BSS
  06 Feb 2024, 21:22
Update : 06 Feb 2024, 21:23

EU eyes 90% cut to greenhouse gases by 2040

STRASBOURG, France, Feb 6, 2024 (BSS/AFP) - The EU on Tuesday urged a 90-

percent cut to its greenhouse gas emissions by 2040, even as the bloc's
transition to a greener future was clouded by a widespread farmers' revolt.

"Based on the best available science, and a detailed impact assessment, we
are recommending that the 2040 target should be a 90 percent emission cut"
compared to 1990 levels, said the EU climate commissioner, Wopke Hoekstra.

He called for a "fair transition" that will still allow EU businesses to
thrive and ensure "nobody is left behind" as the bloc seeks to become carbon-
neutral by 2050.

In a sign of how politically fraught the environmental issue has become, with
farmers venting their anger around the bloc, European Commission chief Ursula
von der Leyen earlier Tuesday gave key ground by burying a plan to halve
chemical pesticide use by the end of this decade.

The proposal "has become a symbol of polarisation", she acknowledged, with
the legislation stalled amid divisions between EU lawmakers and member
countries.

Tuesday's announcements came as dozens of farmers protested outside the
European Parliament building, angry over shrinking incomes, rising costs and
what they say are increasingly onerous green regulations.

The 27-nation European Union is already working towards an interim target of
cutting greenhouse gas emissions by 55 percent by 2030.

But rising discontent could deal it a tougher time in trying to get the 2040
goal of 90 percent cuts adopted.

Far-right and anti-establishment parties have latched onto the farmers'
movement and are predicted to make big gains in June elections to choose the
members of the next EU assembly.

That vote will also lead to a new commission late this year. Von der Leyen
has not yet said whether she intends to seek a new mandate at its helm.

- Backlash -

There is a vocal backlash from some industries to the bloc's climate policies
and several national leaders are now calling for a "pause" in new
environmental rules.

Eleven EU countries, including France, Germany and Spain had sent a joint
letter to Brussels saying that the transition for an "ambitious" 2040 target
needs to be "fair and just" and "leave no-one behind, especially the most
vulnerable citizens".

The recommended target given Tuesday was accompanied by new post-2030 climate
projections the commission was required to produce in the wake of the COP28
UN climate negotiations that took place in December.

The next European Commission will be tasked with turning the outline into
proposed legislation ahead of next year's international climate summit
(COP30).

The bloc's 2040 targets are expected to rely in part on the capture and
storage of ambitious volumes of carbon dioxide -- incensing climate
campaigners who criticise the technologies as untested and want to see gross
emissions-cut pledges instead.

Even so, the plan would require a sizeable effort from every sector of the
economy -- from power generation to farming, which accounts for 11 percent of
EU greenhouse gas emissions.

- 'Very ambitious' -

Some of the strongest resistance to tougher environmental action comes from
the centre-right European People's Party (EPP), from which von der Leyen
hails.

The EPP's Peter Liese says a more cautious stance is justified.

As the bloc has been implementing its existing 2030 target, he said, "we see
more and more how ambitious it is".

Liese considered a 90-percent emissions cut to be a "very ambitious" target
for 2040 and stressed the need for "the right conditions, the right policy
framework".

Elisa Giannelli, of the E3G climate advocacy group, urged the EU to keep the
social impact of its climate policies front of mind.

"Getting this wrong," she said, "would allow conservative and populist voices
to set the direction of the next steps."

The United Nations climate change organisation said in November the world was
not acting with sufficient urgency to curb greenhouse gas emissions and thus
limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial emissions.

With temperatures soaring and 2023 expected to be recorded as the warmest
year in human history, scientists say the pressure on world leaders to curb
 

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