Weitere EU-News, Hintergründe und Debatten finden Sie auf EurActiv Deutschland!
The summit's opening was delayed after Greenpeace demonstrators – calling on business to endorse 30% carbon cuts by 2020 – blocked all entrances to the venue at Tour & Taxis, Brussels.
The data, released by consultants Accenture, found that 70% of a poll of 400 leading CEOs were optimistic that the next twelve months would bring increased growth, as compared to last year.
Speaking at the opening plenary session of the summit, themed 'Positioning for tomorrow's leadership', the panel welcomed the survey as evidence that a corner had been turned in business sentiment.
Pierre Nanterme, CEO of Accenture, told the gathering: "If you look at the survey then you have to conclude that Europe is an attractive market and that is an advantage we cannot lose."
Politicians more downcast than businessmen
Business optimism was not matched by politicians, however, according to Viktor Orbán, the Hungarian prime minister. He said: "If the survey had been conducted with politicians the outcome would have been different. Politicians are gloomy because we can survive and modernise, or we can be blocked from action which is where we are at the moment."
Orbán said that European political leadership was fragmented, and that what he called the "human factor" was responsible for a much more effective response to the crisis from certain countries, notably Germany, whilst others were late to face the reality of the financial crisis and the changes it engendered.
The Belgian minister for enterprise, Vincent van Quickenborne, also called for stronger political leadership to push through structural reforms – in pensions and labour markets – necessary in the wake of the sovereign debt crisis.
European sense of entitlement
The new dean of INSEAD, Dipak Jain, told the plenary that Europeans needed to shake off their "sense of entitlement". Instead of always considering "the grass greener on the other side," they should reflect that "perhaps the other side is taking better care of its grass," he said.
Meanwhile, around 40 Greenpeace activists were arrested by Belgian police following a protracted demonstration, which caused delays to the opening of the summit after they had blocked all the doors to the venue with metal bars.
Unfurling banners from the roof listing the names of companies which have not endorsed 30% carbon cuts by 2020, the activists were eventually removed by force. Organisers said that the demonstration, involving 170 activists from across the continent, had been planned over several months and was intended to be peaceful.
Jeremy Fleming



