EU ministers urge quick action on climate and carbon

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Ministers from the 13 EU ‘Green Growth Group’ countries have released a joint statement, urging the European Council to adopt a climate and energy framework going forward to 2030. The group, which includes Britain’s Ed Davey, France’s Philippe Martin and officials from other countries including Germany, Italy, Spain, the Netherlands and Denmark, has issued a list of proposals and recommendations for environmental action in Europe.

Among the points raised by the group was an acknowledgement that some energy intensive industries currently face a challenge to their competitiveness, created in part by the increasing divergence of energy prices in the US and the EU. However the group argues strongly against any notion that EU energy and climate policies are the cause of the gap and the 13 signatories of the statement believe the competitiveness of European industry is paramount to the union’s fortunes.

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The Green Growth Group, an “informal grouping of like-minded energy, climate and environment Ministers from 13 EU Member States”, published a pamphlet in October to contribute to the consultative process on renewable energy targets for the EU. The October pamphlet called for action to lower and limit carbon emissions and strongly backed evidence linking human behaviour to climate change.

The current EU target for renewable energy is set at 20% of generation by 2020. A target of 27% by 2030 across Europe has been proposed but without individual, binding national goals. Frauke Thies, policy director of the European Photovoltaics Industry Association (EPIA), said this target was “little more than business as usual”.

The latest Green Growth Group statement, published on Monday, put nine points forward for consideration, beginning with the group’s strong urging of the EU to agree climate targets. The group would like to see an EU-wide commitment to a renewable energy target of 27%, according to the statement. However the group believes this should not be enforced through nationally binding targets. Instead it should be left to the freedom of member states to meet the target as they see fit, through their chosen mix of renewable energy and energy efficiency measures.

The ministers also believe an EU-wide set of binding targets should be set for greenhouse gases, which the group says should be “at least 40%”. Delays in setting these targets and sticking to the course would jeopardise investment and provide too much uncertainty, according to the statement.

The Green Growth Group urges EU member states to discuss openly the fairness and cost-effectiveness of renewable energy, sustainability and energy efficiency and believes the intensity of discussions should increase in order to develop broad agreement on targets and best practise.

Some of the most ambitious goals put forward by the 13 ministers include recommending a limit of two degrees for global temperature rise; the EU emissions trading scheme to be urgently and significantly strengthened. The group calls an emissions trading scheme “the cornerstone of a cost-efficient decarbonisation strategy and for unlocking low carbon investment”.

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