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Draft document reveals that EU will weaken reporting requirements on environment.

A draft EU document that was seen by revealed that the European Commission had drafted proposals for further cuts to EU environmental laws. The proposal targeted requirements on industries to report their pollution and waste.

The draft proposal is due to be released on Wednesday and is part of "omnibus" efforts by the European Union to reduce bureaucracy in business and to cut down regulations that are said to hurt the profitability of industries.

ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT SYSTEM

The environmental regulations in Europe are among the strictest in the world. They cover things like CO2 emissions and water quality, as well as bans on harmful chemical substances.

According to the draft document, the Commission, which is the EU's executive body, will propose that the EU no longer requires industrial facilities and livestock farms to have an "environmental Management System" (EMS) that details their actions to reduce waste and pollution.

A company can instead do a streamlined EMS that covers all of its sites, and some EMS requirements will be scrapped, such as the requirement to disclose hazardous chemicals in facilities.

In addition, the proposal would eliminate the requirement that industrial facilities have a "transformation" plan to align themselves with climate goals. Livestock and fish farms also would not have to report on their water and energy usage.

The proposal also simplifies environmental assessments of industrial and energy projects.

The draft stated that "this simplification package...aims to ensure the environmental goals of European Union are met in a more cost-effective, efficient and intelligent way."

A spokesperson for the Commission declined to comment on the draft as it could change before publication. Changes to EU law would need approval from EU governments and countries.

Cut Administrative Costs

The draft stated that the combined plans could reduce administrative costs by approximately 1 billion Euros per year.

Brussels set the goal to reduce reporting burdens for companies by 25% by 2029. Some businesses and governments have called on Brussels to weaken its green measures in order to compete with competitors from China and the United States.

This year, the EU has delayed its anti-deforestation legislation, exempted tens of thousands of companies from reporting sustainability and due diligence requirements, and weakened the green conditions associated with farming subsidies.

Brussels has been accused by environmental campaigners, businesses and investors of gutting the laws that help to manage climate change risks and encourage capital into the green transition.

The EU has not changed its climate change goals, but is under pressure from some governments to weaken certain policies to reduce CO2 emission - such as the bloc's ban on new CO2-emitting vehicles by 2035. (Editing by Timothy Heritage).

(source: Reuters)