Daily Observer (Jamaica)

EU rushes out $300-billion road map to ditch Russian energy

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BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) — The European Union’s executive arm moved Wednesday to jump-start plans for the 27-nation bloc to abandon Russian energy amid the Kremlin’s war in Ukraine, proposing a nearly 300billion euro (Us$315-billion) package that includes more efficient use of fuels and faster roll-out of renewable power.

The European Commission’s investment initiative is meant to help the 27 EU countries start weaning themselves off Russian fossil fuels this year. The goal is to deprive Russia, the EU’S main supplier of oil, natural gas and coal, of tens of billions in revenue and strengthen EU climate policies.

“We are taking our ambition to yet another level to make sure that we become independen­t from Russian fossil fuels as quickly as possible,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in Brussels when announcing the package, dubbed REPOWEREU.

With no end in sight to Russia’s war in Ukraine and European energy security shaken, the EU is rushing to align its geopolitic­al and climate interests for the coming decades. It comes amid troubling signs that have raised concerns about energy supplies that the EU relies on and have no quick replacemen­ts for, including Russia cutting off member nations Poland and Bulgaria after they refused a demand to pay for natural gas in rubles.

The bloc’s dash to ditch Russian energy stems from a combinatio­n of voluntary and mandatory actions. Both reflect the political discomfort of helping fund Russia’s military campaign in a country that neighbours the EU and wants to join the bloc.

An EU ban on coal from Russia is due to start in August, and the bloc has pledged to try to reduce demand for Russian gas by two-thirds by year’s end. Meanwhile, a proposed EU oil embargo has hit a roadblock from Hungary and other landlocked countries that worry about the cost of switching to alternativ­e sources.

In a bid to swing Hungary behind the oil phase-out, the REPOWEREU package expects oil investment funding of around two billion euros for member nations highly dependent on Russian oil.

Energy savings and renewables form the cornerston­es of the package, which would be funded mainly by an economic stimulus programme put in place to help member countries overcome the slump triggered by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The European Commission said the price tag for abandoning Russian fossil fuels completely by a 2027 target date is 210 billion euros. Its package includes 56 billion euros for energy efficiency and 86 billion euros for renewables.

Von der Leyen cited a total funding pot of 72 billion euros in grants and 225 billion euros for loans.

The European Commission also proposed ways to streamline the approval processes in EU countries for renewable projects, which can take up to a decade to get through red tape. The commission said approval times need to fall to as little as a year or less.

It put forward a specific plan on solar energy, seeking to double photovolta­ic capacity by 2025 and pushing for a phased-in obligation to install solar panels on new buildings.

Simone Tagliapiet­ra, an energy expert at the Bruegel think tank in Brussels, called REPOWEREU a “jumbo package” whose success will ultimately depend on political will in the bloc’s national capitals.

“Most of the actions entailed in the plan require either national implementa­tion or strong coordinati­on among member states,” Tagliapiet­ra said. “The extent to which countries really engage is going to be defining.”

The German energy think tank Agora Energiewen­de said the EU’S plan “gives too little attention to concrete initiative­s that reduce fossil fuel demand in the short term and thereby misses the opportunit­y to simultaneo­usly enhance Europe’s energy security and meet Europe’s climate objectives.”

The group’s research shows rapidly expanding solar, wind parks and use of heat pumps for low-temperatur­e heat in industry and buildings could be done faster than constructi­ng new liquefied natural gas terminals or gas infrastruc­ture, said Matthias Buck, its director for Europe.

The European Commission’s recommenda­tions on shortterm national actions to cut demand for Russian energy coincide with deliberati­ons underway in the bloc since last year on setting more ambitious EU energy-efficiency and renewable targets for 2030.

Those targets, being negotiated by the European Parliament and national government­s, are part of the bloc’s commitment­s to a 55 per cent cut in greenhouse gases by decade’s end, compared with 1990 emissions, and to climate neutrality by 2050.

Von der Leyen urged the European Parliament and national government­s to deepen the commission’s July proposal for an energy efficiency target of 9 per cent and renewable energy goal of 40 per cent by 2030. She said those objectives should be 13 per cent and 45 per cent, respective­ly.

Belgium, the Netherland­s, Germany and Denmark plan to build North Sea wind farms to help cut carbon emissions.

 ?? ?? Von de Leyen...we are taking our ambition to yet another level to make sure that we become independen­t from Russian fossil fuels as quickly as possible.
Von de Leyen...we are taking our ambition to yet another level to make sure that we become independen­t from Russian fossil fuels as quickly as possible.

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