UK
gets carte blanche to expand nuclear power, fracking under new EU
energy goals
New
energy goals set out by the European Union for 2030 will allow
Britain to meet emissions targets by building more nuclear power
plants instead of wind farms and expand fracking operations, despite
criticism by green campaigners.
23
January, 2014
The
European Commission has proposed a new target for 2030 across the EU
- to provide 27 percent of energy from renewable sources. Each
country will decide for itself how to meet the target in order to
limit rising energy costs. The commission decided not to introduce
any laws on environmental damage during the extraction of shale gas
by the potentially dangerous drilling process known as fracking.
On
Wednesday, the EC stated that EU governments should cut their
greenhouse gas emissions by 40 percent compared with 1990 levels.
Current national targets aimed at boosting the share of renewable
energy to 20 percent would not be renewed after 2020.
"What
we are presenting today is both ambitious and affordable," EC
President Jose Manuel Barroso stated.
For
Germany, France and Italy - which spoke in favor of the wind and
solar power development - the new goals came as a disappointment,
while Britain welcomed them. The UK will still have to provide 15
percent of its energy from renewable power by 2020, but after that
benchmark there will be no target.
The
new policy gives the UK government the long-awaited go-ahead to
develop nuclear power and fracking as its key energy source. The less
stringent rules allow Britain to use a mix of energy sources,
including nuclear, to tackle emissions in a cost-effective way.
"This
is a really good package," UK Energy Secretary Ed Davey said.
"It looks very much in line with the things the coalition has
been arguing for."
Green campaigners said the new rules undermined renewable energy goals and promoted shale exploration, which has been welcomed by the UK.
The
World Wildlife Fund (WWF) said it was disappointed by what it called
a "weak" EC outline of climate and energy policies. It said
that by suggesting a low renewable energy target which places no
legal requirements on member states, the EC was putting "the
brakes on modernizing Europe’s energy system."
"The
picture painted by the full set of policy proposals is dispiriting -
an energy-efficiency target has been deferred; canceling the massive
oversupply of carbon in the Emissions Trading Scheme is also
deferred; closing the gaps in EU shale gas legislation is deferred.
I’m sure the fossil fuel lobbyists will sleep well tonight,"
the head of Climate and Energy at the WWF's European Policy Office
stated on the website.
"It
is now up to Member State governments to show the political
leadership needed to inspire Europe towards an industrial and
economic revolution that will provide for both people and the
planet," Jason Anderson added.
Renewable
sources, such as wind and solar power, only function under certain
weather conditions, when the wind is blowing or the sun shining.
Although wind farms in the UK can be costly to maintain and
electricity produced by them is more expensive, wind power enables it
to be produced in an environmentally friendly-way, because the
turbines produce no chemical or radioactive emissions.
Electricity-generating plants using fossil fuels emit large
quantities of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, the major
contributor to climate change.
In
October the government gave the go-ahead for the UK's first new
nuclear station in a generation. The 16 billion-pound ($26 billion)
plant at Hinkley Point, Somerset will be developed by two Chinese
companies and run by a French energy firm, EDF Energy. Hinkley's two
planned reactors will provide power for up to six decades, and are
set to take the UK towards low-carbon power and lower generating
costs.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.