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Business News/ Politics / News/  EU to tackle climate change with more windmills
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EU to tackle climate change with more windmills

EU to tackle climate change with more windmills

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Brussels: The European Union will present plans on 23 January to tackle climate change with more windmills, fewer power-draining buildings and heavier penalties on major polluters.

Proposals by the European Commission will set out how the EU’s 27 nations can slash carbon dioxide and other gases linked to global warming by a fifth by 2020, a pledge EU leaders made last year.

Wind power generators along the Atlantic coast and tighter limits for coal-burning plants will mean cleaner air and a cleaner conscience for Europe as it seeks a global pact to cut carbon dioxide emissions that causes climate change.

Draft EU plans obtained by The Associated Press describe Europe and the world as being at a crossroads. The documents call for “decisive and immediate action" to release less carbon and steer away from unreliable and costly energy imports by developing homegrown renewable power.

But EU officials acknowledge that their green ambitions will carry harsh costs, at least 0.5% of gross domestic product, or $80 billion a year, and likely see electricity prices go up.

They insist that will be balanced by a $72 billion reduction in the EU’s bill for oil and natural gas imports, while a low-carbon revolution within Europe generates “first mover advantage" for a wave of energy-efficient goods and renewable power technology for export.

The EU is calling for a 20% cut in the region’s overall greenhouse gas emissions from 1990 levels, or 14% from 2005.

Richer EU nations will have to go further, while some poorer countries, such as EU newcomer Romania, will be allowed to increase emissions as their economies expand. No country will have to cut emissions by more than a fifth.

A push to use less energy should be simple and relatively painless, as the EU pushes people to install energy-saving light bulbs and insulate buildings, efforts that could reduce energy consumption by 20%.

However, the centerpiece of the program, a carbon cap-and-trade program for heavy industry, will carry a much more expensive price tag as it will likely hike electricity bills and may cause the cost of manufacturing in Europe to soar above other regions.

Up and running since 2005, the European emissions trading program gives polluters a financial incentive to reduce greenhouse gas emissions because they get permits they can sell if they emit less than their allowance. If they need to pollute more, they must buy extra permits.

Electricity generators and steel companies covered by the plan will see the amount they are allowed to release shrink by 21% by 2020. They will be joined by chemical, fertilizer and aluminum companies who face a smaller, 10% cut. Smaller polluters would be excused if they face other measures, such as a tax, to encourage them to release less.

Some companies already complain that tightening carbon trading will force up their costs and encourage them to move to looser regimes outside Europe.

And unlike now, they will not get all their original permits for free. The EU wants to auction all allowances for electricity companies and oil refineries with the justification that they can pass on those costs to their customers.

EU employers claimed last week that higher energy costs and paying more to pollute could make them less competitive than rivals elsewhere in the world. EU trade unions said they were also worried by the risk of major job losses if companies move abroad, saying 50,000 jobs in the steel sector were at risk.

Europe also plans to draw a fifth of its overall energy from renewable power by 2020. For many European countries, they will have to rapidly ramp up their amount of wind, solar or hydro power by 2020 to hit new binding targets.

Some have a hard road ahead. Britain, which generated 1.3% of its energy from renewables in 2005, is expected to be ordered by the EU executive to increase that figure to 15%. Hydropower-happy Sweden was close to 40% while Denmark’s wind farms brought it to 17%. The EU as a whole stood at 8.5% three years ago.

Part of this effort will come from replacing 10% of transport fuel with biofuels made from energy crops such as sugar cane and rapeseed oil. Each country will have its own target. Again, the EU has a long way to go. Biofuels accounted for just 1% of transport fuel in 2005.

EU officials rejected criticism from environmental and development campaigners that the sudden thirst for biofuels will see rain forests cleared and land turned from food to fuel crops, hiking bread prices across the world. They say they would set environmental standards banning imports of biofuels grown at the expense of pristine natural areas.

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Published: 23 Jan 2008, 11:29 AM IST
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