Home » Industrial relations » Transnational industrial relations » Areva: new European agreement on forecasting and anticipating employment and competences Areva: new European agreement on forecasting and anticipating employment and competences To prepare employees to anticipate and manage their career evolution, the group commits, with this agreement, to provide employees with visibility on evolutions within careers and professions via national Professions and Competences Councils managed by a European Professions and Competences Council and a common professions referential model. An annex describes the uniform composition of these Councils, a shared methodology and the development of a 3-year plan as well as the elements on which it should rely (evolution of the resources and needs, population pyramid, mobility, critical professions, emerging professions…). These Councils will have to issue a synthetic report. Through . Published on 04 April 2011 à 7h13 - Update on 04 April 2011 à 7h13 Resources Professions and Competences Councils managed by a European Professions and Competences Council and a common professions referential model. An annex describes the uniform composition of these Councils, a shared methodology and the development of a 3-year plan as well as the elements on which it should rely (evolution of the resources and needs, population pyramid, mobility, critical professions, emerging professions…). These Councils will have to issue a synthetic report.… European Framework Agreement Need more info ? Contact mind's on-demand study service Which service do you want to contact :WritingCommercial serviceTechnical SupportFirst name Last name Organization Function email* Object of the message Your messageRGPD J’accepte la politique de confidentialité.EmailThis field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged. Essentials Les dernières publications Supporting parenthood in the workplace: a win-win strategy Supporting employee carers: a CSR challenge Analyzes Les dernières publications Paternity leave: data observations from 41 countries EU: during H1 2022 five EU Member States have raised their minimum salary levels