The goal of Integrated Border Management is to manage the Schengen external borders effectively and efficiently, so as to make the Schengen area more secure. This will be achieved by better control means, while remaining as open as possible to legal travelers. However, there are interoperability issues between Customs & Border/Security IT systems that were highlighted in several relative assessments (the Assessment report of practitioners, 2019 and in The Import Control System, ICS2) and its relevance as an EU internal security system, 2021, where according to the Customs Authorities, EIS and SIS data could be of value for them. To this direction, the EC published the EU Customs Action Plan (2021-2027) to technologically and structurally enhance Customs, through financial support under the Customs Control Equipment Instrument.
Furthermore, the briefing of the Committee of Budgetary Control to the EU Parliament concluded that ‘There is not a harmonized shared risk assessment, management, and control system for all Member States. In practice, customs administrations apply their own risk assessment & management systems, without even using the same IT system. This can weaken coordination and hinder effective sharing of information. Establishing interoperability among their IT systems is of paramount importance.
CONNECTOR’s vision is to contribute to the European Integrated Border Management and to the EU Customs Action Plan by i) addressing the need of close cooperation between Customs, Border & Coast Guard Authorities within the current and upcoming challenging & demanding environment of borders’ control, and ii)further involving Customs to the Common Information Sharing Environment network and the Enhanced Common Information Sharing Environment (e-CISE), via the development of the Customs Extended Common Information Sharing Environment (CE-CISE).
In addition, CONNECTOR developed an integrated, common and shared risk assessment approach for all IBM Authorities, considering the pan-EU common risk indicators per end user group (Customs, Border and Coast Guards Authorities including FRONTEX).
This can serve to secure external EU borders, protect EU citizens from cross-border crime and/or secure the seamless flow of travelers, as recommended in the multiannual strategic policy document. The CONNECTOR system has been developed as an interoperable technical environment, ensuring close cooperation and information exchange at all levels. The design & development of the CONNECTOR system was based on the analysis of current policy initiatives in EU level (directives, policy documents, etc.) along with gaps, needs and future views of the end-user groups, going beyond previous initiatives (ANDROMEDA, MARISA, EFFECTOR, etc.), and complying with the Societal, Ethical and Legal requirements and regulations. The CONNECTOR system was validated in real operational environment, based on well-defined National, Crossborder and Transnational use cases, commonly defined by Customs, Border and Coast Guards authorities, during three long lasting trials (Demonstration & Testing), under a standardised methodology.