The Scotsman

EU unveils tough new climate rules and taxes on foreign firms over pollution

- By CHAD MAXWELL

The European Union has unveiled sweeping new legislatio­n to help meet its pledge to cut emissions of the gases that cause global warming by 55 per cent over this decade.

The measures include a controvers­ial plan to tax foreign companies for the pollution they cause.

The proposals by the European Commission, which is the EU'S executive branch, range from the de-facto phasing out of pet roland diesel cars by 2035 to new national limits on gases from heating buildings.

They will involve a revamp of the bloc's emissions trading scheme under which companies pay for carbon dioxide they emit and introduce taxes on shipping and aviation fuels for the first time.

The new legislatio­n will involve around a dozen major proposals - most of them building on laws already in place to meet the EU'S old goal of a 40 per cent cut in gas emissions by 2030, compared with 1990 levels - and must be endorsed by the 27 member countries and EU legislator­s.

World leaders agreed six years ago in Paris to keep the global warming increase to below 2C, and ideally no more than 1.5c by the end of the century.

Scientists say both goals will be missed by a wide margin unless drastic steps are taken to begin cutting greenhouse gas emissions.

"The principle is simple: emission of CO 2 must have a price; a price on CO2 that incentiviz­es consumers, producers and innovators to choose the clean technologi­es, to go toward the clean and sustainabl­e products," said European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen.

The European Commission wants to exploit the public mood for change provoked by the Covid-19 pandemic.

It is already channellin­g more than a third of a massive recovery package aimed at reviving European economies ravaged by corona virus restrictio­ns into climate-oriented goals.

The aim of the" fit for 55" legislatio­n,commission officials say, is to we an the continent off fossil fuels and take better care of the environmen­t by policy design, rather than be forced into desperatem­easures at some future climatic tipping point - when it is all but too late.

"The infernos and hurricanes we have seen over the last few weeks are only a very small window into what our future could look like. But by acting now, when we still have the policy choices, we can do things another way ," Ms von der Leyen told reporters.

European commission executive vice-president Frans Timmermans said that by failing to act now ," we would fail our childrenan­d grandchild­ren, who in my view, if we don't fix this, will be fighting wars over water and food".

Given the implicatio­ns, the proposals are certain to be subject to intense lobbying from industry and environmen­tal groups as they pass through the legislativ­e process over at least the next year.

They will also be met with resistance because of the very different energy mixes in member countries, ranging from coal-reliant Poland to nuclear-dependent France. It will impose duties on foreign companies,and so increase the price of certain goods, notably steel products. The aim is to ease pressure on European producerst­hat cut emissions but struggle to compete with importers that don't have the same environmen­tal restrictio­ns.

 ??  ?? 0 Ursula von der Leyen unveils green proposals
0 Ursula von der Leyen unveils green proposals

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