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Grande Région / Großregion

Greater Region

Last modified: 2025-01-04 by olivier touzeau
Keywords: euroregion | grande region | grossregion | egtc | european union | saarlorlux |
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[Meuse-Rhine Euroregion]

Flag of Greater Region - Image by Olivier Touzeau, 21 December 2024

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Presentation of Greater Region

The Greater Region (German: Großregion, French: Grande Région, Luxembourgish: Groussregioun), formerly also known as SaarLorLux, is a euroregion of eleven regional authorities located in four European
states.

Member regions represent different political structures: the Walloon region, the French-speaking and German-speaking Communities of Belgium; in the former Lorraine part of French Region Grand Est, the French
departments Meurthe-et-Moselle, Meuse, Moselle () and Vosges; the German states of Rhineland-Palatinate and Saarland; and the Grand-Duchy of Luxembourg.

The history of the Greater Region as a cross-border political cooperation area began with the founding of the European Coal and Steel Community in 1951, whose functional heart was primarily cross-border cooperation in the mining industry and thus the goal of avoiding another war between the founding states. Lorraine, Luxembourg, Rhineland-Palatinate and Saarland in particular made a significant contribution to Western European coal and steel production at that time.
In March 1969, at the instigation of German Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger and French President Charles de Gaulle, a German-French government commission was formed, which met for the first time in February 1970 in Bonn to discuss the problems in the German-French-Luxembourg mining triangle. The term Saar-Lor-Lux for the border triangle goes back to Hubertus Rolshoven, the CEO of the Saarbergwerke. At the 1971 government commission in Saarbrücken, Luxembourg government representatives were present for the first time and it was decided to set up a regional commission for German-French-Luxembourg border affairs.

On October 16, 1980, the official foundation stone for the Greater Region was finally laid with a government agreement between the three countries. More precisely, the formation of a government and a regional commission SaarLorLux-Trier-Westpfalz was formalized for the first time. The agreement is the legal basis for cross-border cooperation between regional administrations and institutions to promote the economic, cultural, tourist and social development of the region. With the establishment of the Interregional Parliamentary Council in February 1986, a body was created in which representatives from all member parliaments can meet twice a year for a plenary session and make recommendations and statements for the development of the GreaterRegion.

The main political body, however, is the Summit of the Greater Region, which brings together representatives of the incumbent executive of the partner regions. The first summit took place in 1995 in Bad Mondorf, Luxembourg, in the historical context of the Treaty of Maastricht, which was the reason for the Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker and the Saarland Prime Minister Oskar Lafontaine to hold regular meetings at the highest political level. In 1996, the establishment of an advisory cross-border economic and social committee was decided. In 1999, a joint secretariat, the so-called House of the Greater Region, based in Luxembourg, was added, which bundles the administrative activities of the association.

On 23 May 2005, the Walloon Region, the French Community of Belgium and the German-speaking Community joined the cooperation as full members by signing a government agreement between the Belgian government and the other three member states. At the same time, the summit of the Greater Region was merged with the SaarLorLux-Trier-Westpfalz Regional Commission. In 2013, the Summit Secretariat was founded as a European Grouping of Territorial Cooperation to prepare the work of the Summit and ensure the continuity of cooperation. In 2015, the House of the Greater Region moved to Esch-sur-Alzette, where it now houses a total of nine entities of the Greater Regional Cooperation with their offices and business premises.

[source: official website]

Olivier Touzeau, 21 December 2024


Flag of Greater Region

The flag has an "azure mist" field with the curent logo, adopted in april 2022:
photo (2023), photo (2024), where it can be seen with many white flags with logos of the member entities.

Olivier Touzeau, 21 December 2024