General Court of the EU confirms subsidies to grassroots sport

General Court of the EU confirms subsidies to grassroots sport

Following its judgement on the similar case “Hamr Sport", the General Court of the EU published its judgement on the German state aid case “Deutscher Alpenverein-Magic Mountain u.a.” (T-162/13) on 9 June 2016. In this judgement, the court rejected the complaint by Magic Mountain, a private operator of climbing halls and confirmed the European Commission decision from 5 December 2012 that declared the state aid given as compatible with the single market. The Commission had decided a case of transfer of public property and granting of subsidies in two different regions of Germany together. A legal remedy with the European Court of Justice is still possible, but would only examine formal questions and no considerations regarding content.

In the course of two months, the court has therefore strengthened the position of non-profit sport organisations and denied private companies the claim to similar access to state subsidies. Even though the Block Exemption Regulation (valid since July 2014) has created a new legal situation, these old cases have more than symbolic value. They clarify that an affordable grassroots sport is of public interest and can even be considered part of the economic services of general interest.

The recourse to Art. 165 TFEU furthermore illustrates that the rather general claim that “the Union shall contribute to the promotion of European sporting issues, while taking account of the specific nature of sport, its structures based on voluntary activity and its social and educational function” is more than mere words. It illustrates that grassroots sport, organised on club level and oriented towards the common good, needs specific support and specific protection.

FURTHER INFORMATION
Judgement General Court of the EU – DAV-Magic Mountain (in German or French)
 

Recent Posts

The European Olympic Committees (EOC) EU Office is looking for new trainees to join our team this Autumn!

🔹 As of 1st September 2024 🔹 3-6 months 🔹 Full-time (38h) 🔹 In Brussels About the EOC EU Office The EU Office of the European Olympic Committees (EOC EU Office) is the representation of the EOC and other major sport organisations to the European institutions in Brussels. Main responsibilities One of the main missions […]

Read More
European Parliament Committee on Culture and Education (CULT) published its activity report for 2019-2024

The CULT activity report  2019-2024 sets out all the main legislative and non-legislative activities carried out by the committee during the 9th parliamentary term in order to reinforce the continuity of the policies implemented with new MEPs (after the elections in June). For retiring MEPs, the activity report can serve as a valuable record of their achievements […]

Read More
Working Party on Sport finalises EU Work Plan for Sport

The Working Party on Sport met on 8 April. Priority topic of the meeting was the finalisation of the text for the EU Work for Sport (2024-2027) and the Council Conclusions on the contribution of self-organised sport to supporting active and healthy lifestyles among Europeans. Furthermore, the EU Sport Ministers discussed a background document on […]

Read More

Related Posts

April 16, 2024
The European Olympic Committees (EOC) EU Office is looking for new trainees to join our team this Autumn!

🔹 As of 1st September 2024 🔹 3-6 months 🔹 Full-time (38h) 🔹 In Brussels About the EOC EU Office The EU Office of the European Olympic Committees (EOC EU Office) is the representation of the EOC and other major sport organisations to the European institutions in Brussels. Main responsibilities One of the main missions […]

April 12, 2024
European Parliament Committee on Culture and Education (CULT) published its activity report for 2019-2024

The CULT activity report  2019-2024 sets out all the main legislative and non-legislative activities carried out by the committee during the 9th parliamentary term in order to reinforce the continuity of the policies implemented with new MEPs (after the elections in June). For retiring MEPs, the activity report can serve as a valuable record of their achievements […]

April 12, 2024
Working Party on Sport finalises EU Work Plan for Sport

The Working Party on Sport met on 8 April. Priority topic of the meeting was the finalisation of the text for the EU Work for Sport (2024-2027) and the Council Conclusions on the contribution of self-organised sport to supporting active and healthy lifestyles among Europeans. Furthermore, the EU Sport Ministers discussed a background document on […]

About us

The EOC EU Office is the House of European Sport, representing the European Olympic Committees (EOC), the IOC and other major sport organisations to the European institutions in Brussels.
CONTACT
crossmenu linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram