TNE logo

EU sticks with low climate offer

The EU will stick with its lowest offer for cutting carbon emissions under a UN climate accord

22/01/2010

Article tools

The 27-nation bloc has committed to unilaterally cut carbon dioxide to 20 percent below 1990 levels over the next decade.

Ahead of the UN climate talks in Copenhagen in December it offered to deepen those cuts to 30 percent if other rich countries made similar efforts.

That offer still stands, according to the draft letter to top UN climate official Yvo de Boer. But it is unlikely to be carried out because the Copenhagen talks ended with a weak deal.

Experts say the total cuts offered there by rich countries amount to no more than 18 percent and fall far short of the 25-40 percent that UN scientists outline as necessary to avert dangerous climate change.

The world is currently on track for temperatures to rise to 3.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels by the end of this century, which would bring catastrophic melting of ice sheets and rising seas, some scientists say.

But many EU countries and industries are wary of increasing cuts to 30 percent alone, because the cost of cutting emissions might put factories at a disadvantage to rivals in less regulated countries.

Leverage
"After the Copenhagen failure, the EU would be foolish to again unilaterally increase its greenhouse gas objective," Gordon Moffat, the head of steel industry group Eurofer, said in a statement on Thursday. "Another 10 percent would be fatal."

But environmentalists say the EU is naive to think its conditional 30 percent offer creates any negotiating leverage and the bloc should move there anyway to set a moral example.

"Tackling climate negotiations with the same strategy as trade negotiations will simply get them bogged down like the current Doha round of trade talks," Greenpeace campaigner Joris den Blanken said.

Spain, which holds the EU's rotating presidency until July, drafted the letter, and will wait for feedback from all 27 EU nations before signing and sending it.

While participants in the EU's Emissions Trading Scheme, the bloc's main weapon against climate change, were worried that a 30 percent goal would raise the cost of carbon permits, analysts said the 20 percent target was largely priced into the market.

"Thirty percent is out of the picture for now," said Emmanuel Fages of Societe Generale. "Nobody was seriously attaching any probability to it post-Copenhagen."

At a meeting of EU ambassadors in Brussels on Thursday, a group of eastern European countries led by Poland joined Italy, Cyprus and Malta to call for the deletion of any reference to the 30 percent, even as a conditional offer, diplomats said.

Britain, Denmark, France and the Netherlands wanted the 30 percent offer to be prominent but to remain conditional.

Leave a comment

5 		stars5 stars5 stars5 stars5 stars
 4 stars4 stars4 stars4 stars4 stars
 3 stars3 stars3 stars3 stars3 stars
 2 stars2 stars2 stars2 stars2 stars
 1 star1 star1 star1 star1 star

Home Articles

Also in this section

Latin America's hard left losing its luster

"Fatherland, Socialism or Death!" scream the large red letters on a typical pro-government street pa...Read more

Inside the battle for Genzyme's future

At a recent dinner to honor the achievements of Henri Termeer, chief executive of biotechnology comp...Read more

Expanded New Zealand carbon scheme faces lean trading

New Zealand's national emissions trading scheme, the first outside Europe, moves up a gear from July...Read more

Inside a global cybercrime ring

Hundreds of computer geeks, most of them students putting themselves through college, crammed into t...Read more

EU-bound Croatia faces stagnation without reforms

Croatia may complete European Union entry talks this year but it risks prolonged economic stagnation...Read more

High stakes in China's big dig

In a tunnel deep beneath Shenyang's busy streets, Lu Ze flicked a switch and a lone light bulb revea...Read more

Europe emergency fund to happen eventually

A European Monetary Fund to help troubled Eurozone countries will be created at some stage but will ...Read more

Endeavour ends space shuttle fleet's 130th mission

Space shuttle Endeavour and its six crew members wrapped up a 14-day construction mission to the Int...Read more

IMF gold plan poses tricky twist for market

The IMF's long-planned sale of its 403 tonnes of gold has taken on a new twist that may chip away at...Read more

Kenya moves zebras to feed marauding lions

A zebra leaps to freedom after a gruelling six-hour truck journey to Kenya's Amboseli National Park....Read more

Myanmar turns to bartering

Faced with a shortage of small banknotes, people in Myanmar are resorting to bartering cigarettes, s...Read more

No quick fix for Yemen, powers commit to long haul

International talks to stop Yemen from joining the club of failed states and becoming the regional c...Read more

Russia, once a scientific powerhouse, loses standing

Political turmoil, a brain drain of scientists and waning interest have transformed Russia from a na...Read more

"Ring of fire" solar eclipse millennium's longest

The longest, ring-like solar eclipse of the millennium started on January 15, with astronomers sayin...Read more

Gene may pinpoint most aggressive prostate cancer

Researchers have found a genetic mutation that helps predict which men will have aggressive prostate...Read more

Swiss precision

The World Economic Forum returns to Davos-Klosters, Switzerland, between January 27-31. Lyndon Drive...Read more

Going it alone

From oil, to television, to steel, Hugo Chavez has a bold vision of nationalisation. But is he bitin...Read more

Identity theft

The highly lucrative theft of personal and corporate identities is becoming an international crimina...Read more

Aviation emissions

Aviation is growing at a rate matched only by the rising pressure to cut CO2 emissions. Surely somet...Read more

Branding an elephant called global warming

According to eminent people like Sir Nicolas Stern, if CEOs in the UK do nothing about climate chang...Read more

GM pharming

The UK has no tolerance for GM crops in the food chain, but will it accept using them to produce dru...Read more

Man machine

The concept of a machine that controls parts of the human body is no longer restricted to the confin...Read more

Cell division

With technology and interest growing steadily, will embryonic stem cell research head a medical revo...Read more

Virtual edition

In this issue, we list our 40 most innovative companies in the world and bring you the facts and figures from the latest developments making the news...
Doha talks in 2011 hinge on US politics-India

Doha talks in 2011 hinge on US politics-India

There is likely to be little movement in the Doha world trade talks by the end of this year and progress in 2011 will hinge on the outcome of November's US mid-term elections, India's commerce secretary has declared

Reform for Turkey

Reform for Turkey

Turkey's president has approved a constitutional reform bill sponsored by the ruling Islamist-rooted AK Party, opening the way for a referendum secularist critics have pledged to block in court