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EU Parliament passes weakened pollution limitations for animals farms

The EU Parliament on Tuesday provided its final approval to brand-new rules to cut pollution from animals farms, but only after agreeing with EU countries to make the law far weaker than at first prepared.

The law will tighten limits for farms and factories on waste disposal and polluting gases to try to reduce damage to the environment.

The Parliament passed the law by 393 to 173, with 49 abstentions. European Union member states need to offer their final approval before the law can take effect.

The law will not cover intensive cattle farming after EU nations and legislators agreed to ditch this part of the European Commission's proposal. Rather, the Commission needs to evaluate by 2026 how to deal with emissions from cattle farming.

That's despite livestock farming being the greatest emitter of ammonia - which the EU pollution law attempts to restrict - within Europe's animals farming sector, according to the European Environment Agency.

The law will cover pig farms with a minimum of 350 animals units - more than doubling the threshold the Commission initially proposed. The brand-new limits, which use from 2030, will cover poultry farms with more than 280 animals systems.

Just 30% of the largest commercial scale pig and poultry farms would remain in the scope of the revised instruction, EU Environment Commissioner Virginijus Sinkevicius stated.

The Commission's original proposition, from 2022, would have imposed the brand-new limitations on all livestock, pig and poultry farms with over 150 animals units - around 185,000 of Europe's largest farms.

The EU is scrambling to respond to months of protests by farmers over concerns consisting of low-cost imported food and green policies.

To attempt to relax the protests, Brussels has actually compromised some green measures - despite the EU's own environment company caution that more, not fewer, climate-protecting policies are required to help farmers adapt to getting worse extreme weather.

Countries consisting of Bulgaria, Germany, Italy and Poland had pushed for fewer farms to be consisted of in the contamination policy, stating the original plan was unrealistic and burdensome.

(source: Reuters)