Peter Sayer
Executive Editor, News

EU turns to YouTube to create EUtube

news
Jun 29, 20072 mins

EC plans to disseminate information and explain policy to its citizens through a new video-sharing channel

The European Commission is turning to video-sharing Web site YouTube.com to disseminate information about the workings of the European Union to its citizens, through a new channel on the site called EUtube, it announced Friday.

The EUtube channel bears the tagline “Sharing the sights and sounds of Europe.” At launch, the showcased video was a 40-second animated cartoon entitled “Everyone Can Save The Planet.” Other featured videos include a series entitled “And if Europe didn’t exist…” and a documentary on the troubled Galileo project to build a European satellite navigation system.

The channel will carry video news releases and other video clips created to explain E.U. policy, said Mikolaj Dowgielewicz, spokesman for the E.U. commissioner for institutional relations and communications strategy. “It’s part of our strategy to use the tools that people use,” he said.

It will help YouTube users learn more about the workings of the E.U.’s institutions, by leading them to information they weren’t necessarily looking for. “When a user watches clips on the channel, he or she is prompted to view other clips from the same source,” he said.

Users will be invited to add their comments on the video clips.

Setting up the channel has not cost the E.U. anything, Dowgielewicz said.

Although the European Union is keen to adopt Web 2.0 technologies to communicate with its citizens, the Commission has no plans to set up a presence in Second Life or on MySpace.com for the time being, said another spokesman.