| Rank | Name | Country | Group | Speeches | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
|
Lukas SIEPER | Germany DE | Non-attached Members (NI) | 321 |
| 2 |
|
Juan Fernando LÓPEZ AGUILAR | Spain ES | Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats (S&D) | 280 |
| 3 |
|
Sebastian TYNKKYNEN | Finland FI | European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) | 247 |
| 4 |
|
João OLIVEIRA | Portugal PT | The Left in the European Parliament (GUE/NGL) | 195 |
| 5 |
|
Vytenis Povilas ANDRIUKAITIS | Lithuania LT | Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats (S&D) | 183 |
All Contributions (18)
Conservation and sustainable use of marine biological diversity of areas beyond national jurisdiction (A10-0205/2025 - Michal Wiezik) (vote)
Date:
13.11.2025 10:06
| Language: EN
Madam President, thank you, colleagues, for the support. According to Rule 60(4), I would like to request referral back to committee for interinstitutional negotiations. Thank you once again.
Conservation and sustainable use of marine biological diversity of areas beyond national jurisdiction (debate)
Date:
12.11.2025 20:13
| Language: EN
Madam President, thank you once again for the floor and for the discussion. I would really like to stress once again that the implementation of the BBNJ Agreement is essential for achieving the 2030 biodiversity target and the goals of the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework. It will accelerate the creation of marine protected areas and ensure that all scientists from every part of the world can share knowledge, technology and infrastructure. This is how we make global cooperation real. Our vote tomorrow is therefore another formality. It is a statement of leadership. It is our opportunity to show that Europe stands for ambition, science and solidarity in protecting the global commons. If we succeed, the benefits will extend far beyond the high seas – to coastal communities, to our climate, and to every citizen who depends on a stable and healthy planet. Let us make this a success story – one where cooperation replaces competition, where protection and sustainable use go hand in hand, and where Europe continues to lead by example. I want to thank all the colleagues who contributed to this constructive cooperation, and I wish Belgium every success in its bid to host the BBNJ Secretariat.
Conservation and sustainable use of marine biological diversity of areas beyond national jurisdiction (debate)
Date:
12.11.2025 19:49
| Language: EN
Madam President, Madam Commissioner, dear colleagues, when we speak of the ocean, we often forget how vast it truly is. Two thirds of it lies beyond any nation's borders. The high seas and the international seabed, once thought to be empty and lifeless, these waters are now known to be among the richest and most diverse ecosystems on Earth. They host spawning grounds for countless fish species, deep sea coral reefs, migratory routes for whales and sharks, and an astonishing variety of marine life, much of it still unknown to science. It is a world shaped by 4 billion years of evolution, holding genetic and biological treasures that could benefit humanity for generations to come. But this world is under pressure: climate change, pollution, acidification, overfishing and the intensity of maritime transport are altering even the most remote corners of the ocean. In some regions, plastic pollution is now more common than plankton. All of these problems remind us how deeply human activity has reached into areas once thought unreachable. The high sea risks becoming a classic tragedy of the commons: a shared resource used by all but protected by no one. That is why the agreement on biodiversity beyond national jurisdiction, the BBNJ agreement, is so important. When it enters into force, it will fundamentally change how we manage and protect the high seas. This agreement provides a coherent, science-based framework to assess human activities, to establish marine protected areas, to foster scientific cooperation, and to build capacity so that all nations can benefit from the ocean's legacy. In doing so, it will help deliver the marine conservation targets of the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework and make a tangible contribution to the 2030 biodiversity goals. The European Union has played, so far, a leading and ambitious role in negotiating this treaty. We ratified it on 28 May, and to this day, 75 parties have done so as well. Our friends in the United Kingdom are finalising their national legislation before ratifying – a different approach, but the same shared commitment. Within the EU, the Commission presented the directive in April, followed by our ratification in May. Now the European Parliament and the Council are advancing the legislative work. The parliamentary committees accept the tool of choice by the Commission and found a solid majority for the position. We however made an active move to offer more flexibility and recognition of the work of Member States, in due consideration of the competences of the Commission and the Member States. The European Union has much to offer. Our Member States are global leaders in ocean science, technology and exploration, but we also have much to gain by managing marine resources sustainably, by establishing effective area-based management tools, and by safeguarding the ecosystems that sustain life on our planet. Protecting the high seas is not only an environmental responsibility, it is a strategic and moral one. A healthy ocean stabilises our climate, supports global food security and preserves the carbon cycle that sustains life on Earth. Colleagues, the BBNJ agreement is multilateralism at its best: nations coming together to protect what belongs to no one, but benefits everyone. I therefore urge you to support this report and to ensure that the EU's voice remains strong, united and ambitious as we move towards the first meeting of the conference of the parties. Let this be the moment we show that cooperation, science and shared responsibility can truly turn the tide for the ocean.
Key objectives for the CITES COP20 meeting in Uzbekistan (debate)
Date:
22.10.2025 19:32
| Language: EN
Mr President, wildlife crime is multifaceted: it involves wildlife trafficking, document fraud, tax evasion and money laundering, and one can say that it is huge and everywhere. For instance, in 2023, over 1 million live eels were seized in the European Union: 1 million live eels that didn't reach European rivers, eels that never reproduced, eels missing in the ocean ecosystem, eels out of the legal trade, which normally would enrich European communities. That needs to stop. CITES is an important treaty. It covers roughly 40 000 species worldwide, yet countless others don't fall under this regulation. Therefore, we need a strong CITES and we need a strong enforcement chain to tackle illegal trade in wildlife. We need the European Union to be strong and successful at CoP20. Therefore, Renew Europe supports the final position text. We call for the review of CITES strategic vision to align with Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework and ask to strengthen legal frameworks against wildlife trafficking. If we need to stop wildlife crime, we simply need to act. The time is now!
Arbitrary detention of EU citizens Javier Marañón Montero and David Rodríguez Ballesta in Equatorial Guinea
Date:
08.10.2025 18:17
| Language: EN
Madam President, EU citizens Javier Marañón Montero and David Rodríguez Ballesta were arbitrarily detained in Malabo in January 2005, in a prosecution that appears politically motivated and aimed at shifting responsibility away from the members of the regime. They are being held in a prison infamous for torture and inhumane conditions, without any guarantee of due process and a fair trial. We in Renew Europe believe in a European Union built on the rule of law, due process, fair trial standards and humanitarian protections. At a time when these very principles are being challenged within and beyond our boundaries, we must act decisively to defend and strengthen them so that we never create space for criminal and dictatorial regimes to thrive. Through this resolution, this House reaffirms its united commitment to the rule of law, human rights and the right to a fair trial: principles on which the European Union is built.
Rule of law and EU funds management in Slovakia (debate)
Date:
10.09.2025 18:31
| Language: SK
Madam President, two examples of the use of EU funds in Slovakia: The National Institute of Cardiac and Vascular Diseases has equipped two operating rooms for €1.6 million from the recovery plan. This significantly reduced the duration of heart disease fibrillation surgery. We have a state-of-the-art workplace that saves dozens and hundreds of lives. On the other hand, for the same amount, people related to the ruling party Smer built an opulent castle in which they never accommodated anyone and in a few years became their private property. Do you feel the difference? It's essential. The first approach is beneficial, it moves Slovakia forward and helps people improve their lives in Slovakia. The latter is a misappropriation of European finances. It deprives us of the opportunity to move forward. Slovakia should be a successful country. The European Union is helping us in this, and no government, no government has the right to deprive us of this opportunity. That's why today's debate is, that's why there was a control mission, that's why we stand here, we scream, and we draw attention to this problem. We do so in the best interests of Slovakia. We are fighting and we will fight for the money to reach the people and regions in Slovakia so that Slovakia can move forward.
Post-2027 Common Agricultural Policy (debate)
Date:
10.07.2025 08:18
| Language: SK
Madam President, I welcome your proposals. I like supporting young, small, medium-sized farmers, supporting rural development and making farming more attractive. Setting fair prices and rules with third countries. But I'm afraid that might not be enough. Please live in the real world. In such a world in 2027, the climate crisis will be worse than it is today. We will face more droughts, more floods, more shortages of commodities and inputs, and we need to prepare consistently for this. But we don't do it, we don't do it enough, quite the contrary. We are releasing green measures to protect soil, biodiversity, preserving the status quo, not promoting new sustainable practices. We make the necessary measures voluntary and thus weaken them. It is harmful and dangerous. And one more thing. Benevolent rules and trust have often been used to steal subsidies. Unfortunately, Slovakia has had a very bad experience with this. I am therefore concerned that further easing of the rules will not turn into a new wave of looting and inefficient overeating of European public resources. Please live in the real world.
European Ocean Pact (debate)
Date:
17.06.2025 09:18
| Language: EN
Madam President, I would like to speak about deep-sea mining. In deep-sea mining, a precautionary pause is a conscious and responsible position over an issue which potentially involves impacts on a million-year timescale. We don't know, at this point, what we could lose by greedily looking at resources located in areas which belong to no one (and hence are common mankind heritage), what consequences our decisions to extract those resources might have, or what processes we could disrupt. For this ecosystem it took millions of years to evolve, yet they can be destroyed in a blink of an eye. For certain forms of deep-sea mining, the negative effect would be forever. I therefore applaud the Commission calling for a precautionary pause until sufficient scientific evidence is available to confirm that deep-sea mining poses no substantive threat to marine ecosystems. From this place, as a Member of the European Parliament and as a scientist, I also call on the Council to confirm the approach of a precautionary pause.
The European Water Resilience Strategy (debate)
Date:
06.05.2025 16:46
| Language: SK
Madam President, there is no life without water. Yes, but without enough water there is no industry, there is no agriculture. There is only hunger and thirst. So the water scarcity problem is really serious and requires a quick and effective solution. The problem is complicated. It's not just about the quantity of water, it's about its quality. And just as complex must be the solutions, where we have to make the most of both technical measures and natural ones. That was my approach in the Committee on Agriculture as rapporteur, and I must say that we have reached a solution or a text which, yes, indicates what needs to be done. Unfortunately, I must also say critically that we are not too brave on some issues. It's like we're switching off old ways, but they don't work anymore in a new world, a changing world. I therefore really wish the Commission to draw up a good water strategy on the basis of this document, too. She took over the good things we propose, and she was more courageous where we lacked courage. It's about water, and it's about life.
Discharge 2023 (joint debate)
Date:
06.05.2025 15:06
| Language: SK
Madam President, tomorrow's vote will conclude the discharge process for the financial year 2023. I would therefore like to thank the European Court of Auditors once again for its role in supporting our work. The principles of transparency, accountability, parliamentary oversight, sound financial management and the rule of law must, and I believe they are, shared in this House. For budgetary control, we proceed on the basis of the relevant financial regulations and established financial rules. The principle of legality is an essential element and we all know that it is indeed a very clean, very technical and very targeted procedure. It is therefore worrying if this approach really involves political narratives that do not inherently belong to such platforms. These are, unfortunately, aimed at non-governmental organisations and, in particular, at green NGOs. As part of civil society, NGOs are an integral part of the European Union's decision-making and it remains crucial that civil society organisations can engage in an open, transparent and effective dialogue with the European Union institutions through European Union funding. This is enshrined in Article 11 of the Treaty on European Union through activities such as advocacy, taking of evidence or administrative submissions. This is nothing more than what we agreed in the treaties. It is therefore very worrying when attacks on NGOs come from such a large part of this House, not only from the far right, but literally from the centre, literally from the heart of this house. And if I use that parallel with the heart, it's dangerous because it puts the whole system at risk. So far, it may be a murmur, but if it is not treated, it will break into a heart attack. And this threatens to collapse the whole system, which is European democracy. Let's try to avoid such unnecessary steps.
Discharge 2023 (joint debate)
Date:
06.05.2025 13:14
| Language: EN
Mr President, ladies and gentlemen, dear colleagues, let me first also thank to the European Court of Auditors for their thorough audits, as well as for the clarifications and open cooperation with joint undertakings. Joint undertakings as public-private partnerships play a crucial role in ground-breaking European research, development and demonstration programmes in sustainable transport, revolutionary fusion energy, health, circular bio-based industries, key electronic components, supercomputing and network systems. On 13 November 2024, the Court of Auditors published its annual report on joint undertakings in the form of a consolidated report, similarly to the previous year. I would like to highlight that there are some recurrent problematic areas that could be still brought about in the next financial years, particularly the need for improvement in programme implementations, human resources, and the management and control systems. Likewise, we also emphasise the continuation of aftermath of the important events that enrolled over the last years and that eventually had an impact on the performance of the joint undertakings. Particularly, these were the Russia's war of aggression against Ukraine and its impact on some specific supply chains. These were also the COVID-19 pandemic impacts and the high level of inflation caused by the two aforementioned events, which, again, had an impact on the supplies and delivery time for the joint undertakings. Nevertheless, we endorse the Court's recommendations and conclude that the risks to the reliability of annual accounts was deemed to be low for all joint undertakings and medium for the smart networks and services joint undertaking and the global joint undertaking, due to the complexities brought about by the transfer of budget appropriations. We also conclude that the risk to the legality and regularity of revenue was deemed to be low for all joint undertakings. As a member of the CONT Committee, I would also like to express my personal dissatisfaction over the recent politicising of the discharge procedure. Let me remind my colleagues that it is ensuring compliance with the relevant legal and regulatory framework requirements that is the main aim of the procedure. There should be no space for political targeting. Nevertheless, we saw allegations which were dismissed by the Commission and timely clarified by the recent ECA special report. Such unfounded claims have no place in this exact procedure. In Budgetary Control, we are proceeding on the basis of financial regulations and the established financial rules, the principle of legality being the core element. NGOs, as part of civil society, are an integral part of EU decision-making, and it remains fundamental that civil society organisations, through EU funding, can engage in an open, transparent and structured dialogue with EU institutions as enshrined in Article 11 of the Treaty, through activities such as advocacy, demonstrations and judicial actions. This is nothing more than we have agreed on, and I call on all of us to abide by it in this very House.
Outcome of the recent COP16 biodiversity negotiations in Rome (debate)
Date:
02.04.2025 17:14
| Language: SK
Mr President, it is important to discuss biodiversity protection, but it is more important to act. Commissioner, a few hours ago, the Slovak Government approved a proposal to shoot 350 bears. 350 bears, that is a third of the nation-wide population. This proposal came without proper discussion, without impact assessment and without understanding the consequences. But most importantly, it is a decision that has no legal framework and is a blatant, direct and deliberate violation of legislation, including European legislation. Commissioner, European Commission, I am calling on you from this place and please focus on what is happening in Slovakia at the moment and intervene before this ecocide is fully triggered. Strike and put an end to this madness, so please demonstrate with clear actions that the EU is in fact able to protect biodiversity and is committed to upholding the basic rules on which it is built. Thank you, now is the time.
US withdrawal from the Paris Climate Agreement, the World Health Organisation and the suspension of US development and humanitarian aid (debate)
Date:
12.02.2025 17:15
| Language: SK
Trump's current policy has many elements of far-right populism. I see a lot of evidence that it is unsystematic and disruptive. For all this, it is enough to mention the truly unelected and unaccountable Elon Musk, to whom Trump granted almost unlimited power over the state apparatus. This is a threat to the democratic system, which naturally encounters resistance and is doomed to failure. This creates an exceptional opportunity for the EU and makes it necessary to take the initiative again. If we want to withstand pressure from the now unsystematic US, as well as from autocratic Russia and China, we will need to create a robust, vital, competitive and sustainable economic framework that relieves us of dependence on unreliable partners while allowing us to cope with objectively impending crises, including the climate crisis. This makes sense economically, environmentally and geopolitically. There is no time or reason for backward revisionism, let alone the example of Trump, Putin or Musk. Thank you.
Urgent need for EU action to preserve nature and protect biodiversity to avoid the extinction of species (debate)
Date:
18.12.2024 20:24
| Language: SK
Mr President, when we lose biodiversity, we have a serious problem because we lose the functionality of ecosystems and thus the ecosystem services on which we depend. Without biodiversity, we will not survive. For life to work properly, it must be varied and robust. Any activity that destroys life is inherently harmful and should be replaced by procedures that allow us to achieve the desired goals, but do not have the negative impact on life. And that's just not happening. Let's be honest with each other. Already in the previous mandate, when we had the Green Deal, we were rather hesitant about protecting biodiversity. In this mandate, the reinforced right to protect biodiversity is openly attacking. The weakening of the Deforestation Regulation, wolf hunting, are just two signs of a new anti-natural standard. Without facts and science, but on horse-drawn populism. It is unacceptable, it is non-European. But above all, let's not pretend that we can afford this sick procedure. We can't. Ide o život.
Outcome of the UN Biodiversity Conference 2024 in Cali, Colombia (COP16) (debate)
Date:
25.11.2024 19:10
| Language: SK
Madam President, COP 16 was based on the motto 'peace with nature'. At a time when we are experiencing a 73% decline in wildlife populations and we are missing 700 billion euros a year for nature conservation, this result is kind of non-existent. And that's because the champions in nature conservation have failed. We are them. Instead of building peace with nature, we declared an open war on it. We have weakened and almost failed to pass the Nature Restoration Regulation, postponed and almost rendered inoperable the Deforestation Regulation. We're going to reduce the protection of the wolf, and I'm afraid it won't end with this species. On the wave of populism, an anti-natural right-wing coalition with extremists is being built here. We want the world to protect biodiversity, but at the same time we pretend not to be concerned. It is a gross disregard for the urgency of the biodiversity crisis. It's such a song and I find it very relevant for this moment. “The forest is on fire, the fauna is flaming, nobody is dancing, nobody is anything, so it is, there is still dancing on the Titanic.” In human history, no society has disappeared because it protected its nature. On the contrary, it killed ignorance, unsustainability and destruction. And none of us have a mandate to make the Titanic here.
The devastating floods in Central and Eastern Europe, the loss of lives and the EU’s preparedness to act on such disasters exacerbated by climate change (debate)
Date:
18.09.2024 07:46
| Language: SK
Madam President, this disaster, which has swept across several European countries, has caused enormous damage. I wish to express my full solidarity with those affected and my sincere condolences to those most seriously affected. At the same time, I would like to express my deep gratitude to all the security forces and authorities, as well as to the volunteers, who intervened in this event and helped to protect the lives and property of citizens of European countries. I want to say that, in the resolution that we are preparing in this House, we are asking the European Commission to activate the European Union Civil Protection Mechanism as soon as the affected countries request it. Boris should be a lesson. We knew he was coming, and yet we did not avoid some mistakes, which unfortunately were also associated with incompetent decision-making. But above all, it is proof that it was neither the last nor the greatest such catastrophe. On the contrary, the climate crisis will bring more frequent and larger disasters of a similar nature. That is why we cannot stop our efforts to mitigate climate change and keep global warming at relatively safe levels of 1.5°C. But above all, we are lagging behind in adaptation. It's basically about infrastructure. It must be functional and durable, but concrete alone is not enough for us. Functional ecosystems, rivers, forests, wetlands have enormous potential to help us. Let's make full use of it. And where it has been reduced, let's restore it and incorporate it into integrated protection from weather extremes. The situation is really serious, it is about people's lives and property. It is about security and our prosperity. Failure is therefore unacceptable.
Outcome of the Strategic Dialogue on the Future of EU Agriculture (debate)
Date:
16.09.2024 16:57
| Language: SK
Mr President, twenty-nine authorities from the circle of scientists, stakeholders and farmers' organisations have met and organised a strategic dialogue on agriculture, and I very much welcome its conclusions. Indeed, the conclusions drawn by this dialogue go to the heart of today's agricultural problems. They clearly state the need to strengthen the position of farmers and fair conditions for those who produce our food. Help should be directed and addressed to those most in need. And risk management and measurable results are a prerequisite for the transformation of agriculture. However, one thing should not disappear. This report, these conclusions, very clearly focus on the need for agriculture to respond to the climate, biodiversity and pollution crises, to ensure that agriculture is better prepared for drought, healthy soils, vital pollinators and better welfare of farmed animals. Our common goal should be a viable and successful agriculture. The results of the strategic dialogue clearly show us how to ensure this. I think we're ready and able to get out of it.
Debate contributions by Michal WIEZIK