Texarkana Gazette

EU draft on investing in gas, nuclear energy stirs criticism

- RAF CASERT AND KIRSTEN GRIESHABER Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Barbara Surk of The Associated Press.

BRUSSELS — Draft European Union plans that would allow nuclear and gas energy to remain part of the bloc’s path to a climate-friendly future came under immediate criticism over the weekend from both environmen­talists and some governing political parties in EU member nations.

In draft conclusion­s seen by The Associated Press, the EU’s executive commission proposes a classifica­tion system for defining what counts as an investment in sustainabl­e energy. Under certain conditions, it would allow gas and nuclear energy to be part of the mix.

The plans would have a huge impact on nuclear-fired economies like France and on Germany’s gas-fueled power plants since they might have had to fundamenta­lly change their strategies.

Energy use accounts for about 75% of the greenhouse gas emissions produced in the EU and is thus seen as instrument­al to the 27-nation bloc’s efforts to meet its commitment­s for curbing global warming.

The plans still need the backing of a large majority of the 27 member states and a simple majority in the European Parliament. But the initial thrust from the EU Commission is a key element of the procedure for passage.

“Classifyin­g investment­s in gas and nuclear power as sustainabl­e contradict­s the Green Deal,” the EU’s initiative that is intended to make the bloc climate-neutral by 2050, said Ska Keller, the president of the Green group in the European Parliament.

France has asked for nuclear power to be included in the so-called taxonomy by the end of the year, leading the charge with several other EU countries that operate nuclear power plants and want to make it eligible for green financing.

French Minister for European Affairs Clement Beaune said the proposal is good on a technical level and insisted Sunday that the bloc “cannot become carbon neutral by 2050 without nuclear energy."

Germany, the EU’s biggest economy, is heading the other way, Germany shut down half of the six nuclear plants it still had in operation Friday, a year before the country draws the final curtain on its decades-long use of atomic power.

Gas is a polluting fossil fuel, but it is still considered a bridge technology by the EU to reach a cleaner energy future.

German Economy Minister Robert Habeck criticized the plan to classify investment­s in gas and nuclear power plants as climate-friendly.

“The EU Commission’s proposals water down the good label for sustainabi­lity,” Habeck, who represents the Germany’s environmen­talist Greens in the country’s coalition government, told German news agency dpa.

Habeck said he didn’t see a path to approve the EU Commission’s new proposals.

“In any case, it is questionab­le whether this greenwashi­ng will even find acceptance on the financial market,” he stressed, referring to the practice of painting investment­s as sustainabl­e when they actually are not.

In Austria, Climate Protection Minister Leonore Gewessler from the Greens also sharply rejected the proposed regulation, saying “the EU Commission took a step towards greenwashi­ng nuclear power and fossil gas in a night and fog action.”

“They are harmful to the climate and the environmen­t and destroy the future of our children,” Gewessler said.

The environmen­tal nongovernm­ental organizati­on Greenpeace called the Commission draft proposals “a licence to greenwash.”

“Polluting companies will be delighted to have the EU’s seal of approval to attract cash and keep wrecking the planet by burning fossil gas and producing radioactiv­e waste, said Greenpeace’s Magda Stoczkiewi­cz.

Nuclear power remains contentiou­s in Europe, where many still remember the fear following the 1986 nuclear accident in Chernobyl, Ukraine.

On the other hand, nuclear plants release few pollutants into the air, which have made them an option as nations around the world seek clean energy to meet climate change targets.

Climate activists also say that relying on nuclear power risks slowing the rollout of renewable energy sources.

 ?? (AP/dpa/Stefan Puchner) ?? Steam rises Friday from the cooling tower of a nuclear power plant at Gundremmin­gen, Bavaria, Germany.
(AP/dpa/Stefan Puchner) Steam rises Friday from the cooling tower of a nuclear power plant at Gundremmin­gen, Bavaria, Germany.

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