The Commission has decided to refer Hungary to the Court of Justice of the European Union regarding a prior notification scheme introduced by the Hungarian authorities which allows to block the export of building materials.
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The Commission considers that these measures are in breach of Article 35 TFEU and Article 36 TFEU, as they restrict the free movement of goods and are not justified. In particular, Hungary does not demonstrate in a satisfactory manner that the objective of the measure corresponds to a legitimate objective.
In addition, there seems to be no actual risk to the security of supply of the products concerned in Hungary. Furthermore, the Hungarian measures do not provide objective and predefined criteria for the decision of whether exports could be blocked.
Therefore, the Hungarian authorities can freely determine when there is a risk to the security of supply in the construction industry, making the decision potentially arbitrary.
The measures therefore cannot be considered as justified to attain the intended public interest.
The Hungarian measures not only affect intra-Union trade but also trade with third countries in violation of Article 2 and Article 3 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU).
Furthermore, the notification obligations under the Single Market Transparency Directive have been violated as the Hungarian authorities did not submit to the Commission the draft measure.
The Commission had initially sent a first letter of formal notice in September 2021, followed by a reasoned opinion in April 2022. As the Commission considers that Hungary is still in breach of EU rules, it has decided to refer the case to the Court of Justice of the European Union.
National measures that are capable of hindering, directly or indirectly, actually or potentially intra-Community trade are measures having an equivalent effect to a quantitative restriction.
The export notification system and the right to block exports stipulated in the Hungarian legislation amount to such measures. ■
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