The Jerusalem Post

What is EU’s ‘Green Deal’?

- • By JONAS EKBLOM

BRUSSELS (Reuters) – Ursula von der Leyen, the new president of the EU’s executive commission, laid out the details of her “European Green Deal” on Wednesday, coinciding with a UN summit on the climate.

Calling it “Europe’s man on the moon moment,” von der Leyen presented her plan to make the European Union the world’s first “climate-neutral” continent by 2050.

Following are the key components of her hallmark plan:

Von der Leyen wants the EU to reduce carbon emissions by at least 50% by 2030, compared with 1990 levels, considerab­ly more than the current goal of 40%. She may raise that aim to 55%.

Green lobbyists are pushing for an even more ambitious target of 60% or 70% cuts by 2030, but some critics say her plans may cripple European industries.

There is currently nearly unanimous support among member states for the EU to be climate neutral – not adding greenhouse gases to the atmosphere beyond what can be absorbed – by 2050.

Von der Leyen has pledged to present the first “European Climate Law” by March 2020 to enshrine that goal.

Her commission is to start work immediatel­y on a carbon border tax on polluting foreign firms in an effort to shelter EU businesses striving to become environmen­tally friendly.

Von der Leyen says the new tax, to be introduced in 2021, will comply with World Trade Organizati­on rules and start on a “number of selected industries.”

She will also reform the EU’s emissions trading system, which taxes industries, and work to include the maritime, aviation, traffic and constructi­on sectors.

Some of the EU’s 28 members, mainly from Eastern Europe, want financial aid to transition away from fossil fuels. The incoming commission’s answer is the “Just Transition Fund.”

Its size will depend on the outcome of negotiatio­ns on the EU’s long-term budget for 2021-2027 and the bloc’s cohesion funds, but is expected to amount to at least €35 billion ($39 billion) plus tens of billions in additional funding from other sources such as the European Investment Bank (EIB).

The fund would allow fossil fuel-dependent regions to finance their transition to clean industries and energy sources and retrain workers for higher-tech sustainabl­e industries.

The EIB, the EU’s lending arm, decided on November 15 to cease funding fossil fuel projects at the end of 2021 in line with von der Leyen’s goals for it to be “Europe’s climate bank.”

She wants the EIB to dedicate half its financing to climate investment by 2025. She also plans to fund parts of the European Green Deal policies with a “Sustainabl­e Europe Investment Plan,” with €1 trillion in investment over the coming decade.

Von der Leyen also promised to refresh farming with policies such as the “Farm to Fork Strategy,” designed to help farmers produce food in more sustainabl­e ways.

The Green Deal will also include a biodiversi­ty strategy for the coming 10 years, with the EU aiming for a lead role at the United Nations’ biodiversi­ty summit in 2020.

 ?? (Francois Lenoir/Reuters) ?? EUROPEAN COMMISSION president Ursula von der Leyen speaks during an extraordin­ary session to present a Green Deal plan, at the European Parliament in Brussels yesterday.
(Francois Lenoir/Reuters) EUROPEAN COMMISSION president Ursula von der Leyen speaks during an extraordin­ary session to present a Green Deal plan, at the European Parliament in Brussels yesterday.

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