Foreign affairs parliamentary committee chairs from Central and Eastern European (CEE) countries including Czechia, Ukraine, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania are amongst the signatories of an open letter calling for more criticism of Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic’s Kosovo policy.
The letter to the EU and the US, seen by German
Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia agreed on Thursday 3 August to decouple from Russia’s BRELL power grid by February 2025, in order to reach full energy independence from the Kremlin.
The three countries in 2018 agreed to integrate into the EU electricity system by the end of 2025, as their
The top 11 inflation rates in the EU were in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) countries in June 2023, according to new data figures published by Eurostat, the EU’s official statistics office.
All of the EU member states in CEE registered inflation over the EU average of 6.4%
An apparent attempted coup d’etat led by the head of a mercenary group in Russia over the weekend set off emergency responses across Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) on Sunday, 26 June.
Mercenary fighters of the Wagner private army, run by former Putin ally Yevgeny Prigozhin, pressed on across
Austria (26%) and Estonia (23%) had the EU’s highest proportions of organic land within their total utilised agricultural area (UAA) in 2020, according to recent data released by Eurostat.
In 2021, the area used for organic farming expanded to 15.9mn hectares (ha) – or just under 10% of the
Only 4.48 million EU citizens aged 15 to 29 found themselves unemployed last year, according to the latest data from the EU’s official statistics agency Eurostat. This constituted 6.3% of those in that age group, a historic low since 2009, it added.
The lowest rate in Central
Estonia had the highest employment rate in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) of 81.9% in 2022, according to the recently released data of the EU statistics agency Eurostat.
Just behind the Baltic country were Czechia, with 81.3%, and Hungary (80.2%). The middle grouping of the EU member
The number of pay TV subscribers in Eastern Europe will decline by 8mn from its peak of 81mn in 2018, to 73 million by 2028, according to a new report by Digital TV Research.
However, the figures for 2018 included 17mn analogue-cable subscribers, which will have dropped to zero by
NATO’s annual report for 2022 reveals that only 7 countries of the 30-country defence alliance met the military spending target of 2% of GDP.
A total of five of the seven countries that reached the target are from the Eastern side of Europe: Lithuania, Poland, Estonia, Latvia and Greece.
Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas’s Reform Party (ER) secured both the most votes and most seats ever in a national election in the 1.3mn Baltic country on Sunday.
Defence and Estonia’s inflation-related cost of living crisis were the main issues of the election campaign, which coincided with
Estonia is named the most prosperous country in Eastern Europe, and the 21st globally, in the newly-released 2023 Legatum Prosperity Index.
Legatum’s 16th annual survey praises the Baltic country’s “effective policy response” to Covid, which meant “Estonia’s pandemic-period contraction was one of the smallest in Europe”, and
Estonian voters go to the polls on Sunday 5 March, after a campaign that focussed on the country’s cost of living crisis and national security in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
On Wednesday, ahead of the vote to fill the 101-seat Parliament (Riigikogu), Estonian Prime Minister
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy urged the Western world to send more help when he opened the Munich Security Conference (MSC) from Kyiv on Friday. “We need speed,” Zelenskyy said.
The MSC is the primary global platform for the exchange of ideas on security policy, assembling hundreds of heads-of-state, ministers, influential
Leaders from the Baltic nations and Poland have called for the utilization of approximately EUR 300bn worth of assets from the Russian Central Bank currently frozen by EU member states, towards the reconstruction of Ukraine.
In a joint letter to to European Council President Charles Michel, European Commission President Ursula
Railway infrastructure managers from Czechia, Poland and the Baltics signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) in connection with building almost 2,800 miles of high-speed railway across Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) on Wednesday.
The MOU was signed in Warsaw at the Railway Direction Days conference, and builds on a