Green
Fade-Out: Europe to Ditch Climate Protection Goals
The
EU's reputation as a model of environmental responsibility may soon
be history. The European Commission wants to forgo ambitious climate
protection goals and pave the way for fracking -- jeopardizing Germany's touted energy revolution in the process touted energy revolution in the process
26
January, 2013
The
climate between Brussels and Berlin is polluted, something European
Commission officials attribute, among other things, to the "reckless"
way German Chancellor Angela Merkel blocked stricter exhaust
emissions during her re-election campaign to placate domestic
automotive manufacturers like Daimler and BMW. This kind of blatant
self-in
But
now it seems that the climate is no longer of much importance to the
European Commission, the EU's executive branch, either. Commission
sources have long been hinting that the body intends to move away
from ambitious climate protection goals. On Tuesday, the Süddeutsche
Zeitung reported
as much.
At
the request of Commission President José Manuel Barroso, EU member
states are no longer to receive specific guidelines for the
development ofrenewable
energy.
The stated aim of increasing the share of green energy across the EU
to up to 27 percent will hold. But how seriously countries tackle
this project will no longer be regulated within the plan. As of 2020
at the latest -- when the current commitment to further increase the
share of green energy expires -- climate protection in the EU will
apparently be pursued on a voluntary basis.
Climate
Leaders No More?
With
such a policy, the European
Union is
seriously jeopardizing its global climate leadership role. Back in
2007, when Germany held the European Council presidency, the body
decided on a climate and energy legislation
package known as the "20-20-20" targets, to be fulfilled by
the year 2020. They included:
- a 20 percent reduction in EU greenhouse gas emissions;
- raising the share of EU energy consumption produced from renewable resources to 20 percent;
- and a 20 percent improvement in the EU's energy efficiency.
All
of the goals were formulated relative to 1990 levels. And the targets
could very well be met. But in the future, European climate and
energy policy may be limited to just a single project: reducing
greenhouse gas emissions. The Commission plans also set no new
binding rules for energy efficiency.
Welcome,
Frackers
In
addition, the authority wants to pave the way in the EU for the
controversial practice of fracking, according to the
daily Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. The report says the
Commission does not intend to establish strict rules for the
extraction of shale gas, but only minimum health and environmental
standards.
The
plans will be officially presented next Wednesday ahead of an EU
summit meeting in March. Observers, however, believe that a decision
is unlikely to come until the summer at the earliest. But action must
be taken this year: At the beginning of 2015, a climate conference
will take place in Paris at which a global climate agreement is to be
hashed out.
The
European Parliament is unlikely to be pleased with the Commission's
plans. Just at the beginning of January, a strong parliamentary
majority voted to reduce carbon emissions EU-wide by 40 percent by
2030 and to raise the portion of renewables to at least 30 percent of
energy consumption.
Germany's
Energy Goals at Risk
The
Commission's move further isolates Germany. Merkel's government, a
"grand coalition" of her conservatives and the
center-left Social
Democratic Party (SPD),
seeks to increase the share of renewables in the country's energy mix
to 60 percent by 2036. As reported in the latest issue of
SPIEGEL, Sigmar
Gabriel,
SPD chair and minister of energy and economics, recently urged
Climate Commissioner Connie Hedegaard and Energy Commissioner Günther
Oettinger to put forth mandatory expansion targets for renewable
energy in the EU by 2030. Europe "can't afford to pass up this
opportunity," Gabriel wrote.
But
within the Commission, the ambitious project has long been
controversial. The same goes for EU member states, as Gabriel
recently discovered. Prior to Christmas the minister, together with
eight colleagues from throughout the EU, called for a "renewables
target" in a letter to the Commission. But some countries, such
as France, joined the appeal only hesitantly at the time. Paris might
prefer instead to rely more heavily on nuclear power in order to meet
stringent carbon emission requirements.
Energy
Commissioner Günther Oettinger, a German from Merkel'sChristian
Democratic Union,
has also shown reluctance. Rather than setting clear goals for the
share of renewables, he wants fixed targets only for the reduction of
carbon emissions -- and he is skeptical even of the 40 percent target
proposed by Climate Commissioner Hedegaard.
The
Berlin-based German Institute for International and Security Affairs
(SWP) writes in a recent study that more moderate EU climate goals
and less support for renewable energies could have a real impact on
Germany's so-called Energiewende,
or energy revolution. "In such a context," writes the
nonpartisan think tank, "it will be increasingly difficult for
Germany to successfully carry out pioneering policies."
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