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News Releases


No. 05/08
January 23, 2008
BOOSTING EUROPE'S GROWTH AND JOBS BY MEETING CLIMATE CHANGE COMMITMENTS
The European Commission has today agreed on a
far-reaching
package of
proposals that will deliver the
European Council's commitments to fight climate change
and promote renewable
energy. The proposals demonstrate
that the targets agreed last year are technologically
and economically possible and provide a unique business
opportunity for thousands of European companies. These
measures will dramatically increase the use of renewable
energy in each country and set legally-enforceable
targets for governments to achieve them. All major
CO2
emitters will be given an incentive to develop clean
production technologies through a thorough reform of the
Emissions Trading System (ETS) that will impose an
EU-wide cap on emissions. The package seeks to deliver
the European Union to reduce greenhouse gases by at
least 20% and increases to 20% the share of renewable
energies in the energy consumption by 2020--as agreed by
EU leaders in
March 2007. The emissions reduction will
be increased to 30% by 2020 when a new global climate
change agreement is reached.
"Responding to the challenge of climate change is the
ultimate political test for our generation,"
said
European Commission President
José Manuel Barroso.
"Our
mission, indeed our duty, is to provide the right policy
framework for transformation to an environment friendly
European economy and to continue to lead the
international action to protect our planet. Our package
not only responds to this challenge, but holds the right
answer to the challenge of energy security and is an
opportunity that should create thousands of new
businesses and millions of jobs in Europe. We must grasp
that opportunity."
"Building on Europe's pioneering emissions trading
system, this package demonstrates to our global partners
that strong action to fight climate change is compatible
with continued economic growth and prosperity,"
said
EU
Environment Commissioner
Stavros Dimas.
"It gives Europe
a head start in the race to create a low-carbon global
economy that will unleash a wave of innovation and
create new jobs in clean technologies. These proposals
implement the commitments made by EU leaders last year
through a fair share-out of the effort. Now all Member
States must make their full contribution."
EU Commissioner for
Energy Policy
Andris Piebalgs said:
"In a time of growing oil prices and climate change
concerns, renewable energy sources is an opportunity
that we cannot miss. They will help us to reduce our CO2
emissions, strengthen our security of supply and develop
jobs and growth in a high tech developing sector. If we
do the effort now, Europe will be the leader in the race
towards the low carbon economy that the planet so
desperately needs."

EU Commissioner for
Competition
Neelie Kroes
said:
“The
state aid guidelines are a significant contribution to
Energy and Climate Change policy in the Union and to the
continuing process of the state aid reform. This is a
win-win opportunity for the Member States to finance
environmental projects and for economic growth in the
EU."
Building on the EU Emissions Trading System, the
Commission proposes to strengthen the single, EU-wide
carbon market which will include more greenhouse gases
(currently only CO2 is included), and involve all major
industrial emitters. The emission allowances put on the
market will be reduced year-on-year to allow for
emissions covered by the ETS to be reduced by 21% from
2005 levels in 2020.
The power sector – forming the majority of EU emissions
– will face full auctioning from the start of the new
regime in 2013. Other industrial sectors, as well as
aviation, will step up to full auctioning gradually,
although an exception may be made for sectors
particularly vulnerable to competition from producers in
countries without comparable carbon constraints. In
addition, auctions will be open: any EU operator will be
able to buy allowances in any Member State.
Revenues resulting from the ETS will accrue to Member
States and should be used to help the EU to adjust to an
environment-friendly economy by supporting innovation in
areas such as renewables, carbon capture and storage and
R&D. Part of the revenues should also go towards helping
developing countries adapt to climate change. The
Commission estimates that the revenues from the
auctioning could amount to 50 billion euros annually by
2020.
The EU Emissions Trading System, now in its fourth year
of operation, has proved an effective instrument to find
a market-based solution to provide incentives for cuts
in greenhouse gas emissions. At present the system
covers some 10,000 industrial plants across the EU –
including power plants, oil refineries and steel mills
– accounting for almost half the EU's CO2 emissions.
Under the new system over 40% of total emissions will be
covered by the ETS. To reduce the administrative burden,
industrial plants emitting less than 10,000 tons of
CO2 will not have to participate in the ETS.
In sectors not covered by the ETS such as buildings,
transport, agriculture and waste, the EU will reduce
emissions to 10% below 2005 levels by 2020. For each
Member State the Commission is proposing a specific
target by which it must reduce or, in the case of new
Member States, may increase its emissions up to 2020.
These changes range from -20% to +20%.
In addition to a properly-functioning market for
pollutants, all Member States have to start
changing urgently the structure of their energy consumption.
Today, the share of renewable energy in the EU's final
energy consumption is at 8.5%, which means that an
average increase of 11.5% is needed to meet the target
of 20% in 2020.
In order to achieve this, the Commission is today
proposing individual, legally-enforceable targets for
each of the Member States. The options for developing
renewable energy vary from one Member State to another
and lead times for bringing renewable energy on stream
are long. Thus it is important for Member States to have
a clear vision of where they intend to act. The national
action plans to be prepared by Member States will set
out how they intend to meet their targets and how
progress can be monitored effectively.
As long as the EU's overall target is met, Member States
will be allowed to make their contribution by supporting
Europe's overall renewables effort, and not necessarily
inside their own borders. This would shift investment to
where renewables can be produced most efficiently, which
could cut 1.8 billion euros from the price tag for
meeting the target.
Today's proposal also addresses the minimum target of
10% for use of biofuels in transport in the EU to be
reached by 2020. This is the same for each Member State.
Sustainability is essential in implementing this target
– the directive includes clear sustainability criteria.
The Commission has also adopted new state aid guidelines
on environmental protection which will help Member
States to develop a sustainable European climate and
energy policy. In comparison with the 2001 guidelines,
these new guidelines broaden the scope of aid projects
as well as increase the aid intensities. The guidelines
set out new conditions for state aid measures to promote
environmental protection and strike a very important
balance between delivering larger environmental benefits
and minimizing distortions of competition.
If aid is not well targeted, it will not deliver
environmental results and it risks distorting
competition, which can lead to lower economic growth in
the European Union.
Background
On
January 10, 2007 the Commission adopted an energy and
climate change package, calling on the Council and
European Parliament to approve:
- an independent EU commitment to achieve a reduction of
at least 20% in the emission of greenhouse gases by 2020
compared to 1990 levels and the objective of a 30%
reduction by 2020, subject to the conclusion of a
comprehensive international climate change agreement;
- a mandatory EU target of 20% renewable energy by 2020
including a 10% biofuels target.
This strategy was endorsed both by the European
Parliament and by EU leaders at the March 2007 European
Council. The European Council invited the Commission to
come forward with concrete proposals, including how
efforts could be shared among Member States to achieve
these targets.
This package is the reply to that invitation. It
comprises a set of key policy proposals that are closely
interlinked. They include:
(1) a proposal amending the EU Emissions Trading
Directive (EU ETS);
(2) a proposal relating to the sharing of efforts to
meet the Community's independent greenhouse gas
reduction commitment in sectors not covered by the EU
Emissions Trading System (such as transport, buildings,
services, smaller industrial installations, agriculture
and waste;
(3) a proposal for a Directive promoting renewable
energy, to help achieve both of the above emissions
targets.
Other proposals that are also part of the package
include a proposal for a legal framework on carbon
capture and storage, a Communication on the
demonstration of carbon capture and storage and new
guidelines for environmental state aid.
Legally binding targets for Member States in 2020

For more information on the package, please visit:
http://www.eurunion.org/newsweb/HotTopics/ClimateChange.htm
and
http://www.eurunion.org/newsweb/HotTopics/energy.htm
.

Further Contact Information:
Press and Public Diplomacy
Delegation of the European Commission
2300 M Street, NW
Washington, DC 20037
http://www.eurunion.org/PressRoom
Tel: 202-862-9552
Fax: 202-429-1766
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