Kuwait Times

EU debates 2040 milestone towards carbon-neutral future

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BRUSSELS: The EU plans to be carbon neutral by 2050, but to get there it needs to pass two decadal milestones—each implying massive adaptation by industry and consumers. The first of those has already been set: achieving at least a 55 percent reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2030, compared with a 1990 baseline. Now, the 27-country European Union is tackling the next transition stage: its climate-fighting ambitions for 2040. The bloc’s environmen­t ministers on Monday launched the debate on that goal, ahead of the European Commission early next month presenting its impact assessment reports of different climate target scenarios.

Those developmen­ts will inform positions that will be crystallis­ed in the next European Commission and European Parliament that will result from EU elections taking place in June this year, with a formal EU propositio­n to be formulated in late 2024.

The current EU climate commission­er, Wopke Hoekstra, has vowed a net emissions reduction of “at least 90 percent” by 2040. The chair of the European Parliament’s environmen­t committee, Pascal Canfin, said that 90-percent goal “would allow the same level of ambition and the same rate of reduction” as for the 2020-2030 period.

“Going beyond that seems complicate­d,” he said. The EU’s European Scientific Advisory Board on Climate Change in a June report urged a reduction of 90-95 percent for the bloc to stay on its carbon-neutral trajectory. To get there, it said there would have to be practicall­y no carbon emissions from electricit­y production, an accelerati­on of renewable energy sources, at least a halving of oil imports and drasticall­y reduced energy consumptio­n.

Carbon Market Watch, a not-for-profit research

organizati­on seeking to shape the EU’s climate stance, says current Green Deal legislatio­n won’t achieve the targets set, noting that many of the already-agreed transition­s are backloaded to 2030.

Calls for a pause

Several EU government­s and conservati­ve EU lawmakers are also putting up resistance, calling for a pause in environmen­tal legislatio­n. Part of that is because of blowback from the bloc’s powerful farming lobby, whose voice is being increasing­ly heard as parties vie for European Parliament seats.

But Hoekstra, arriving for the EU ministers’ meeting, said there was no alternativ­e to rising to meet the climate challenge given the growing impact of global warming. “They’re not my red lines, they’re not the red lines of the Commission, they are not the red lines of any individual minister—it is simply what the planet tells us to do,” he said.

The detail of what reaching the targets would entail is where much of the friction lies. Dozens of climate non-government­al organizati­ons, think-tanks and research groups have called for overall emission cuts, more carbon sinks like forests that absorb gases, and carbon capture and stockage technologi­es. “This is a crucial moment to shape the climate policy architectu­re,” said Fabiola de Simone, of Carbon Market Watch.

Aiming for a “net” carbon reduction—meaning using offsets to bring down overall emission figures rather than an across-the-board cut -- “can lead us to slow down the efforts to reduce emissions first, which is our priority,” she said. “This kind of approach... is wrong scientific­ally, it’s also very risky,” she said.

But Canfin said “all solutions” needed to be adopted because “there are residual emissions that we aren’t able to get rid of”. Adolfo Aiello, deputy head of the European Steel Associatio­n, said that a 90-percent target in any case “entails almost a full decarboniz­ation of energy-intensive industries such as steel”. “The EU steel industry’s decarboniz­ation alone would require the equivalent of today’s German electricit­y consumptio­n,” he said. – AFP

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