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EU approves climate, emission laws

  • : Emissions
  • 23/04/18

The European Parliament today approved four key laws revising the EU emissions trading system (ETS), phasing out free carbon allowances for aviation, incorporating maritime emissions and establishing both a social climate fund and carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM). The vote paves the way for formal EU adoption in the coming weeks.

The legislation is part of the EU's Fit for 55 package of measures, which aims to cut the bloc's greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by at least 55pc by 2030 from 1990 levels. German centre-right EPP lawmaker Peter Liese led negotiations for parliament with EU member states for a deal settling the final legal text for the ETS revisions, which was adopted by a large majority. He said changes to the ETS and the regulation on land use and forestry (LULUCF) increased the expected GHG reduction to 57pc.

The file on ETS revisions contains a raft of changes to the system, including a tighter supply cap, strengthened market oversight, the gradual phase-out of free allowance allocations alongside the phase-in of the CBAM, and the expansion of the scope to include maritime emissions in the existing scheme and set up a new ETS for buildings and road transport.

Addressing parliament, EU commissioner Paolo Gentiloni said the new ETS for buildings and road transport will reduce emissions, while its revenues will fund the social climate fund to help EU states tackle the social effects of the transition. And the CBAM will put a fair carbon price on imported products, preventing the ETS from being undermined by carbon intensive goods produced from outside the EU, Gentiloni added.

The social fund, as well as the second ETS' planned price cap and "emergency" break, create "breathing space", Liese said.

The CBAM will be introduced gradually over the period 2026-34, initially covering aluminium, cement, iron, steel, electricity, fertilizers, ammonia, hydrogen and certain downstream products.

The CBAM agreement between parliament and EU countries obliges the European Commission to consider expanding the mechanism's product scope following a report in 2025. EU energy commissioner Kadri Simson warned parliament that the "significant" changes from the commission's original July 2021 CBAM proposal have moved away from decentralised administration by EU member states. "There's no margin to finance additional [European] officials," she said.

Dutch Green MEP Bas Eickhout noted the increased ambition in EU emissions cuts, albeit not enough to avoid average global temperatures rising by more than 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels. "But we are increasing our ambitions. Industry is getting a very clear signal, not only for 2030 but even more important for 2040," he said, adding that the €87bn social climate fund is "insufficient".

Parliament's environment committee voted through the legislative acts in February. Following formal adoption by EU ministers, the legislation will be published in the EU official journal.


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