SHAME ON EU FOR POOL CLIMATE DEAL


Environmental Panorama
International
December of 2008


12 Dec 2008 - Brussels, Belgium/Poznan, Poland – Today’s agreement by EU leaders on the most contentious aspects of the EU’s planned response to climate change, known as the climate and energy package, has been condemned as a failure by Climate Action Network Europe, Friends of the Earth Europe, Greenpeace, Oxfam and WWF.

Green and development groups described today’s deal on the Effort Sharing law (which sets national emission targets for sectors not included in the EU’s emissions trading) as inconsistent with the EU’s long-standing target of keeping global warming below 2 degrees Celsius.

More specifically, EU leaders only made a weak and ambiguous commitment to the 30% reduction in EU emissions by 2020 they had trumpeted just last year. Furthermore, today’s agreement would mean that unacceptably high levels – around two thirds - of these reductions could be met by buying carbon credits from projects outside EU borders. EU leaders also refused to introduce measures, such as fines, to compel countries to meet their national targets – a fundamental flaw, which could prompt governments to think that they can get away with inaction.

Green and development groups are therefore calling on the European Parliament to show strong support for far greater European emission reduction efforts when it votes next week on effort sharing and reject today’s deal on this law. European citizens should express their outrage – and ask their national parliaments to stop external credits being used to buy the way out of real emission reductions within Europe.

In discussions over the future of the EU Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS), the European manufacturing sector was largely granted full exemption from requirements to buy carbon permits. This was done in the absence of any strong evidence that such a requirement would impact on the international competitiveness of these industries. As a result of pressure mainly coming from Poland, the polluting power sector was also awarded exemptions from having to pay for such permits in auctions, in spite of the huge windfall profits companies in the sector have reaped by passing on the costs of permits they have so far received for free to customers.

European environment and development groups insist that auctioning must become the norm for all industries covered by the ETS when the system comes up for review. Industries must pay if they don not reduce their pollution and the revenues generated must be used to fund tackling climate change in developing countries and in Europe.

Climate Action Network Europe, Friends of the Earth Europe, Greenpeace, Oxfam and WWF said: “This is a dark day for European climate policy. European heads of state and government have reneged on their promises and turned their backs on global efforts to fight climate change.

“Angela Merkel, Silvio Berlusconi, Donald Tusk and Nicolas Sarkozy should be ashamed. They have chosen the private profits of polluting industry over the will of European citizens, the future of their children and the plight of millions of people around the world. The Parliament can and should amend the worst parts of today’s deal.”

The EU also abjectly failed to make binding commitments to provide funds to help developing countries adapt to the unavoidable impacts of climate change, and to reduce the growth in their emissions – a move which has threatened the collapse of the ongoing UN climate negotiations in Poland. Campaigners demand that EU leaders immediately resume talks on financial commitments to developing countries and produce an adequate, binding proposal by March 2009. UN climate talks urgently need the EU to show it is willing to pay its fair share of the costs of tackling climate change.

“EU leaders will probably trumpet the deal on climate change as a great success, but in reality this is a big failure in EU ambition. Basically, Europe just decided to off-set about two thirds of its own greenhouse gas emissions, to have consumers pay for emissions permits that polluting companies get for free and to avoid supporting poorer countries in the fight to climate change. This is not quite the third industrial revolution we were expecting,” said Delia Villagrasa, Senior Advisor to WWF.

“The result of this race to the bottom is that Europe will reduce its own greenhouses gas emissions significantly less than the proclaimed 20% target by 2020.”

“In discussions surrounding the Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) Directive, EU Heads of State failed to provide a signal that heavily polluting power stations will no longer be part of Europe’s future. They did not accept to put a pollution limit on fossil fuel power stations, a failure particulary since the Emissions Trading Scheme is too weak now to guarantee emissions cuts in the power sector.”
Delia Villagrasa, Senior Advisor, WWF European Policy Office

+ More

Feeble EU and group of laggard countries stymie UN climate talks – WWF

12 Dec 2008 - Poznan, Poland – WWF says the disappointing lack of progress at UN climate talks in Poznan is a major missed opportunity towards reaching a new global climate treaty in Copenhagen in 2009. The stalemate was largely the result of a collapse in European Union leadership and obstructionism by other industrialized countries taking the negotiations hostage.

“This was a moment in time when real leaders would have stepped up and taken the positions that would combat the economic and climate crisis at the same time,” said Kim Carstensen, Leader of the WWF Global Climate Initiative. “Instead, industrialized countries preached sermons about the importance of climate protection in the Poznan plenary while lacking or attacking policies to make it happen at home – a serious sign of climate hypocrisy.”

With the US largely sidelined amid the transitioning presidential administration, the hope for EU leadership was dashed as Heads of States meeting in Brussels watered down the block’s climate package instead of moving clean energy development center stage for invigorating the economy. In contrast, developing countries arrived in Poznan with a constructive spirit and proposals to match, highlighted by China’s impressive leadership and Mexico’s pledge to cut 50% of emissions by 2050.

“A passive EU, in effect, joined the US as the second lame duck in the Poznan pond, while Canada, Japan, Russia, Australia and Saudi Arabia openly undermined progress”, Carstensen said. “These countries need to get serious about greening their economies and they need to provide know-how, funding and technology to developing countries. Otherwise, any prospects for a new global climate treaty will remain dim.”

WWF said many opportunities were wasted in Poznan, among them the inclusion of crucial biodiversity issues and the rights of indigenous peoples in the final text on the issue of Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation. It is likely that one positive decision will be to put the Board of the Adaptation Fund into operation, with the hope that money can finally begin to flow to support the poorest countries in their efforts to stem dangerous climate impacts.

Governments managed to at least make procedural decisions on a work plan that will advance the UNFCCC from just talking into negotiating. According to that plan, industrialized countries are expected to announce emission reduction targets for 2020 in early 2009. WWF urged rich nations to finally set these targets and to aim at cuts of at least 25 to 40% below 11000 levels. Together with financial and technological support for developing countries, such targets will be the signal of solidarity that people all over the world want to see.

“Despite the lack of major steps forward in Poznan, the door to a global climate treaty in Copenhagen in 2009 remains open,” said Carstensen. ”But with an entire year lost to blocking strategies and other maneuvers, time is running out quickly. Leaders must now work harder and faster to get the job done. It’s not a problem of the UNFCCC process, but one of political will among industrialized countries.”

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International
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