BENEFITS BECKON IF EASTERN EUROPEAN
COUNTRIES JOIN CLIMATE LEADER’S CLUB


Environmental Panorama
International
December of 2008


01 Dec 2008 - London / Brussels / Gdansk – As Polish Prime Minister, Donald Tusk, and French President, Nicolas Sarkozy host a summit with Central and Eastern European States in Gdansk on 6 December, WWF calls on eastern European leaders to reach out for the benefits of low carbon economies rather than try to hold the line for continuing high emissions and the economic model of a century ago.

The summit with Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania and Slovakia aims to achieve key compromises on the EU’s climate and energy package ahead of the European Council meeting from December 11th-12th.
In stark contrast, today the UK's independent Committee on Climate Change recommended that the UK should reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by 42% from 11000 levels by 2020, a world beating target that the committee considers affordable and achievable despite the economic downturn. The Committee's recommendations will inform a legally binding limit to be set under the brand new UK Climate Change Act, which already requires emissions to be cut by at least 80% by 2050.

Referencing the UK example, WWF calls on Central and Eastern European countries to adopt similar targets and agree on ambitious climate policies for the EU.

Poland, which hosts both this summit and the crucial UN climate change talks being held in Poznan from December 1st-12th, was singled out for particular attention and encouraged to propose a position consistent with its Presidency role in Poznan.

“There is a unique opportunity for eastern European countries to decide if they want to belong to the group of leaders moving to a low carbon economy, or to the countries lagging behind with economies stuck in the past,” says Delia Villagrasa, Senior Advisor to WWF.

“The host of the UN conference has the obligation to propose measures that will deliver us a safer climate future.”

So far, the Polish government has claimed that the EU climate package will harm its economy, claims that WWF argues are unsubstantiated.

“Poland already benefits from targets allowing for increased emissions and will get extra support from the auctioning revenues of pollution permits under the EU Emissions Trading Scheme, which it can use to make energy and housing infrastructure more efficient. But much of eastern Europe has been opposed to full auctioning of pollution permits”, said Villagrasa.

Eastern European countries can also use the upcoming EU budget negotiations to ensure that billions allocated to them are substantially used for energy efficiency measures, which will increase living standards and alleviate fuel poverty. It is not about lack of money, but of political will,” said Villagrasa.

The 27 member States of the EU have a historic responsibility for greenhouse gas emissions and must therefore play a leading role in fighting climate change. Many eastern European nations in particular have elevated emissions levels. Bulgaria and Romania have CO2 intensity per GDP unit ten times higher than the EU average; Czech and Estonian per capita emissions are higher than the majority of other EU countries; Lithuania displayed the second highest increase of emissions in the power sector between 2000-2006.

With regard to Hungary, WWF urges the government to abandon its demand to be compensated for emissions reductions which were due to the fall of the iron curtain and subsequent economic changes. Hungary should stop plans to fund new inefficient coal power plants with unabated emissions.

Central and Eastern European countries have an enormous opportunity to cut greenhouse gas emissions through untapped potential for energy efficiency and use of renewable energy. Committing to the EU climate package now will increase industrial competitiveness, reduce dependency on foreign energy supplies, reduce household energy bills and boost sustainable economic development with jobs in new cleaner sectors.

“The French Presidency must lead negotiations aiming at a strong climate package. Nearby Gdansk, in Poznan, the world will look at the European Union to see if it will show leadership for a global climate agreement for post-2012,” said Damien Demailly, Climate Change Officer at WWF France.

Notes to the editors
• Contrary to some claims, electricity prices will not be driven up by the full auctioning of emissions allowances under the EU ETS, according to a study carried out in the Czech Republic, Germany, Hungary and Poland by New Carbon Finance for WWF.
• The Gdansk Institute for Market Economics has recently issue the report “Evaluation of the 2030 Report, Impact of the European Commission’s Energy and Climate Package of 23 January 2008 on energy system, economy and households in Poland”, Warsaw, November 2008
• Climate Action Network Europe, Friends of the Earth Europe, Greenpeace and WWF are running a public campaign to keep citizens up-to-date with the discussions on the EU climate package and their implications for average global temperatures. At www.timetolead.eu citizens can take action by asking their leaders to support measures consistent with their commitment to keep global warming below 2°C.
Delia Villagrasa, Senior Advisor to WWF
Claudia Delpero, Communications Manager at WWF European Policy Office

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WWF calls on governments to crack the climate nut

01 Dec 2008 - Poznan, Poland: As UN climate talks enter their next round in Poznan, WWF calls on governments to ensure that the conference shifts the climate negotiations into a much faster gear by producing first real negotiation texts. A final version of the treaty is due end of 2009.

According to the global conservation organization, conditions for making progress in the global fight against climate change have never been more favourable than at this meeting.

“Barack Obama promises to lead the US with an ambitious climate agenda, and large emerging economies are making first moves to cut domestic emissions”, says Kim Carstensen, Leader of the WWF Global Climate Initiative. “Negotiators arriving in Poznan today never had a better chance to crack the climate nut and overcome the deadlock between developed and developing countries.”

WWF activists are welcoming delegates with nuts and nutcrackers to highlight that progress lies in their hands and is easily achievable. Negotiators should translate political will and promising ideas for climate solutions into texts that are fair and ambitious enough to keep global warming below the danger-threshold of 2°C.

“Industrialized country leaders can write history and lay the groundwork for success by committing to emission cuts of at least 25 to 40% by 2020”, says Kathrin Gutmann, Head of Policy at the WWF Global Climate Initiative. “To avoid the climate catastrophe governments must join forces to peak and decline global emissions well before 2020 and agree measures now for this target to remain feasible.”

Strong proposals for the architecture of the future climate regime which are already lying on the negotiation table should be fleshed out in Poznan. More importantly, financial support pledges by industrialized countries for mitigation and adaptation efforts in developing countries must increase – a crucial prerequisite for the developing world to sign onto a global climate treaty.

“The current finance crunch was the result of ignoring major risks, so let’s not repeat this mistake by ignoring even bigger risks from climate change”, says Kim Carstensen. “Delaying the funding for emission reduction efforts and adaptation activities in developing countries will only make things worse.”

Please note: The WWF action takes place outside the main entrance of the UN Climate Change Conference venue in Poznan on Monday, 1 December, from 7:30 AM to 10:30 AM. The WWF Position Paper Crack the Climate Nut and other materials are available at: http://www.panda.org/climate
Christian Teriete

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International
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