EU: Up your targets!
EU: Up your targets
Europe must commit to at least 40%
emissions reductions by 2020 without offsetting
Copenhagen/Brussels, December 10 – Europe
must commit to at least
40% reductions in greenhouse gas emissions by 2020 without
offsetting,
Friends of the Earth International urged today as European
Heads of
State meet in parallel to the UN climate negotiations in
Copenhagen.
The meeting of the European Council in Brussels on
Thursday 10 and
Friday 11 December will discuss climate change and
emissions targets for
the EU with serious implications for the ongoing
international talks.
The European Union has to date committed to a 20% emission
cut by 2020,
and pledged to increase this to 30% conditional on the
commitments made
by other countries. Both targets are inadequate, include
huge amounts of
ineffective tricks such as offsetting, and would not
enable a just
solution to the climate crisis.
European governments still have not solved discussions on
how to count
emissions from forests and how to treat the so called 'hot
air' surplus
emission credits which could massively impact on the EU
targets.
Nnimmo Bassey, chair of Friends of the Earth
International, said:
"African countries are among the most affected by
climate change but
have contributed the least to it. We Africans demand at
least 40%
emissions cuts without offsetting in Europe and in all
other developed
countries which have got rich emitting the gases at the
root of the
problem."
Sonja Meister, climate campaign coordinator for
Friends of the Earth
Europe, said: "Europe must up its commitment
and agree to at least 40%
emissions reductions by 2020 at home. At the same time
European
governments must close all the loopholes which would make
the targets
meaningless. Achieving at least 40% cuts within Europe by
2020 is
technically and economically feasible - there are no
excuses for
governments not to act now."
"Young Friends of the Earth is saying 'up yours' to the EU about its
targets. To prevent dangerous climate change Europe must
take ambitious
action on both emission cuts and climate finance for the
most vulnerable
people in the world and for future generations. Real
solutions to the
climate crisis exist - false solutions like carbon
offsetting must be
rejected," says Young Friends of the Earth
campaigner Job van den Assem.
A study produced by Stockholm Environment Institute in
partnership with
Friends of the Earth Europe shows that at least 40%
emission cuts within
Europe by 2020 are feasible and affordable [1].
This is the minimum scale and speed of reductions science
says is
necessary from rich countries to avert the worst impacts
of climate
change, and is the kind of deep cuts needed if
industrialised countries
are to repay their climate debt and make a just and
effective global
climate agreement possible.
Friends of the Earth International also demands that the
EU makes a
strong financial commitment to pay its fair share of the
finances needed
by developing countries for mitigation, technology and
adaptation. This
needs to be new, public money additional to existing
development aid.
Short-term commitments alone will not satisfy developing
country
negotiators in Copenhagen. Long-term predictable financing
is needed to
enable those countries least responsible for climate
change but hit
hardest by its consequences to adapt and to develop
cleanly.
The money must be administered by the UNFCCC in a central
fund, the
world's largest grassroots environmental network said. Any
funding
outside of the UN, including the World Bank's climate
investment funds,
and any financial transfers made as part of offsetting
schemes should
not count as fulfilment of developed country commitments.
So far EU leaders have failed to put a firm financial
offer on the table
though developing countries are already suffering the
effects of climate
change.
NOTES
A new study published by Friends of the Earth Europe and Stockholm Environment Institute on December 1 proves for the first time that Europe could achieve at least 40% domestic emissions reductions by 2020 without resorting to false solutions like agrofuels, nuclear or carbon capture and storage.
The full report ‘Europe’s Share of the Climate Challenge: Domestic Actions and International Obligations to Protect the Planet’ is available at: www.foeeurope.org and www.sei-international.org/climateshareeurope
Friends of the Earth International has spokespeople from all continents and with a wide range of different expertise available during the UN climate talks in Copenhagen.
