The Guardian Australia

EU on track to break pledge to cut methane emissions by 30%, warns report

- Arthur Neslen

The EU is on track to break a promise to cut methane emissions by 30% by 2030 made due to a “policy vacuum” on livestock emissions, a report has warned.

Methane is the second biggest contributo­r to global heating after carbon dioxide, with a greenhouse gas impact at least 27 times worse than CO2 over a 100-year time span.

Most of Europe’s methane emissions come from agricultur­e – particular­ly livestock – but the EU has avoided using policy levers such as its €387bn common agricultur­al policy to directly tackle the problem, according to the report by the Changing Markets Foundation.

Nusa Urbancic, the campaigns director for the Changing Markets Foundation, said: “We’re in a climate emergency and cutting methane is the best short-term measure to slow the temperatur­e increase. That is why we need urgent policy action to transform our food production systems. Our leaders must start listening to scientists instead of lobbyists, otherwise the EU won’t be able to meet the global methane pledge.”

Methane emissions rose by their highest ever amount to a new record last year, according to scientists at the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Observator­y.

The gas is already responsibl­e for about one-fifth of all global heating and the new study says that methane releases from animal farming in Europe now have the global heating power of 160 coal-fired power plants, measured over a 20-year period.

“It’s a big deal,” said Tim Searchinge­r, a senior research scholar at Princeton University and senior fellow at the World Resources Institute. “Enteric methane emissions [from cow burps and farts] alone would add at least 25% more to agricultur­al emissions by 2050, compared to 2010.”

Searchinge­r said the best ways to mitigate methane emissions would be to feed livestock more efficientl­y, use new feed additives which may reduce emissions, and cut down on beef consumptio­n.

The EU set out legislativ­e plans for reducing methane in a strategy outlined in 2020. But the new paper, which was co-authored with the Institute for European Environmen­tal Studies, finds that the bloc is still failing to set dedicated methane targets for the livestock sector, or channel subsidies for methane cuts, forcing a reliance on loophole-ridden regulation­s which may hide agricultur­al emissions.

Cutting short-lived pollutants such as methane could reduce global heating by one half between 2030 and 2050, a recent study found. But without new measures, the EU’s methane output may only fall 17% by the end of the decade, the new report estimates.

The European Commission has itself admitted it will fail to meet the 2030 target – although it projects a 23% cut by then – in an internal document sent to EU states. That paper said cutting livestock emissions would be key to meeting the goal.

However, the new report says that “undue influence” from agri-industry lobbyists, who EU officials met three times more often than non-industry groups, watered down legislativ­e initiative­s that could have cut livestock emissions.

A spokespers­on for the European Commission said: “EU methane emissions are already 36% below 1990 levels. Individual signatorie­s will make different contributi­ons to the global methane pledge depending on the makeup of their economies. The EU has an agricultur­e policy that focuses on the greening of the sector, including through the use of ambitious CAP strategic national plans. Agricultur­al methane emissions are harder to abate than methane from energy and waste, but the methane intensity of EU27 animal output steadily decreased from 2005 to 2020 and remains one of the lowest worldwide.”

 ?? Photograph: Bernard O’Kane/Alamy ?? Methane is the second biggest contributo­r to global heating after CO2 with most of Europe’s methane emissions coming from livestock.
Photograph: Bernard O’Kane/Alamy Methane is the second biggest contributo­r to global heating after CO2 with most of Europe’s methane emissions coming from livestock.

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