Baltimore Sun

Groups balk at EU plan to add gas, nuclear to bloc’s green list

- By Samuel Petrequin

BRUSSELS — A dozen environmen­tal groups are starting legal challenges against the European Union’s executive branch in a bid to stop the inclusion of natural gas and nuclear power generation in the bloc’s list of sustainabl­e activities.

European Union lawmakers in July voted to add natural gas and nuclear to the list, backing a proposal from the European Commission that has been drawing criticism and accusation­s of greenwashi­ng.

ClientEart­h, WWF’s European Policy Office, Transport & Environmen­t, and BUND said this week that they have asked for an internal review of the decision to include gas. The European Commission has up to 22 weeks to reply and the groups say they will take the action to the Court of Justice of the EU if the executive arm refuses to reconsider its move.

They said that “gas is a potent fossil fuel that threatens European energy security and has led to sky-high energy prices across Europe.”

The groups argue that giving gas a sustainabl­e label clashes with other EU laws and does not respect the EU’s commitment­s and obligation­s under the 2015 Paris accord’s target for limiting global warming.

Separately, eight Greenpeace organizati­ons in Europe have taken action over the inclusion in the so-called taxonomy delegated act of both fossil gas and nuclear energy. They, too, have sent a request for internal review to the Commission, arguing that their inclusion is a breach of the taxonomy regulation.

The green labeling system from the European Commission defines what qualifies as an investment in sustainabl­e energy. The EU’s executive arm did not initially include gas and nuclear and created divisions among member countries when it proposed their addition earlier this year.

The question of nuclear power has divided environmen­talists, energy experts and government­s for years, with some arguing it’s an important source of energy because it’s produced with no emissions and thus “clean,” while others say

the risks of nuclear reactions are too great and infrastruc­ture is slow and costly to build.

Liquid natural gas, clearly a fossil fuel, is roundly criticized in environmen­tal circles.

Under certain conditions, gas and nuclear energy will now be part of the mix, making it easier for private investors to inject money into both.

With the EU aiming to reach climate neutrality by 2050 and to cut greenhouse gas emissions by at least 55% by 2030, the commission says the classifica­tion system is crucial to direct investment­s into sustainabl­e energy. It estimates that about $350 billion of investment per year will be needed to meet the 2030 targets.

“This fake green label is incompatib­le with EU environmen­t and climate laws. Gas is a leading cause of climate and economic chaos, while there is still no solution to the problem of nuclear radioactiv­e waste and the risk of nuclear accidents is far too significan­t to ignore,” said Greenpeace EU sustainabl­e finance campaigner Ariadna Rodrigo.

 ?? INA FASSBENDER/AFP-GETTY ?? A gas-fired power plant is shown in Lingen, Germany.
INA FASSBENDER/AFP-GETTY A gas-fired power plant is shown in Lingen, Germany.

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