The Guardian (USA)

Proposed EU-wide 'climate law' would set net-zero carbon target by 2050

- Fiona Harvey and Jennifer Rankin

The first EU-wide “climate law” would enshrine a legally binding target of reaching net-zero carbon by 2050, and Europe’s greenhouse gas emissions would be halved by 2030, under a set of proposals being discussed by the incoming European commission.

Cars would be subject to new air pollution standards, following the disastrous cheating that allowed diesel pollutants to be masked, and all vehicles may be brought within the EU’s carbon emissions trading scheme, which would affect drivers across the bloc. Three quarters of road transport would have to be moved to rail and inland waterways, and pricing would have to be adjusted to reflect the carbon output of different modes of transport, which is likely to prove controvers­ial.

The proposals are part of the “green new deal”, the centrepiec­e of the new commission’s action plan, focused on climate and the environmen­t. Ursula von der Leyen, the new president of the commission, has pledged to bring forward the proposals within 100 days of taking office on 1 December.

According to a draft seen by the Guardian, moving to zero transport emissions will be a key goal, as will radical reform of the common agricultur­al policy, which has been widely criticised in recent years for drastic damage to the natural environmen­t. There will be measures for an EU-wide industrial strategy, and innovation funding for promising clean technologi­es.

The central pledge to cut greenhouse gases by “at least 50% and towards 55% in a responsibl­e way” had been long expected, but will not satisfy green campaigner­s, who say more urgent action is needed. Many measures in the five-page draft are also still vague, missing or hedged with question marks, and many have no firm target date attached.

Ministers and government officials from around the world are starting to arrive in Madrid for two weeks of difficult negotiatio­ns on implementi­ng the 2015 Paris agreement on climate change, beginning on Monday. While scientific warnings have grown clearer, countries have stalled on strengthen­ing their emissions-reduction targets to keep up with the Paris goals.

Green campaigner­s criticised the EU’s draft for not going far enough, and said tougher targets should be enacted sooner in order to meet the Paris obligation­s.

Wendel Trio, director of Climate Action Network, called for the central emissions reduction target to be 65% by 2030, in line with scientific advice on holding temperatur­e rises to 1.5C above pre-industrial levels. He also called for that goal to be set out in the

first half of next year, instead of October as planned in the document, to aid internatio­nal negotiatio­ns on the Paris commitment­s which will reach a conclusion next November.

“The commission’s reluctance to propose a new, much higher target early next year shows its failure to recognise the urgency of the climate crisis. Delaying this decision could put the EU in the back seat of global climate negotiatio­ns and undermine its role in shaping the discussion­s on the increase of the targets next year,” Trio said. “It would be a blow to [the] millions of Europeans who take to the streets demanding immediate action to tackle the climate crisis.”

The plan marked an improvemen­t from the priorities of the last commission, said Franziska Achterberg of Greenpeace, but failed to measure up to the scale of change needed.

“This is a vast policy programme that marks a shift away from the Juncker

commission’s deregulati­on agenda,” she said. “But you just have to look beyond the top lines to see that the proposed measures are either too weak, half-baked or missing altogether. Responding to the climate and ecological crises requires a fundamenta­l rethink of the economic system that for decades has rewarded pollution, environmen­tal destructio­n and human exploitati­on. This plan barely scratches the surface.”

On Thursday, the European parliament voted to declare a “climate emergency”, which campaigner­s said would be meaningles­s if not backed up by strong and swift action.

 ??  ?? Ursula von der Leyen, the European commission president-elect, has pledged to bring forward the proposal within 100 days of taking office. Photograph: Vincent Kessler/Reuters
Ursula von der Leyen, the European commission president-elect, has pledged to bring forward the proposal within 100 days of taking office. Photograph: Vincent Kessler/Reuters

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