European targets to improve
energy efficiency, cut carbon emissions and increase renewable energy
generation in 2030 should be mandatory, say MEPs
Members of the European
Parliament’s energy and environment committees have voted in favour of
proposals that would impose legally-binding climate change targets across the
bloc up to 2030.
Under current EU policy,
member states have committed to the so-called “20-20-20” goals – reducing
carbon emissions by 20% on 1990 levels, sourcing 20% of energy from renewable
sources and boosting energy efficiency by 20% by 2020. While the bloc is on
track to meet its mandatory CO2 and renewable energy targets, it is unlikely to
hit its voluntary energy efficiency goal. The draft report, backed by the
parliament’s energy and environment committees, calls for a “binding 2030 EU
energy efficiency target of 40%”, alongside mandatory carbon reduction and
renewable energy targets.
CRS Head of Environment,
Richard Ball commented ‘ it is clear that political pressure from climate targets
and fuel & energy prices make energy management a business critical area
for the foreseeable future. Environmental Practitioners working within
organisations need to have the skills to develop long term plans to drive
continual improvement in Carbon Management over the next 5 – 10 years and
beyond. Corporate Risk Systems’ Applied
Learning Course in Environmental Management supports delegates to develop a
carbon plan for their organisation.
However, the European
commission, which is due to outline its proposals for 2030 goals on 22 January
in its new climate and energy policy framework, is expected to resist setting
any target on energy efficiency and to move away from legally-binding goals on
renewable energy generation.
Stefan Scheuer, secretary
general for the Coalition for Energy Savings, warned against such an approach.
“This [the MEPs vote] is a clear and timely call to the European commission and
member states to abandon the dangerous path of dropping the three-target
approach that has been evolving since 2007.
“It confirms that making
the efficiency target binding is the only way forward to capture the huge
energy savings possible.”
In December, energy
ministers from eight European countries, including Germany and France, wrote to
climate change commissioner Connie Hedegaard calling for a 2030 target on
renewable energy generation. The ministers argued that a “robust, long-term framework”
in support of renewables was necessary to secure investment.
The European parliament
will vote on adopting the committees’ report at the beginning of February and
negotiations with commission and member states on the 2030 targets will begin
in March.
Source: Environmentalist
No comments:
Post a Comment