Three Seas Initiative | |
---|---|
Membership | |
Establishment | 2015 |
Area | |
• Total | 1,218,975 km2 (470,649 sq mi) |
Population | |
• Estimate | 110,150,445[1] |
• Density | 90/km2 (233.1/sq mi) |
GDP (nominal) | 2022 estimate |
• Total | €2.295 trillion[2] |
• Per capita | €20,838 |
Website 3seas |
The Three Seas Initiative (3SI or TSI), known also as the Baltic, Adriatic, Black Sea (BABS) Initiative or simply as the Three Seas (Latin: Trimarium, Polish: Trójmorze), is a forum of thirteen states, in the European Union, running along a north–south axis from the Baltic Sea to the Adriatic and Black Seas in Central and Eastern Europe.[3] The Initiative aims to create a regional dialogue on questions affecting the member states.
In 2016, representatives of the original 12 member states (Austria, Bulgaria, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, and Slovenia) met for their first summit in Dubrovnik, Croatia. At the seventh summit in Riga on June 20, 2022, Ukraine received the status of a partner-participant of the TSI, de facto becoming a participant in this initiative.[4] At the 2023 summit, Greece became a member and Moldova a partner-participant.[5]
The twelve Three Seas countries cover 29 per cent of the European Union's territory (1,210,000 km2 or 470,000 sq mi), are home to 25 percent of the European Union's inhabitants (110 million), and produce €2.3 trillion or one seventh of the EU's GDP (nominal).[2]
The Three Seas Initiative, which was influenced by the Polish interwar Intermarium concept, was launched in 2015 by Polish President Andrzej Duda and Croatian President Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović.[6]
The Initiative's first summit, held in Dubrovnik, Croatia, on 25–26 August 2016, ended with a declaration of economic cooperation in energy and in transport and communications infrastructures.[3] Polish President Andrzej Duda called the initiative "a new concept to promote Europe's unity and cohesion... an idea of cooperation among 12 countries located between the Adriatic, Baltic and Black Seas, the three seas of Central Europe."[7]
Guests included Chinese Ministerial Assistant for Foreign Affairs Liu Haixing, who spoke about Three Seas Initiative interconnectedness with China's Belt and Road Initiative, and former US National Security Advisor General James L. Jones, who stressed the Three Seas Initiative's role in European development and security.[8][9]
The Initiative's second summit was held 6–7 July 2017 in Warsaw, Poland. Guest attendees included US President Donald Trump.[10][11] The participating countries unanimously agreed to set up a Three Seas Business Forum.[12][13]
The Initiative's third summit took place 17–18 September 2018 in Bucharest, Romania. Participants approved interconnection projects in three key areas: transport, energy, and digital.[14] Guest attendees included President of the European Commission Jean-Claude Juncker, German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas, and US Secretary of Energy Rick Perry. The first edition[clarification needed] of the Business Forum was organised. A 3SI Network of Chambers of Commerce was created, and a letter of intent was signed concerning establishment of a Three Seas Investment Fund.[15][16]
Date | Location | Hosting leader | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2016 25–26 August |
Dubrovnik, Croatia | Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović | [17][18] |
2 | 2017 6–7 July |
Warsaw, Poland | Andrzej Duda | U.S. President Donald Trump attended.[19] |
3 | 2018 17–18 September |
Bucharest, Romania | Klaus Iohannis | E.U. Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas, and U.S. Secretary of Energy Rick Perry attended.[20] |
4 | 2019 5–6 June |
Ljubljana, Slovenia | Borut Pahor | E.U. Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, German president Frank-Walter Steinmeier, and U.S. Secretary of Energy Rick Perry attended.[21][22] |
5 | 2020 19 October[23] |
Tallinn, Estonia | Kersti Kaljulaid | Virtual summit[24][25] |
6 | 2021 8–9 July[23] |
Sofia, Bulgaria | Rumen Radev | Greek president Katerina Sakellaropoulou attended.[26] |
7 | 2022 20–21 June[23] |
Riga, Latvia | Egils Levits | |
8 | 2023
6-7 September |
Bucharest, Romania | Klaus Iohannis | IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva attended. Greece became the 13th member of the initiative and Moldova a partner-participant.[5] |
9 | 2024
11 April [27] |
Vilnius, Lithuania | Gitanas Nausėda | Japan became 4th Strategic Partner of the Initiative [28] |
10 | 2025
TBC [29] |
TBC, Poland | Andrzej Duda |
The initiative is closely related to two major infrastructure projects in the region:[30]
Other projects are the Baltic-Adriatic Corridor, Via Baltica road, Rail Baltica and Amber Rail Freight Corridor[31] rail connections.[32] Another project is Rail-2-Sea, which aims to connect the Baltic Sea port of Gdańsk (Poland) with the Black Sea port of Constanța (Romania) through a 3,663 kilometres (2,276 miles) long railway line.[33][34]
The initial two founding institutions from Poland and Romania have committed themselves to make payments totaling more than 500 million euros.[35] The Fund is open to other Three Seas countries, which may join it after obtaining appropriate permits. The supervisory board of the Fund consists of representatives of development banks from Poland, Romania, Latvia, and the Czech Republic.[36][37]
In 2019, Bank Gospodarstwa Krajowego and Export–Import Bank of Romania[38] signed the founding act of the Three Seas Initiative Investment Fund.[39] The fund is to focus on projects creating transport, energy and digital infrastructure in the Three Seas region. Private investors from pension funds, private investment funds, and other entities will also be invited to the fund. The aim is to raise up to €3–5 billion.[35]
The fund will engage, on a commercial basis, in infrastructure projects with a total value of up to €100 billion,[40][41] while the needs of the Three Seas region have been estimated at over €570 billion.[42]
Prior to the 2020 Tallinn Summit, United States Secretary of State Mike Pompeo pledged up to a billion dollars in financing for the Investment Fund.[43] The investment was not made.[44]
The fund's assets were estimated at €900 mil. in 2023.[45] The fund is collaborating with the Amber Infrastructure Group in raising capital and managing investments.[46]
Social-democratic Croatian President Zoran Milanović stated that the initiative is harmful for Croatia.[47]
The Three Seas Initiative was perceived rather negatively by Czech experts and diplomats during its launch. It was seen as a Polish attempt to create its sphere of influence (similar to the historical perception of Intermarium). Further fears were related to a possibility of deepening the east–west division in the EU and exclusion of Germany. A long term Czech objection was that there should be no competing geopolitical project in the region that would weaken the EU. Some of those objections have been partially addressed lately also due to a good experience with cooperation on infrastructure projects in the Visegrád Group.[48][verification needed] Further improvement of Czech position toward the Initiative happened after the term of the president Miloš Zeman ended and the government could remove from the Czech priority list the controversial project of Danube-Odra-Labe channel in 2023. The Ministry of foreign affairs suggested the new priority projects should be the gas connection STORK II and high-speed rail connection to Poland. On the other hand, Czechia still does not seem interested in joining the Investment fund or hosting a summit.[49]
The populist Finns Party has advocated for Finland to join the initiative.[50]
In 2016, Ukraine was sent an invitation to the Three Seas Summit in Dubrovnik. However, no state representative was sent to the meeting.[51] In August 2019, during the visit of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to Poland, he stated that Ukraine is interested in becoming an active participant in regional projects and initiatives in Poland, such as the Three Seas, which covers the Baltic, Adriatic and Black Seas. It was also noted that Ukraine is already cooperating in the construction of the trans-European Via Carpatia highway, and is discussing an ambitious E-40 waterway project for Ukraine."[52]
In October 2019, Polish Foreign Minister Jacek Czaputowicz said that Ukraine could not now join the Three Seas Initiative, as it includes the countries of Central and Southern Europe, which are members of the European Union. The head of Polish diplomacy explained that the Three Seas Initiative should not be associated with geopolitics, as it is only an infrastructure project.[53]
In November 2019, during the visit of the President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy to Estonia, he stated that Ukraine is interested in joining the TSI and intends to discuss this issue with Estonian partners.[54]
After the start of the 2022 Russian invasion during the Russian-Ukrainian War, President of Poland Andrzej Duda in his address to the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine on 22 May 2022, stated that Ukraine should join the Three Seas Initiative.[55] Later, on June 7, 2022, the Prime Minister of Poland, Mateusz Morawiecki, at the opening of a two-day congress of local self-government in the Three Seas in Lublin, stated that the Three Seas Initiative is impossible without involving a free and sovereign Ukraine.[56]
At the seventh summit in Riga on 20 June 2022, speaking on video, the President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy stated that Ukraine should become a member of the Three Seas Initiative. Zelenskyy suggested strengthening the interpretation of cooperation within the Three Seas, emphasizing the importance of logistics. Speaking about cooperation in the energy sector, Zelenskyy reminded that Ukraine has one of the largest gas storage facilities in the region.[57] At this summit Ukraine received the status of a partner-participant of the TSI, de facto becoming a participant in this initiative.[4]