EU Emission Goals Compromised by Fierce Rebellion Led by Italy and Poland. By David Charter and Rory Watson, London Times, October 17, 2008. "Europe's commitment to ambitious green goals became the latest victim of the global financial crisis yesterday when a growing number of EU countries rebelled, claiming that the plans were now too expensive. Plans for binding European legislation by December were dropped as the EU watered down the carbon dioxide blueprint that it had announced with a fanfare 18 months ago. The revolt by eight countries, led by Italy and Poland, left the EU's self-proclaimed mission to shape a global, post-Kyoto agreement on greenhouse gases in disarray. President Sarkozy of France, which holds the rotating EU presidency, led the way in appealing to all 27 countries to stick to their targets. But tempers flared at the quarterly European Council in Brussels, with Silvio Berlusconi, the Italian Prime Minister, clearly furious at the pressure being applied. During a stand-up row behind the scenes, he told Mr Sarkozy that the targets would crucify Italian industry. 'Our businesses are in absolutely no position at the moment to absorb the costs of the regulations that have been proposed,' Mr Berlusconi said later. Donald Tusk, the Polish Prime Minister, said: 'We don't say to the French that they have to close down their nuclear power industry and build windmills, and nobody can tell us the equivalent.' In an extraordinary break with EU protocol, both leaders said that they did not have to stick to the deal because neither had been in office when it was signed by their predecessors in March 2007. The eight countries have the voting power to form a blocking minority, should they choose to do so. Under the original deal, EU countries would cut carbon dioxide emissions by 20 per cent from 1990 levels by 2020 - rising to 30 per cent if it encouraged global agreeement. Mr Sarkozy succeeded in preserving the overall goal but he faces an increasingly uphill task to hold various countries to their individual contributions."
2008-10-17
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment