For the last year, Central and Eastern European governments have been pressuring the EU to include less restrictive
criteria for biomass energy production and to recognise natural gas as a transition fuel towards climate neutrality. They may have realised their ambitions with the current draft of the
EU Sustainable Taxonomy proposal. Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) will be one of the most negatively affected regions if fossil fuels are included in the EU Sustainable Taxonomy. Such a development would open the way for environmentally harmful projects that would have a destructive impact not
just on regional ecosystems, but also on the global climate.
Along with 225 scientists, WWF, financial institutions and NGOs have signed a letter stating that if the leaked text
were adopted, the Taxonomy would become a greenwashing tool instead of being the gold standard in the fight against
greenwashing that it was promised to be. On a broader level, it would completely discredit the European Green Deal.
The EU’s supposed “gold standard” for sustainable investments could in fact provide an incentive to build more gas
plants while failing to close more coal plants.
Allowing gas to be labelled as green ignores the massive environmental effects of methane, a highly potent greenhouse
gas. Methane’s impact on climate change is up to 84 times greater than CO2 in a 20-year timeframe and, if natural gas
emits only 3% of its methane content it will cause even more global warming than coal.[1] A coal-to-clean instead of coal-to-gas transition would make more sense. Given the EU's strategic goal to become carbon
neutral by 2050, a second transition would be needed in 20 years’ time to transition from natural gas to renewables.
There is a climate emergency, and a two-phase transition that includes a prolonged phase-out of natural gas is
irresponsible, uneconomical, procrastinating and panders to big energy. The proposal also contradicts the recommendations of the Commission’s own Technical Expert Group published last year.
“A weak taxonomy will gravely hinder the chance to implement EU climate targets, especially in CEE countries. We need a
taxonomy that stops greenwashing and is in alignment with what science tells us.” - Alina Blaga, Regional Policy Lead, WWF Central and Eastern Europe WWF Central and Eastern Europe not only asks the
EU Commission to permanently remove natural gas from the sustainable taxonomy. Small hydro should also be permanently
removed. The draft does not follow the TEG recommendation that “construction of small hydropower (<10MW) should be avoided.”
An excessive number of hydropower plants, including many small ones, already heavily disrupt freshwater ecosystems, and
the benefit of new hydropower in transitioning to carbon neutrality is negligible. Furthermore, the EC should
temporarily remove forestry and biomass from the sustainable taxonomy to allow for more discussions. This is based on
the precedent the EC set when it entirely removed agriculture from the EU Sustainable Taxonomy Act. The idea that forest
biomass can mitigate climate change is extremely problematic. Demand for forest biomass is hindering EU forests’ ability
to act as a carbon sink and threatening the integrity of biodiversity-rich forests in Central and Eastern Europe. The
Commission should reverse its decision to classify the burning of all forest biomass for energy as sustainable, and
exclude from eligibility all bioenergy feedstocks that increase emissions compared to fossil fuels, including
purpose-grown crops.
An EU Sustainable Taxonomy must be one that is based on scientific evidence, supports fully sustainable economic
activities, accelerates the shift from unsustainable to sustainable activities, truly reduces the risk of greenwashing,
and is aligned with the European Green Deal’s ambitions.
The EU Sustainable Economy must exclude small hydro and natural gas, and reject the idea that all forest biomass may be burned as feedstock.