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EU attempts to open deal to give up controversial energy investment treaty

The European Commission on Friday urged member states not to oppose reforms to an global energy treaty it says the bloc needs to leave anyhow since it weakens efforts to combat environment change.

Enabling the treaty to be reformed would halve the time non-EU energy companies would continue to enjoy the pact's. protections to their investments in the EU after the bloc's. departure.

The 1998 Energy Charter Treaty enables energy companies to. sue federal governments over policies that harm their investments and. recently has been utilized to challenge policies that require. fossil fuel plants to shut.

Brussels initially proposed a coordinated EU departure from the. treaty last July, after member states consisting of Denmark, France,. Germany, Luxembourg, Poland, Spain and the Netherlands announced. strategies to stop, with most citing climate modification issues.

Other countries have yet to come on board, with some,. including Cyprus and Hungary, eager to remain in, and others. worried that their efforts to improve the treaty would go to. waste with their departure.

In a quote to find the required majority assistance for a joint. exit, the European Commission proposed on Friday that EU. countries need to back reforms the treaty's roughly 50. signatories concurred in 2015, but which had long shot of. entering force without the EU's green light.

Lukas Schaugg, an expert at the International Institute for. Sustainable Development think tank, stated he was hopeful the. proposition might unblock the deadlock amongst member states.

Among the crucial proposed reforms to the treaty is the. reduction to 10 years the period energy firms from non-EU. signatories such as Japan and Turkey would delight in protection of. their existing financial investments in the bloc.

Brussels' proposition would enable the changes to enter into. force, after which, the EU would leave the treaty.

Withdrawing from the treaty without first authorizing the. reforms would leave the EU subject to the present sunset provision. that for 20 years safeguards existing investments.

(source: Reuters)