The Cyprus Presidency of the Council of the European Union will convene a high-level conference in Paphos on June 26 under the theme “Strengthening EU Islands and Coastal Communities.” The gathering, to be held at the Elysium Hotel, underscores a growing policy push in Brussels to give Europe’s peripheral regions more targeted attention.
A Strategic Moment For Europe’s Island Regions
The conference will bring together the President of the Republic of Cyprus, Nikos Christodoulides, and the Prime Minister of Malta, Robert Abela, placing two of the European Union’s island states at the center of the discussion.
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At the heart of the summit is the presentation of the European Commission’s first comprehensive strategies tailored specifically to Europe’s islands and coastal communities. It is a notable shift: rather than treating these regions as geographic outliers, the Commission is framing them as strategic assets with distinct economic, social, and environmental needs.
Millions Of Europeans Live With Structural Disadvantages
More than 17 million people living on over 4,000 islands across 16 EU member states, including Cyprus, Ireland, and Malta, are covered by the new initiatives. Another 95 million people reside along 70,000 kilometres of coastline in 22 member states.
According to the European Commission, many of these regions face common challenges linked to connectivity, demographic change, and exposure to climate and maritime risks. To address those issues, the proposed strategies aim to establish a more coordinated policy framework.
Four Pillars For Island Resilience
Economic development and innovation, energy security and climate resilience, demographic support through improved public services, and stronger protection against natural disasters and maritime threats form the four pillars of the islands’ strategy.
Under the proposal, island-specific needs would be incorporated into broader EU policies while supporting access to services, economic activity, and local development.
The Blue Economy Takes Center Stage
The companion strategy for coastal communities focuses on prosperity through a more diversified blue economy. That includes pescatourism, offshore renewable energy, and the bioeconomy, all sectors that can create jobs while aligning growth with sustainability.
Key measures include empowering local communities through the forthcoming Ocean Act, supporting local supply chains, and establishing a certification system for blue carbon credits. Together, these steps are intended to strengthen climate adaptation while preserving the cultural and maritime identity that defines many coastal regions.
Brussels Bets On Sustainable Competitiveness
Executive Vice-President for Cohesion and Reforms Raffaele Fitto and Commissioner for Fisheries and Oceans Costas Kadis will present the strategies during the conference. Opening remarks are scheduled from Christodoulides and Abela, followed by an intervention from European Parliament Vice-President Younous Omarjee.
Discussions will then continue through a series of roundtable sessions focused on island development and coastal communities, bringing together experts, policymakers, and public officials. Recommendations from participants, remarks from representatives of the upcoming Irish Presidency of the Council of the EU, and a closing address by Deputy Minister for European Affairs Marilena Raouna will conclude the event.
From Policy Framework To Political Signal
The event is more than a technical policy launch. It is also a political signal that the EU is broadening its cohesion agenda to better reflect the realities of its outer regions. That will matter not only for Cyprus and Malta, but for every member state with islands, coastlines, or communities vulnerable to demographic and climate pressures.
The conference will conclude with a summary of recommendations and statements from the upcoming Irish Presidency of the Council of the EU, followed by a closing address from Cyprus Deputy Minister for European Affairs Marilena Raouna.
For the European Commission, the message is unmistakable: resilience at the margins is now central to the EU’s economic and geopolitical agenda.







