EuroNews (English)

ROUNDUP: Key energy and environmen­t votes in parliament

- Marta Pacheco

The legislatio­n adopted this week by the Parliament, already provisiona­lly agreed in back-room talks with member state offi cials, now awaits the nal rubber stamp from the EU Council before entering into force.

Right to repair

Lawmakers approved on Tuesday (April 23) strengthen­ing the right to repair of household products such as washing machines, vacuum cleaners, and smartphone­s. The law, backed by 584 votes against 3, seeks to reduce waste and bolster the repair sector.

German lawmaker René Repasi (S&D): “The new legislatio­n extends legal guarantees by 12 months when opting for repair, gives better access to spare parts and ensures easier, cheaper and faster repair.”

Monique Goyens , director general at the European Consumer Organisati­on (BEUC): “The Parliament agreement is great news for consumers: the new rules will put pressure on producers to make high-quality and repairable products. This will mark the closure of the chapter on impossible-to- x products that break too quickly.”

New market rules to promote repair over replacemen­t

Ecodesign

On the same day, lawmakers voted by 455 to 99 in favour of a new Ecodesign Regulation, replacing a directive of the same name, extends ‘sustainabl­e by design’ rules to tackle fast fashion and introduce a digital product passport to provide transparen­t informatio­n to traders and consumers. Overall, materials like steel, furniture, tyres, chemicals and textiles will need to comply with specifi c sustainabi­lity requiremen­ts for most products sold in the EU. Producers and retailers will also have to report the destructio­n of any unsold goods, starting with clothing and footwear two years after the law takes eff ect.

Italian lawmaker Alessandra Moretti (S&D): “Sustainabl­e products will become the norm, allowing consumers to save energy, repair and make smart environmen­tal choices when they are shopping.”

Neil D’Souza , EU-based expert in materials sourcing and sustainabl­e design, CEO of Makersite: “If there ever was one, this will be the regulation that will change the world, just like nutrition labels did in 1970. Looking back at history of similar regulation­s, I expect it will take 10 years or less to reach mass adoption in Europe.”

Air Quality

An updated Ambient Air Quality Directive (AAQD) was green lighted with 381 votes in favour and 225 against on Wednesday (24 April). The new law sets stricter limits for air pollutants and improves monitoring to pave the way for a full alignment with the World Health Organisati­on’s stringent guidelines by 2030.

Spanish lawmaker Javi López (S&D): “Thanks to Parliament, the updated rules improve air quality monitoring and protect vulnerable groups more eff ectively. Today [April 24] is a signifi cant victory in our continuous commitment to secure a safer, cleaner environmen­t for all Europeans.”

Margherita Tolotto , policy manager air and noise, at the NGO umbrella group European Environmen­tal Bureau (EEB): “Still, some MEPs have chosen to vote against human health and environmen­tal protection. When voting for the new Parliament later in June it is important for citizens to know who are the ones standing up for their right to health and the environmen­t and those who are not.”

Parliament backs stricter limits for air pollutants, better monitoring

Packaging waste

Another rubber-stamp vote awaiting Council approval, the Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation (PPWR) was backed by MEPs on Wednesday with 476 votes in favour and 129 against. The new rules are designed to make packaging more sustainabl­e and reduce packaging waste in the EU. The PPWR includes reduction targets - 5% by 2030, 10% by 2035 and 15% by 2040. Provisions to ban the use of so-called “forever chemicals also feature in the law.

Belgian lawmaker Frédérique Ries (Renew Europe): “For thefi

rst time in an environmen­tal law, the EU is setting targets to reduce packaging, regardless of the material used.”

Francesca Stevens , secretary general of packaging industry group Europen: "We're starting to see too many national diverged measures. And this is not just bad for business, but really for circular economy."

MEPs approve law to reduce growing stream of packaging waste

Due diligence

On Wednesday MEPs in Strasbourg voted 374 to 235 in favour of the Corporate Sustainabi­lity Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD), which requires big companies to check supply chains for pollution, environmen­tal damage or poor labour practices. The new rules will apply to EU and non-EU companies and parent companies with turnover of more than €450 million.

Dutch lawmaker Lara Wolters (S&D): “The CSDDD vote is a milestone for responsibl­e business conduct and a considerab­le step towards ending the exploitati­on of people and the planet by cowboy companies.”

Jennifer Kwao , trade and corporate accountabi­lity campaigns offi cer at Climate Action Network (CAN) Europe: “Starting with member states, the EU must keep a keen eye on them for swift and proper transposit­ion of the law [CSDDD]. And it should be ready to take them to task for failing to meet their legal obligation.”

Government­s support stripped-down corporate due diligence law

Energy Charter Treaty

Lawmakers overwhelmi­ngly supported withdrawal from the Energy Charter Treaty with 594 votes in favour and only 7 against. This brings the EU one step closer to rejecting the 1994 agreement intended to protect investment­s in unstable post-Soviet Union states, but whose investorst­ate dispute settlement provisions have primarily been used by energy rms to sue western government­s over the alleged impact of environmen­tal and climate legislatio­n on their future bottom line.

German lawmaker Anna Cavazzini (Greens): “Finally the fossil dinosaur treaty is no longer standing in the way of consistent climate protection, as we no longer have to fear corporate lawsuits demanding billions of euros in compensati­on brought before private arbitratio­n tribunals.”

Paul de Clerck , economic justice expert at the NGO Friends of the Earth Europe: “Politician­s now have the duty to further unlock Europe from fossil fuels, scrap the investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) parallel justice system that lets industry sue states over public interest policies in many other trade and investment deals, and accelerate the clean energy transition.”

Belgian Presidency seals withdrawal x from Energy Charter Treaty

Net-zero industry act

MEPs backed the EU’s answer to the Biden administra­tion’s Infl ation Reduction Act on Thursday (25 April) by 361 votes to 121, paving the way for an accelerati­on of the green industrial­isation of the bloc. The new legal framework is intended to boost the domestic production of technologi­es needed for decarbonis­ation, such as electric vehicle batteries, heat pumps, solar panels, electrolys­ers and wind turbines.

German lawmaker Christian Ehler (EPP): “This vote is good news for European industry and sets the tone for the next term. To achieve all our economic, climate and energy ambitions, we need industry in Europe.”

Dries Acke , deputy CEO of the Brussels-based trade associatio­n SolarPower Europe: “The NZIA is only one part of the story, while landing the NZIA sends a strong signal, it doesn’t negate the need for emergency support and for a structural EU fund for scaling solar manufactur­ing soon. Some manufactur­ers have weeks left of survival, this emergency requires urgent action from EU and national authoritie­s.”

MEPs agree to give European clean tech manufactur­ing a boost

Fiscal rules

Not strictly speaking an environmen­t or energy policy le, but the adoption on Tuesday of updated EU scal rules sparked outrage and despair among environmen­talists, who feared a return to austerity and rued the lack of any provisions to exempt public investment in green infrastruc­ture from a strict annual budget defi cit limit of 3%.

Belgian MEP Philippe Lamberts , president of the Greens/EFA Group: “Unfortunat­ely, at the heart of this reform lies an ideologica­l obsession that prioritise­s the dogma of debt reduction over investment and social spending.”

German Lawmaker Markus Ferber (EPP), parliament­ary rapporteur: “This reform constitute­s a fresh start and a return to scal responsibi­lity. The new framework will be simpler, more predictabl­e and more pragmatic.”

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AP / Matthias Schrader
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