By Francesco Guarascio and Foo Yun Chee
BRUSSELS (Reuters) -The European Union and the United States announced a preliminary data transfer deal on Friday, seeking to end the limbo in which thousands of companies found themselves after Europe’s top court threw out two previous pacts due to concerns about U.S. surveillance.
While businesses cheered the news, Austrian privacy activist Max Schrems, whose campaign about the risk of U.S. intelligence agencies accessing Europeans’ data in a long-running dispute with Meta led to the court vetoes, criticised the lack of details.
U.S. President Joe Biden and European Commission Ursula von der Leyen said at a joint news conference in Brussels that the provisional agreement takes into account the court’s concerns and offers stronger legal protections.
“Today, we’ve agreed to unprecedented protections for data privacy and security for citizens,” Biden said.
“I am very pleased that we have found an agreement in principle on a new framework for transatlantic data flows,” von der Leyen said.
“This will enable predictable and trustworthy data flows between the EU and U.S., safeguarding privacy and civil liberties,” she added, without elaborating.
An EU official familiar with the matter said it will likely take months to turn the provisional agreement into a final legal deal.
“First, the U.S. needs to prepare their executive order, and then we need to do our internal consultation in the Commission and within the European Data Protection Board,” the official said, referring to the EU privacy watchdog.
Companies welcomed the provisional deal.
“Legal certainty about data flows will spur innovation, growth, and job creation. This is a win-win-agreement for businesses on both sides of the Atlantic,” said Markus J. Beyrer, director of lobbying group BusinessEurope.
“A new agreement will provide companies of all sizes the legal certainty to transfer, analyze, and use data on both sides of the Atlantic. The ability to move data is critical in today’s digitally connected economy,” said U.S. Chamber of Commerce Executive Vice President Myron Brilliant.
Activist Schrems, however, said the lack of details was troubling and that if the United States was only offering executive reassurances instead of changing its surveillance laws, he would not hesitate to go to court again.
“The final text will need more time, once this arrives we will analyze it in depth, together with our U.S. legal experts. If it is not in line with EU law, we or another group will likely challenge it,” he said in a statement.
The latest data accord risks being shot down again if it is not strong enough, said Patrick Van Eecke, a partner at law firm Cooley in Brussels.
“As before, privacy activists will probably try to have this agreement invalidated by the European Court of Justice, and the recent Supreme Court decision in the FBI v. Fazaga case will not make it easier for the U.S. administration to convince Europe that the United States has equally strong privacy protections,” he said.
(Reporting by Francesco Guarascio; Editing by Toby Chopra)