The Permanent Representatives Committee (Coreper) of the EU Council will meet on 24 and 30 June 2026 in Brussels to prepare upcoming Council meetings, adopt legislative acts, and discuss key policy files, according to a provisional agenda published on 22 June 2026.
On 24 June, Coreper will prepare the Environment Council (25 June), the Transport/Telecommunications/Energy Council (26 June), and the Employment/Social Policy/Health/Consumer Affairs Council (29 June). Key legislative items include a final compromise on the market stability reserve for buildings, road transport and additional sectors (document 10592/26); preparation for trilogues on passenger rights enforcement (10749/26) and the Eurovignette Directive amendment (10644/26); and a partial general approach on Horizon Europe 2028-2034 (10457/1/26 REV 1).
On 30 June, the agenda features Presidency debriefings on trilogue outcomes for passenger rights, France's accession to the Inter-American Convention for Sea Turtles, and the European Chemicals Agency (ECHA) Regulation. A key item is the Critical Medicines Act, with analysis of the final compromise text with a view to agreement (10713/26).
The annex (I items) includes adoption of appointments for the European Foundation for the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions (DK, LU members), the Social Security Advisory Committee (BE member), and the European Food Safety Authority Board; adoption of legislative acts on farmers' position in the food supply chain, vehicle circularity/end-of-life, and an export ban on mixed municipal waste for recovery; and authorisation for negotiation of the UNCCD COP17 political declaration and signature of the Friends of the Cali Fund Statement.
EU member states will see harmonised rules on market stability reserve adjustments affecting building and transport sectors; transport operators face potential cost changes from Eurovignette and passenger rights enforcement; farmers gain stronger position in the food supply chain; and the pharmaceutical sector faces new obligations under the Critical Medicines Act. The export ban on mixed municipal waste affects waste management companies and recyclers. Institutional follow-up: Coreper's positions will feed into the June Council meetings and subsequent trilogues with the European Parliament.