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EU Parliament authorizes strategy to stop energy charter treaty

The European Parliament gave its permission on Wednesday for the EU to exit the energy charter treaty, an international contract protecting energy financial investments, over issues that it undermines efforts to eliminate environment modification.

WHY IT'S IMPORTANT

The 1998 Energy Charter Treaty allows energy business to take legal action against governments over policies that harm their investments. In recent years, business have used it to look for compensation for measures that require closing down fossil fuel plants.

The European Union wants to leave the treaty, which it says is a challenge to fighting climate modification and shifting to tidy energy.

Brussels proposed a joint exit, after EU members consisting of Denmark, France, Germany, Luxembourg, Poland, Spain and the Netherlands revealed their own plans to quit, mostly over climate concerns.

Losing the EU would approximately halve the treaty's current 50 signatories, which likewise consist of Azerbaijan, Japan and Turkey.

KEY PRICES ESTIMATE

The Energy Charter Treaty secretariat did not react to a. ask for comment.

Green EU legislator Anna Cavazzini, who led the Parliament's. work on the treaty exit, stated: This ridiculous treaty has slowed. down environment security and expense residents billions in taxpayers'. money in the type of legal expenses before private arbitration. tribunals and compensation payments to international. corporations.

WHAT'S NEXT

The Parliament's approval means EU countries can take a. decision to exit the treaty, expected in May, EU officials. stated. Ministers provided their preliminary support last month.

Cyprus and Hungary had wished to remain in, while other. nations were concerned that efforts to modernise the treaty. would go to waste with their departure.

To relieve those concerns, EU countries are anticipated to concur. that they will first permit reforms to modernise the treaty to. pass, before quitting.

Signatories to the treaty agreed the reforms last year, however. they had long shot of coming into force without EU support.

Among the reforms would halve the time non-EU energy firms. would continue to delight in the pact's protections to their. financial investments in the EU, after the bloc's departure.

(source: Reuters)