EU ‘Green Deal’ in difficulty despite climate law votes
“EXTREMELY CHALLENGING” TIME FRAME
Adam Guibourge-Czetwertynski, a Polish junior climate minister, said that, given the varying centres of concern in the EU on a text on a proposed “nature restoration” law, there was a need “to make this proposition realistic in practice”.
Austria’s environment minister, Leonore Gewessler, underlined the “extremely challenging” time frame and urged giving enough space for the negotiations to result in “a coherent policy mix”.
During a late March parliamentary debate on the nature restoration text, one left-leaning Spanish MEP, Cesar Luena, said: “Things are not looking very good.”
“The green consensus that was there at the beginning of our term has gradually been eroded. It’s fading away,” he said, pointing to remonstrations from farming and fishing lobbies.
Pacal Canfin, the chair of the parliament’s environment committee, said there was progress on the energy, industry and transport aspects of the proposed texts. “But for agriculture and fishing, no path has been found,” he added.
Some related topics – such as propositions on genetically modified crops and soil protection – are not even part of the talks and will be presented by the commission in June.
Presentation of a tricky text on a tighter framework for the use of chemical substances which had been expected early last year has now been pushed back to late 2023.
While haggling continues over the biodiversity texts, the EU can at least bask in the glow of having the parliament on Tuesday adopting laws on expanding the bloc’s carbon trading market and introducing a carbon border tax on imports.
Those measures bolster Europe’s bid to cut greenhouse gas emissions as it moves towards the goal of a net carbon-neutral future.
The 27 EU countries are collectively the third-biggest global emitter of carbon dioxide.
The biggest by far is China, which is greatly expanding its fleet of coal-fired power plants despite a vow to have carbon emissions peak by 2030 then reduced to net zero by 2060.
Then comes the United States, historically the biggest carbon-gas emitter, which has a long-term strategy of reaching net zero by 2050.
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