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Nations make late quote to salvage EU's nature law

A group of 11 countries, led by Ireland, has actually made a lastditch attempt to approve the EU's flagship policy to bring back damaged nature, in the middle of issues the law could be shelved following EU elections in June.

The law would be amongst the EU's greatest environmental policies, needing nations to introduce steps bring back nature on a fifth of their land and sea by 2030.

EU countries had prepared to approve the policy in March called off the vote after Hungary all of a sudden withdrew its support to wipe out the slim majority in favour.

Bring back ecosystems is vital to mitigate and adapt to the effects of climate change, and to safeguard European food security, the 11 countries said in a letter to other EU nations' environment ministers, released on Tuesday.

Our failure as EU leaders to act now would fundamentally weaken public faith in our political management, they stated.

The letter was signed by Cyprus, Czech Republic, France, Denmark, Estonia, Germany, Ireland, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Slovenia and Spain.

EU legislators and countries agreed an offer in 2015, however some have actually warned it would enforce challenging rules on markets. Farmers have staged protests throughout Europe over problems consisting of rigorous EU guidelines.

EU diplomats stated on Tuesday no country had actually altered its position on the law because March - leaving member states deadlocked.

Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands and Sweden oppose the nature policy, while Austria, Belgium, Finland and Poland plan to abstain. The other EU member states support the policy.

We need one country, one EU diplomat stated.

The 11 nations recommended putting forward the law for approval at a meeting of environment ministers on June 17. The European Parliament has actually currently approved it.

That would be days after the European Parliament election - which EU authorities suggested could give nations the political breathing space to support the law.

Surveys suggest the election will yield an EU Parliament making up more right-wing celebrations sceptical of ecological policies.

(source: Reuters)