Diplomatic missions of the European Union

The member states of the European Union are aligned in their foreign policy on many issues. The EU is the world's largest economic union, customs union and donor of humanitarian and development assistance and thus has an extensive network of delegations around the world mainly operating in the framework of External Relations, for which the European Commission is the main decision body. The EU also represents shared political and security viewpoints held by its member states, as articulated in the Common Foreign and Security Policy.
The EU's predecessor, the European Coal and Steel Community, opened its first mission in London in 1955, after three years non-EU countries began to accredit their missions in Brussels to the Community. The US had been a fervent supporter of the ECSC's efforts from the beginning, and Secretary of State Dean Acheson sent Jean Monnet a dispatch in the name of President Truman confirming full US diplomatic recognition of the ECSC. A US ambassador to the ECSC was accredited soon thereafter, and he headed the second overseas mission to establish diplomatic relations with the Community institutions.[1]
The number of delegates began to rise in the 1960s following the merging of the executive institutions of the three European Communities into a single Commission. Until recently some states had reservations accepting that EU delegations held the full status of a diplomatic mission. Article 20 of the Maastricht Treaty requires the Delegations and the Member States' diplomatic missions to "co-operate in ensuring that the common positions and joint actions adopted by the Council are complied with and implemented".
Management of the EU External Relations is conducted by the European External Action Service which reports to the High Representative for Foreign Affairs. Delegates are generally sent only to capital cities and cities hosting multilateral bodies.
The EU missions work separately from the work of the missions of its member states, however in some circumstances it may share resources and facilities. In Abuja, the EU mission shares its premises with a number of member states.[2] The European Commission also maintains representation in each of the member states.[3] For details on diplomatic representation, see Foreign relations of the European Union#Diplomatic representation.
Europe

 Albania Albania
 Armenia Armenia
 Azerbaijan Azerbaijan- Baku (Delegation)
 
 Belarus Belarus- Minsk (Delegation)
 
 Bosnia and Herzegovina Bosnia and Herzegovina- Sarajevo (Delegation)
 
 Georgia Georgia
 Iceland Iceland
 Kosovo Kosovo
 Moldova Moldova
 Montenegro Montenegro- Podgorica (Delegation)
 
 North Macedonia North Macedonia
 Norway Norway
 Russia Russia- Moscow (Delegation)
 
 Serbia Serbia
.svg.png) Switzerland Switzerland
 Turkey Turkey- Ankara (Delegation)
 
 Ukraine Ukraine
 United Kingdom United Kingdom
Africa
 Algeria Algeria- Algiers (Delegation)
 
 Angola Angola
 Benin Benin- Cotonou (Delegation)
 
 Botswana Botswana
 Burkina Faso Burkina Faso- Ouagadougou (Delegation [a])
 
 Burundi Burundi
 Cameroon Cameroon
 Cape Verde Cape Verde
 Central African Republic Central African Republic
 Chad Chad
 Comoros[7] Comoros[7]
 Congo-Brazzaville Congo-Brazzaville- Brazzaville (Delegation)
 
 Congo-Kinshasa Congo-Kinshasa- Kinshasa (Delegation)
 
 Djibouti Djibouti
 Egypt Egypt- Cairo (Delegation)
 
 Eritrea Eritrea
 Eswatini[8] Eswatini[8]- Mbabane (Delegation)
 
 Ethiopia Ethiopia- Addis Ababa (Delegation [a])
 
 Gabon Gabon- Libreville (Delegation)
 
 Gambia Gambia- Banjul (Delegation)
 
 Ghana Ghana
 Guinea Guinea- Conakry (Delegation)
 
 Guinea-Bissau Guinea-Bissau
 Ivory Coast Ivory Coast
 Kenya Kenya
 Lesotho Lesotho
 Liberia Liberia
 Libya Libya- Tripoli (Delegation)
 
 Madagascar Madagascar- Antananarivo (Delegation [a])
 
 Malawi Malawi
 Mali Mali- Bamako (Delegation)
 
 Mauritania Mauritania- Nouakchott (Delegation)
 
 Mauritius Mauritius- Port Louis (Delegation [a])
 
 Morocco Morocco- Rabat (Delegation)
 
 Mozambique Mozambique
 Namibia Namibia- Windhoek (Delegation)
 
 Niger Niger
 Nigeria Nigeria
 Rwanda Rwanda
 Senegal Senegal
 Sierra Leone Sierra Leone
 Somalia Somalia
 South Africa South Africa
 South Sudan[9] South Sudan[9]
 Sudan Sudan
 Tanzania Tanzania- Dar es Salaam (Delegation [a])
 
.svg.png) Togo Togo
 Tunisia Tunisia- Tunis (Delegation)
 
 Uganda Uganda
 Zambia Zambia- Lusaka (Delegation)
 
 Zimbabwe Zimbabwe
Americas


 Argentina Argentina- Buenos Aires (Delegation)
 
 Barbados Barbados- Bridgetown (Delegation)
 
 Bolivia Bolivia- La Paz (Delegation)
 
 Brazil Brazil- Brasília (Delegation)
 
.svg.png) Canada Canada
 Chile Chile- Santiago de Chile (Delegation)
 
 Costa Rica Costa Rica- San Jose (Delegation)
 
 Colombia Colombia- Bogotá (Delegation)
 
 Cuba Cuba- Havana (Delegation)
 
 Dominican Republic Dominican Republic- Santo Domingo (Delegation)
 
 Ecuador Ecuador- Quito (Delegation)
 
 El Salvador El Salvador- San Salvador (Delegation)
 
 Guatemala Guatemala- Ciudad de Guatemala (Delegation)
 
 Guyana Guyana- Georgetown (Delegation)
 
 Haiti Haiti- Port-au-Prince (Delegation)
 
.svg.png) Honduras Honduras- Tegucigalpa (Delegation)
 
 Jamaica Jamaica- Kingston (Delegation)
 
 Mexico Mexico- Mexico City (Delegation)
 
 Nicaragua Nicaragua- Managua (Delegation)
 
 Panama Panama- Panama City (Delegation)
 
 Paraguay Paraguay- Asunción (Delegation)
 
 Peru Peru- Lima (Delegation)
 
 Trinidad and Tobago Trinidad and Tobago- Port of Spain (Delegation)
 
.png) United States United States- Washington, D.C. (Delegation)
- San Francisco (Office)
 
 Uruguay Uruguay- Montevideo (Delegation)
 
 Venezuela Venezuela- Caracas (Delegation)
 
Asia
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 Afghanistan Afghanistan
 Bangladesh Bangladesh- Dhaka (Delegation)
 
 Cambodia Cambodia- Phnom Penh (Delegation [a])
 
 People's Republic of China People's Republic of China
 East Timor East Timor
 India India
 Indonesia[10] Indonesia[10]
 Iraq Iraq- Baghdad (Delegation)
 
 Israel Israel- Tel Aviv (Delegation)
 
 Japan Japan- Tokyo (Delegation)
 
 Jordan Jordan- Amman (Delegation)
 
 Kazakhstan Kazakhstan
 Kuwait Kuwait- Kuwait City (Delegation)[11]
 
 Kyrgyzstan[12] Kyrgyzstan[12]- Bishkek (Delegation)
 
 Laos[13] Laos[13]- Vientiane (Delegation)
 
 Lebanon Lebanon- Beirut (Delegation)
 
 Malaysia Malaysia- Kuala Lumpur (Delegation)
 
 Mongolia Mongolia- Ulaanbaatar (Delegation)
 
 Myanmar Myanmar- Yangon (Delegation)
 
 Nepal Nepal- Kathmandu (Delegation)
 
 Pakistan Pakistan- Islamabad (Delegation)
 
 Palestine Palestine- East Jerusalem (Technical Assistance Office)
 
 Philippines Philippines
 Qatar Qatar
 Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia- Riyadh (Delegation)
 
 Singapore Singapore- Singapore (Delegation)
 
 South Korea South Korea- Seoul (Delegation)
 
 Sri Lanka Sri Lanka- Colombo (Delegation)
 
.svg.png) Syria Syria- Damascus (Delegation)
 
 Republic of China (Taiwan) Republic of China (Taiwan)
 Tajikistan Tajikistan- Dushanbe (Delegation)
 
 Thailand Thailand
 Turkmenistan[15] Turkmenistan[15]- Ashgabat (Delegation)
 
 United Arab Emirates United Arab Emirates
 Uzbekistan Uzbekistan- Tashkent (Delegation)
 
 Vietnam Vietnam
Oceania

.svg.png) Australia Australia
 Fiji Fiji
 New Zealand New Zealand- Wellington (Delegation [a])
 
 Papua New Guinea Papua New Guinea- Port Moresby (Delegation [a])
 
 Samoa[16] Samoa[16]
 Solomon Islands Solomon Islands
 Vanuatu Vanuatu- Port Villa (Delegation [a])
 
Multilateral organisations
- Addis Ababa (Delegation to the African Union)[a]
- Geneva (Delegation to UN organisations and the World Trade Organization)[17]
- Jakarta (Delegation to ASEAN)[18]
- New York City (Delegation to the United Nations)
- Paris (Delegation to UNESCO and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development)
- Rome (Delegation to the Holy See, Order of Malta, San Marino and UN organisations: Food and Agriculture Organization, WFP, IFAD)[19][20]
- Strasbourg (Delegation to the Council of Europe)
- Vienna (Delegation to the international organisations in Vienna: IAEA, UNODC, UNIDO and the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe)[21]
Non-resident Delegation
Resident in Bridgetown, Barbados
 Antigua and Barbuda Antigua and Barbuda
 Dominica Dominica
 Grenada Grenada
 Saint Kitts and Nevis Saint Kitts and Nevis
 Saint Lucia Saint Lucia
 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Missions to open
See also
- Accreditations and Responsibilities of EU delegations – for non-resident missions
- Delegations of the European Parliament
- Delegation of the European Union to Canada
- Delegation of the European Union to the United Kingdom
- Delegation of the European Union to the United Nations
- Delegation of the European Union to the United States
- European External Action Service
- Foreign relations of the European Union
- List of diplomatic missions to the European Union
- List of European Union ambassadors
- CARIFORUM
Notes
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj As part of the process of establishment of the European External Action Service envisioned in the recently ratified Treaty of Lisbon, on 1 January 2010 all former European Commission delegations were renamed into European Union delegations and till the end of the month 54 of the missions were transformed into embassy-type missions that employ greater powers than the regular delegations. These upgraded delegations have taken on the role previously carried out by the national embassies of the member state holding the rotating Presidency of the Council of the European Union.[4]
References
- ^ "Taking Europe to the world: 50 years of the European Commission's External Service" (PDF).
- ^ Unified External Service of the European Commission Unified External Service of the European Commission
- ^ "Representations in Member States". European Commission. Retrieved 27 February 2020.
- ^ "EU commission 'embassies' granted new powers". EUobserver. 21 January 2010.
- ^ "EEAS content". European External Action Service – European Commission.
- ^ "EU office in northern K. Mitrovica". B92.net. 26 March 2010. Archived from the original on 29 March 2010.
- ^ "Madagascar | EEAS Website".
- ^ "Delegation of the European Union to the Kingdom of Eswatini | EEAS". www.eeas.europa.eu.
- ^ "Delegation of the European Union in Juba, South Sudan". www.embassypages.com.
- ^ "About the EU Delegation to Indonesia and Brunei". Delegation of the European Union to Indonesia and Brunei Darussalam. Retrieved 27 February 2020.
- ^ "EU to open delegation in Kuwait – FM Sheikh Sabah Al-Khaled". Kuwait News Agency. 13 July 2018.
- ^ "Home". Delegation of the European Union to the Kyrgyz Republic.
- ^ "Home". Delegation of the European Union to the Lao PDR.
- ^ "Qatar: Establishment Agreement signed for opening of the EU Delegation in Doha | EEAS Website".
- ^ "Delegation of the European Union in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan". www.embassypages.com.
- ^ "EU opens new office in Samoa". Radio New Zealand. 24 April 2014.
- ^ "Delgva.ec.europa.eu". Archived from the original on 5 December 2011. Retrieved 23 January 2010.
- ^ "PR German-Czech EU Presentation Credentials" (PDF). Asean.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 April 2016. Retrieved 1 December 2010.
- ^ "Delegation of the European Union to the Holy See, Order of Malta, UN Organisations in Rome and to the Republic of San Marino". European External Action Service. Retrieved 22 December 2023.
- ^ "About the Delegation of the European Union to the Holy See, Order of Malta, UN Organisations in Rome, Republic of San Marino". Retrieved 21 January 2021.
- ^ "Delegation of the European Union to the International Organisations in Vienna | EEAS". www.eeas.europa.eu.
- ^ "EU to open office in Tehran in months". 7 November 2016.
- ^ "Decision on Schengen visa waiver for Omanis soon". 7 June 2022.










