European Convention on Cinematographic Co-Production
The European Convention on Cinematographic Co-Production is the Council of Europe's multilateral framework for co-production between contracting states. It is not a bilateral treaty — it is a convention that any Council of Europe member state can accede to, and once acceded the state is in a co-production relationship with every other contracting state.
Two versions are in force:
- CoE 1992 — the original convention, opened for signature 1992. Ireland acceded with effect from 1 August 2000. Still the active framework for the majority of contracting states.
- CoE 2017 — the revised convention, in force for ratifying states from September 2019. Modernised the framework but currently has a smaller pool of ratifying states (as of 2026-05, 18 ratifications).
The two versions have somewhat different operational rules — see below.
Scope
- Theatrical only. The Convention covers cinematographic works intended for theatrical release. Television and direct-to-streaming productions are out of scope. (This is a meaningful constraint — bilateral treaties typically cover TV.)
- Three or more parties. The Convention is a multilateral instrument — minimum three contracting states involved. Two-party co-productions use the relevant bilateral treaty between those two states (or the Convention, but most Convention work is genuinely multilateral).
Key thresholds — CoE 1992
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Minimum parties | 3 |
| Minimum financial participation per party | 10% |
| Maximum financial participation per party | 80% |
| Annex II points (creative / technical roles) | 15 of 19 minimum |
The Annex II points system scores creative + technical roles across the structure. Director, writer, lead cast, supporting cast, DoP, editor, sound, designer, composer, locations, art department, post — totalling 19 points distributed across the roles. Co-productions need at least 15 of those 19 points held by contracting-state nationals.
Key thresholds — CoE 2017
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Minimum parties | 2 (bilateral) or 3+ (multilateral) |
| Minimum financial participation (bilateral) | 10% |
| Minimum financial participation (multilateral) | 5% |
| Maximum financial participation per party | 80% |
| Annex II points (creative / technical roles) | 15 of 19 minimum |
The 2017 revision permits bilateral structures under the same Convention (where both parties have ratified the revised text) and lowers the multilateral minimum to 5%. The points system is preserved.
Contracting states (selected)
CoE 1992 has a broad membership. Notable Irish co-pro partners under the 1992 Convention:
- Ireland (since 2000)
- United Kingdom — the IE↔UK route for cross-border productions
- France (also has a bilateral with Ireland from 2022)
- Germany
- Spain
- Italy
- Belgium
- Netherlands
- Czech Republic
- Hungary
- Poland
- Sweden
- Denmark
- Norway
Plus many others — verify the current contracting-states list against the Council of Europe website before structuring.
Council of Europe vs Eurimages
Eurimages is not the Convention — it is the Council of Europe's funding instrument for European co-productions. The Convention is the legal framework granting national status; Eurimages is the money. A Convention-qualifying co-production can apply to Eurimages; the two are designed to work together.
UK left Eurimages on 31 December 2022. UK remains in the European Convention.
Competent authorities
| Side | Authority |
|---|---|
| Ireland | Department of Culture, Communications and Sport (DCCS) with Screen Ireland (Fís Éireann) |
| Each other contracting state | Their respective national authority |
Each contracting state approves its own producer's participation; the Council of Europe does not centrally certify co-productions under the Convention.
Pitfalls
Theatrical only — TV drama is excluded. A producer building a TV drama co-production cannot use the Convention. They need a bilateral treaty if one exists between the relevant parties. The Convention won't qualify a TV drama for national status.
1992 vs 2017 status matters. Some states have ratified only 1992; some have ratified 2017; some have ratified both. Verify each prospective co-producing state's status before assuming the looser 2017 rules apply.
How Togra supports this
The Co-Production Structurer runs two scheme scorers — coe_1992 for the 1992 Convention and coe_2017 for the revised version. Each checks party-eligibility against the contracting-states list, financial-band (10-80% on 1992; 5-80% on 2017 multilateral), sums-to-100%, and Annex II 15-of-19 points scoring. The scorer reports per-clause pass / partial / fail with treaty article citations.
Related
Sources
- · European Convention on Cinematographic Co-Production (Council of Europe, opened 1992)
- · Ireland's accession to the Convention — entered into force 1 August 2000
- · Council of Europe Convention on Cinematographic Co-Production (revised), 2017 — entered into force for ratifying states from September 2019