In the shadow of the sovereign debt crisis, the eurozone will welcome Estonia as its 17th member on Saturday.
However, the addition does not dispel concerns for the future of the euro, which is in great trouble caused by the Greek debt crisis.
Many see a bumpy road ahead for the single currency in its second decade after coming into being on Jan. 1, 1999.
Volatile 2010
At the end of 2009, a debt crisis hit Greece immediately after the global financial upheaval. The crisis worsened step by step despite continuous denials by the Greek government of its problem and assurances from top European Union officials.
The first summit called by the president of the European Council, Herman Van Rompuy, on Feb. 11 was hijacked by Athen's debt problems. The EU leaders were preoccupied with the Greek debt crisis at their meeting, which was initially supposed to focus on drawing an economic blueprint for the 27-member bloc for the next 10 years.
The meeting, however, didn't result in any immediate aid to Athens.
"Euro area member states will take determined and coordinated action, if needed, to safeguard financial stability in the euro area as a whole," said a joint statement from the eurozone countries.
However, the pledge by eurozone members failed to assure the market and the Greek government was forced to ask help from its fellows and the International Monetary Fund.
On May 10, EU finance ministers agreed on a provisional rescue mechanism worth up to 750 billion euros (1,035 billion U.S. dollars) to prevent the spread of the crisis and restore confidence in financial markets.
In November, Ireland followed the same path as Greece, dragged down by its troubled banking sector.
The 85-billion-euro (113-billion-dollar) aid package to Dublin did not dispel fears of contagion of the crisis, which many said could inevitably spread to peripheral countries such as Portugal and Spain.
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