordered in a semi-colon separated list).
In the individual XML files of the projects, you'll find, in addition, their classification with the newly introduced EuroSciVoc taxonomy (fields of science) as well as links to related editorial articles such as news or Results in Brief.
The participating organisations are listed in the file 'FP7 Organisations', which includes: project Record Control Number (RCN), project ID, project acronym, organisation role, organisation ID, organisation name, organisation short name, organisation type, participation ended (true/false), EC contribution, organisation country.
The periodic or final report summaries (or publishable summaries) from the projects have been included since October 2018.
Reference data (countries, funding schemes/types of action, subjects (SIC codes)) can be found in this dataset: https://data.europa.eu/euodp/en/data/dataset/cordisref-data
EURIO Knowledge graph data from CORDIS in the form of named graphs can be found in this dataset: https://data.europa.eu/data/datasets/named-graphs-from-eurio-knowledge-graph?locale=en2024-03-18T15:33:20Z2015-07-29T18:25:42ZCORDIS reference datatag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/cordisref-dataDataset containing the different reference lists to which CORDIS data links2024-03-18T15:24:10Z2015-07-29T19:48:28ZCOVID-19 lists of disinfectant active substances and products tag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/biocidal-products-lists-of-disinfectant-active-substances-and-productsTo alleviate the difficulties companies and Member State authorities may be facing during the global coronavirus pandemic, ECHA is supporting EU/EEA countries and companies to ensure that disinfectants can quickly enter the market.
To ease the work of authorities and biocides companies looking for information on disinfectants, European Chemical Agency has published lists of active substances approved or being reviewed for their use in disinfectant products as well as a list of products that are authorised under the Biocidal Products Regulation (BPR).
This is not a comprehensive representation of all the disinfectant products available on the EU/EEA market as many of the products are currently authorised under various national regimes, while awaiting approval of the active substance (e.g. ethanol) at EU level. To give a better indication of the market situation for disinfectant products, ECHA has collected information from two Member States (Spain and the Netherlands) and from Switzerland, which each have a national authorisation system in place for disinfectant products.
See more at: https://echa.europa.eu/covid-19.
2020-08-07T10:32:03Z2020-04-02T01:07:23ZSafety Gate (the EU rapid alert system – non-food) DG JUST - Justice and Consumers Directorate-General, B - 1049 Brussels, Belgium just-rapex@ec.europa.eutag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/rapex-rapid-alert-system-non-foodEuropean legislation ensures a consistent, high level of protection for the health and safety of consumers. Products placed on the market in the internal market are subject to general safety requirements. The European Union (EU) has introduced a rapid alert system (Safety Gate/RAPEX) for non-food products which pose a risk to consumers or professional users. Thanks to this system, information is rapidly exchanged and published on measures taken to prevent or restrict the marketing or use of non-food, non-pharmaceutical or non-medical products or devices. Summaries of the alerts are published immediately after having been validated by the Commission on the Safety Gate website. Furthermore, a weekly report is also made available on the website every Friday. The system is available in 25 languages: the EU official languages, Norwegian and Icelandic. It is also possible to make a personalised subscription to the weekly reports in one of the 25 available languages. Subscribers receive a personalised mail according to their subscription.
Disclaimer: United Kingdom (data until 31/12/2020).2021-06-22T12:15:37Z2016-02-01T13:36:31ZStandard Eurobarometer 84DG COMMEurobarometer@ec.europa.eutag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/S2098_84_3_STD84_ENGStandard Eurobarometer 84 survey (EB84), was carried out between 7 and 17 november 2015 in 34 countries or territories: the 28 European Union (EU) Member States, five candidate countries (the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Turkey, Montenegro, Serbia and Albania) and the Turkish Cypriot Community in the part of the country that is not controlled by the government of the Republic of Cyprus. The survey includes topics such as the European political situation and the economy (perception of the current situation and expectations for the future). It analyses how Europeans perceive their political institutions, both national governments and parliaments, the EU and its institutions as well as their main concerns. It also examines people's attitudes on European citizenship and on issues linked to the priorities of the European Commission, notably investment, trade and migration.
#####The results by volumes are distributed as follows:
* Volume A: Countries
* Volume AA: Groups of countries
* Volume A' (AP): Trends
* Volume AA' (AAP): Trends of groups of countries
* Volume B: EU/socio-demographics
* Volume B' (BP) : Trends of EU/ socio-demographics
* Volume C: Country/socio-demographics
----
Researchers may also contact GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences: [https://www.gesis.org/eurobarometer](https://www.gesis.org/eurobarometer)2021-05-04T17:53:11Z2016-03-16T08:21:39ZSpecial Eurobarometer 386: Europeans and their LanguagesDG COMMEurobarometer@ec.europa.eutag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/S1049_77_1_EBS386The survey provides information about the citizens' attitudes towards foreign languages and multilingualism within the European Union.It looks at the ways in which Europeans learn and use foreign languages, exploring their motivations and potential barriers to learning.It also gauges their opinion on the role of interpretation and translation in relation to European institutions and various areas across society.
The Commission’s first ever Communication on Multilingualism “A New Framework Strategy for Multilingualism”, adopted in November 2005 and now superseded by the 2008 Strategy, set out three basic strands to the EU’s policy in this area:
- underlining the major role that languages and multilingualism play in the European economy, and finding ways to develop this further
- encouraging all citizens to learn and speak more languages, in order to improve mutual understanding and communication
- ensuring that citizens have access to EU legislation, procedures and information in their own language
#####The results by volumes are distributed as follows:
* Volume A: Countries
* Volume AA: Groups of countries
* Volume A' (AP): Trends
* Volume AA' (AAP): Trends of groups of countries
* Volume B: EU/socio-demographics
* Volume B' (BP) : Trends of EU/ socio-demographics
* Volume C: Country/socio-demographics
----
Researchers may also contact GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences: [https://www.gesis.org/eurobarometer](https://www.gesis.org/eurobarometer)2021-05-04T18:01:00Z2015-07-29T08:29:32ZSafety Directives: Operational Measures to Prevent the Spread of Coronavirus `SARS-CoV-2` Infectiontag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/list-of-airports-located-in-affected-areas-with-high-risk-of-transmission-of-the-covid-19-infectionThe European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) has issued safety directives to reduce the risk of spread of the novel coronavirus through flights to and from high risk areas.
Safety Directive SD-2020-03:
https://ad.easa.europa.eu/ad/SD-2020-03
Applicability: National Competent Authorities (NCAs) responsible for the certification and oversight of aircraft operators involved in commercial air transport of passengers in accordance with Commission Regulation (EU) 965/2012.
Safety Directive SD-2020-04:
https://ad.easa.europa.eu/ad/SD-2020-04
Applicability: Third Country Operators (TCOs) authorised by EASA pursuant to Commission Regulation (EU) No 452/2014 to perform commercial air transport of passengers into, within or out of the territory subject to the provisions of the Treaty on European Union,
Any updates related to COVID-19 will be communicated via:
• Website: https://www.easa.europa.eu/the-agency/coronavirus-covid-19
• RSS: https://www.easa.europa.eu/the-agency/coronavirus-covid-19/feed.xml
2020-07-09T12:33:52Z2020-04-02T13:01:04ZMembers of the European Parliament (MEPs)European Parliamenttag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/members-of-the-european-parliamentThe dataset contains information about each of the 705 Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) elected in 2019: the country they represent, the political group and the national political party.
In addition, you will also find information on:
- incoming and outgoing MEPs,
- MEPs' assistants,
- links to search pages where information can be visualised by several criteria
- full list of the MEPs in the 8th parliamentary term (2014-2019), and
- full list of the MEPs for all parliamentary terms from 1979 to 2014.
Further information on MEPs, including their CV, parliamentary activity, and contact details is available on the website of the European Parliament: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/meps/
2021-04-06T11:40:11Z2015-07-27T14:38:04ZThe EFSA Comprehensive European Food Consumption DatabaseEuropean Food Safety Authoritydata.collection@efsa.europa.eutag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/the-efsa-comprehensive-european-food-consumption-databaseThe Comprehensive Food Consumption Database is a source of information on food consumption across the European Union (EU). It contains detailed data for a number of EU countries. The database plays a key role in the evaluation of the risks related to possible hazards in food in the EU and allows estimates of consumers’ exposure to such hazards, a fundamental step in EFSA’s risk assessment work. The database was also relevant for other fields of EFSA’s work, such as the assessment of nutrient intakes of the EU population.
EFSA used its food classification system ‘FoodEx’ to categorise all foods and beverages included in the Comprehensive Database.
Summary statistics from the database enable quick screening for chronic and acute exposure to substances and organisms that may be found in the food chain. In the database, dietary surveys and food consumption data for each country are divided by category. These include: age, from infants to adults aged 75 years or older; food group (over 1,500) and type of consumption, covering both regular and high consumption thus allowing calculations to be tailored to each category of consumer.
The statistics on food consumption are reported in grams per day (g/day) and grams per day per kg of body weight (g/kg bw per day). The statistics for chronic food consumption are available for the total population (‘all subjects’) and for consumers of respective food categories. The statistics for acute consumption are available for all days and for the consuming days.
These food consumption statistics are stored and presented in the EFSA Data Warehouse.2020-01-20T16:56:05Z2016-03-01T07:51:51ZEuropean electricity market reportstag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/european-electricity-market-reportsThe European Commission publishes regular market analysis reports on European gas and electricity markets and energy prices and costs in Europe. The quarterly reports analyse the main factors behind price and volume evolutions on the market and they analyse gas and electricity market interactions between countries.
This dataset is related to: [European gas market reports](http://data.europa.eu/88u/dataset/european-gas-market-reports)
2022-11-18T10:21:56Z2016-12-16T13:40:14ZSpecial Eurobarometer 437: Discrimination in the EU in 2015DG COMMEurobarometer@ec.europa.eutag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/S2077_83_4_437_ENGAs the last Eurobarometer on this topic in 2012, the survey looks into attitudes and perceptions of Europeans towards discrimination based on different grounds (gender, ethnic origin, religion or beliefs, age, disability, sexual orientation and gender identity) and citizens' opinions on different policy measures to combat discrimination. For the first time the survey explores the social acceptance of specific groups belonging to ethnic and religious minorities. Also for the first the survey is looking into social acceptance and citizens' views on the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender persons.
#####The results by volumes are distributed as follows:
* Volume A: Countries
* Volume AA: Groups of countries
* Volume A' (AP): Trends
* Volume AA' (AAP): Trends of groups of countries
* Volume B: EU/socio-demographics
* Volume B' (BP) : Trends of EU/ socio-demographics
* Volume C: Country/socio-demographics
----
Researchers may also contact GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences: [https://www.gesis.org/eurobarometer](https://www.gesis.org/eurobarometer)2021-05-04T18:00:59Z2015-10-06T05:12:01ZGender Equality IndexEuropean Institute for Gender Equalityeige.sec@eige.europa.eutag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/gender-equality-indexThe Gender Equality Index is a tool to measure the progress of gender equality in the EU, developed by EIGE. It gives more visibility to areas that need improvement and ultimately supports policy makers to design more effective gender equality measures.
The Gender Equality Index has tracked the painfully slow progress of gender equality in the EU since 2010, mostly due to advances in decision-making. While equality is more pronounced in some Member States than in others, it is far from a reality for everyone in every area. Gender norms around care, gender segregation in education and the labour market, and gender inequalities in pay remain pertinent.
The Index allows Member States to easily monitor and compare gender equality progress across various groups of women and men in the EU over time and to understand where improvements are most needed. The 2022 Index has a thematic focus on care in the Covid-19 pandemic. It explores the division of informal childcare, long-term care and housework between women and men.
The Gender Equality Index is a composite indicator. With a total of six core domains (work, money, knowledge, time, power and health) and two satellite domains (violence against women and intersecting inequalities), it offers a synthetic and easy-to-interpret measure for gender equality, indicating how far (or close) the EU and its Member States are from achieving gender equality on a scale of 1 to 100.
Building on previous editions alongside EIGE’s approach to ensuring intersecting inequalities are captured, the Gender Equality Index 2022 continues to show the diverse realities that different groups of women and men face. It examines how elements such as disability, age, level of education, country of birth and family type can intersect with gender and create many different kinds of pathways in people's lives.
2023-02-01T13:48:02Z2015-07-27T15:05:48ZeCertis: EU Procurement CertificationDG GROW Business Unit G4 — Innovative and eprocurementGROW-ECERTIS@ec.europa.eutag:data.europa.eu,2012:/dataset/ecertiseCertis (https://ec.europa.eu/tools/ecertis) is the information system that helps you identify different certificates requested in procurement procedures across the EU. If you are a European company wishing to participate in a public procurement procedure, or if you are a public buyer that has to evaluate bids received from various Member States, eCertis can help you understand what evidence is requested or provided by the other party. Just enter the description of the document used for proving the fulfilment of the exclusion or selection criteria in a given procedure. The search function is supported in any of the EU languages.
Please note that eCertis is a reference tool and not a service of legal advice. It does not guarantee that the information resulting from a query will be recognised as valid by a contracting authority. It is just an information tool which helps you identify and recognise the certificates and attestations that are most commonly requested in the context of procurement procedures of different Member States. The IT system was developed by the European Commission however the information contained in the database is provided by the national authorities and updated on a regular basis.
The complete data about criteria, evidence and issuers can be extracted from the home page as an EXCEL export.2020-03-20T10:44:13Z2018-05-24T06:28:04Z