EU needs to step up domestic climate efforts
EU needs to step up domestic climate efforts to
deliver on Paris
Brussels 22 April 2016.
Today at least 160 countries - and the EU – gather in New
York to sign a landmark climate deal with an ambitious
target to limit global warming to 1.5°C above
pre-industrial levels. On this occasion, 23 organisations
urge EU leaders to ensure that Europe’s largest climate
instrument will be made coherent with the Paris agreement.
Other key areas where the EU needs to deliver are the EU
Emissions Trading System, and emissions from
aviation.
Upcoming
legislative proposal for Europe’s largest climate
instrument
The European
Commission is expected to present its proposal for the 2030
Effort Sharing Decision (ESD) before the summer. The
ESD sets annual emission targets for each Member State for
the transport, buildings, agriculture, small industry and
waste sectors. These sectors account for almost 60% of the
EU’s greenhouse gas emissions.
Today, Carbon Market Watch along with 23 other organisations sent a letter to Commissioners and ministers calling for increased ambition that is consistent with long-term objectives, 5-yearly review and ratchet up mechanisms, starting in 2021 at actual emission levels, and closing the loopholes.
In the pursuit of cost-effective climate action, the EU Member States are pushing for certain flexibilities in the legislation.
“Using hot air from the ETS and other so-called flexibilities undermines real action to decarbonize Europe’s economy. The oversupply of EU ETS allowances must instead be addressed in the context of the ongoing reform of Europe’s carbon market,” warns Femke de Jong, EU Policy Director at Carbon Market Watch.
The EU’s carbon
market under review
The EU
Emissions Trading System (EU ETS) is the largest carbon
market in the world and one of the cornerstones of
Europe’s climate policies. It covers about 40 percent of
the EU’s greenhouse gas emissions. However, the pace of
emission reductions in the EU ETS is too slow to achieve
Europe’s 2050 objective of 80-95% emission
cuts.
“The current proposals for the EU’s carbon
market are not aligned with keeping global temperature rise
to below 2°C. This means that the EU is set to emit 2
billion tonnes more CO2 than is stated in its pledge to the
Paris Agreement, signed in New York today,” says
Femke de Jong.
A second problem with the
EU ETS is the large amount of surplus carbon permits. Ever
since its inception over ten years ago, targets were set
above business-as-usual emissions, resulting in a large
amount of ‘hot air’ which is set to reach over 3
billion CO2 equivalents by 2020.
Emissions
from aviation
Originally the
scope of aviation in the EU ETS was meant to cover emissions
from flights within as well as to and from the European
Economic Area (EEA).
The scope was reduced pending a
global solution at the International Civil Aviation
Organization (ICAO) this year. For now, the EU ETS only
covers flights within the EEA.
It is vitally important
that the EU maintains regional ambition and joins together
with other countries to establish an effective global
market-based mechanism to address international aviation
emissions.
“Currently, a large amount of emissions
is left uncovered, leaving regional and national policies to
pick up the slack. Increased ambition on the EU level to
reduce emissions from the aviation sector is vital if Europe
wants to reach its own target of at least 40 percent less
emissions by 2030," comments Kelsey Perlman,
Aviation Policy Researcher at Carbon Market
Watch.
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