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EU delays 2040 climate target proposal beyond Q1

EU delays 2040 climate target proposal beyond Q1

It said that the European Commission had delayed its plan to present a new EU Climate Target in the first quarter this year. This has pushed back the expected launch of a commitment to reduce emissions by 2040.

Last month, Brussels announced that it would amend EU's Climate Law this quarter. This long-planned change would establish a 2040 goal to keep the countries on track with their 2030 emission goals and the bloc’s aim of zero net emissions by the year 2050.

The proposal has met with opposition from some states and legislators who are unwilling to support the Commission's previous recommendation that the 90 percent reduction in emissions should be the target for 2040.

The EU's Climate Targets set in law the amount that countries must reduce their emissions net compared to 1990 levels.

A spokesperson for the Commission told reporters at a press conference on Friday that they could confidently assume it would not be adopted during Q1. However, he declined to confirm the date of its proposal.

Like most countries, the EU missed the February deadline for submitting a climate plan 2035 to the U.N. The Commission said that the EU's goal of 2040 should be used as a basis.

The EU has pledged to not backtrack from its commitments on climate change, despite President Donald Trump's scrapping of green goals for the U.S.

Scientists have linked global warming to the heatwaves, droughts, and floods that Europe has experienced in recent years.

The green agenda in Europe is under increasing pressure, both from the industry and certain governments. They claim that environmental regulations are harming businesses who already struggle with high energy costs and low demand. After industry pleas, the EU has agreed to relax CO2-cutting regulations for carmakers.

Some EU officials have also noted a reluctance on the part of some EU countries to begin political negotiations about the 2040 climate goals before the Polish presidential election in May. Poland is currently the rotating EU president and will be leading negotiations between EU countries up until July.

Warsaw initially refused to accept the EU's climate goal of 2050, citing the costs associated with the energy transition in the nation that relies heavily on coal.

One EU diplomat stated that he did not see a majority of EU countries supporting the 90% goal. (Reporting and editing by Frances Kerry, Kate Abnett, Charlotte Van Campenhout)

(source: Reuters)