EU watchdog condemns Commission

By Laurence Peter
BBC News

**The EU’s institutional watchdog has castigated the European Commission in a dispute over access to three letters from the German carmaker Porsche AG.**The European Ombudsman said the Commission - the EU’s executive arm - had displayed an “unco-operative attitude” that risked damaging trust.

The Ombudsman, Nikiforos Diamandouros, has sent a report to the European Parliament, detailing his complaint.

The Commission says it has contacted Porsche again over the letters.

Porsche sent the letters to former Commission Vice-President Guenter Verheugen during an EU consultation in 2006 about proposals to reduce CO2 emissions from cars.

The Ombudsman says 15 months have elapsed since he called on the Commission to release the letters’ contents. The nature of the contents is not yet clear.

The request to see the letters had come originally from the environmental group Friends of the Earth Europe. The group went to the Ombudsman after the Commission had denied it access to the letters.

‘Extraordinary delay’

In his report, dated 24 February, the Ombudsman said the need to allow Porsche to exercise its legal rights “cannot justify the Commission’s extraordinary delay”. He accused the Commission of “maladministration”.

"The Ombudsman concludes with great regret that, by delaying for 15 months its reply to his draft recommendation and by failing to implement its undertaking to notify Porsche AG of its intention to disclose, the Commission infringed its obligation to co-operate with him sincerely and in good faith.

“The Ombudsman emphasises that the Commission’s attitude is detrimental not only to inter-institutional dialogue, but also to the public image of the EU,” the report said.

It calls on the European Parliament to help “ensure that the Commission will respect the duty of sincere co-operation with the Ombudsman in the future”.

The spokesman for the Commission’s administration, Michael Mann, says the Commission wrote to Porsche on 18 February, “telling them that we are going to partially release the contents of the three disputed letters”.

“They have 10 working days from receipt of the letter to accept or seek to block it in court. So we’re acting now,” he told the BBC.

The case could go to the European Court of Justice if Porsche insists the letters must not be released.

“It was the complaint by the Ombudsman that encouraged us to reopen the case with Porsche,” Mr Mann said.

Asked about the delay highlighted by the Ombudsman, he said “we have to balance the need for transparency with the need to consider the legitimate interests of the third party”. Parts of the letters were “commercially sensitive,” he said.

“If we were overcautious we’ll draw lessons for the next time such a thing happens,” he added.