Imperial Valley Press

EU executive wants bloc to go climate neutral by 2050

- BY FRANK JORDANS

BERLIN — The European Union’s executive branch proposed Wednesday that the bloc should cut its emissions of greenhouse gases to net zero by 2050, a measure that scientists say needs to be adopted worldwide in order to avoid catastroph­ic global warming.

The European Commission is the first major economy to set its sights on achieving climate neutrality in the next three decades. The plan, which was announced days before a global climate summit being held in Poland, is far more ambitious than the national targets set so far by many of the EU’s 28 member nations and is likely to meet with resistance.

The EU’s climate chief, Miguel Arias Canete, cited a recent scientific report that warned of deadly consequenc­es for many species on Earth from rising temperatur­es.

“This has been a real wake-up call,” Arias Canete told reporters in Brussels. “And today we are responding to this call.”

Experts say ending the use of fossil fuels — a process known as decarboniz­ation — is one of the most important measures needed to achieve the 2015 Paris climate accord’s goal of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) by the end of the century.

Net zero emissions mean that any greenhouse gases emitted need to be soaked up by forest growth or new technologi­es that can remove carbon from the atmosphere.

Arias Canete said the tools to achieve this target already exist.

“We are not inventing the wheel,” he said.

Still, he noted that considerab­le investment will be needed to shift Europe’s economy away from fossil fuels and this needs to be done in a socially acceptable way.

Bas Eickhout of the Greens/ EFA group in the European parliament said the European Commission’s proposal , which isn’t binding, sends “a positive message” that saving the planet and economic growth can go hand-in-hand. But he noted that the EU executive had shied away from setting any new emissions targets by 2030.

“That’s of course where the political debates, where the political pain will be,” Eickhout told The Associated Press.

 ?? AP PHOTO/MICHEL EULER ?? In this Oct. 13 file photo demonstrat­ors hold placards during a rally against the climate change in Paris when demonstrat­ors in cities across France and Europe were marching against climate change.
AP PHOTO/MICHEL EULER In this Oct. 13 file photo demonstrat­ors hold placards during a rally against the climate change in Paris when demonstrat­ors in cities across France and Europe were marching against climate change.

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