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EU sets September as target date for climate agreement

Sources familiar with Friday's discussions reported that the majority of European Union countries are in favor of a plan to reach an agreement on their new target for climate change by September.

The EU is currently negotiating its new climate change goal for 2040. Last week, the Commission proposed that the target should be 90% reduction in emissions from 1990 levels. However, countries will be allowed to purchase international carbon credits to reach a limited portion of the goal.

Denmark, which assumed the rotating EU presidency this month, and is leading negotiations among countries about the target, hopes to reach a deal during a ministerial summit in September, the Danish energy and climate ministry stated in a Friday statement.

After a Friday meeting in Aalborg of EU climate ministers, Danish Climate Minister Lars Aagaard stated: "It's extremely important to unite the EU behind new climate goals...We have a very short window to wrap up these negotiations."

Three sources said that the majority of EU member states backed the idea to reach a deal in September on the climate goal for 2040.

Sources said that a few countries, such as Poland, Hungary, and the Czech Republic were against a deal to be fast tracked, while others wanted changes made to the Commission proposal.

This is not something we should take lightly. It affects the entire economy. "Working under such time pressure just isn't reasonable", Polish deputy climate minister Krzysztof Blesta said, about the proposed deadline of September.

Both the Czech Republic and Hungary's EU representatives confirmed that their governments are against the deadline of September.

The climate change has caused Europe to become the fastest-warming continental in the world, causing deadly heatwaves. The 2040 goal has caused political tensions about how ambitious we should be to combat climate change. This is at a moment when Europe is raising its defence spending and trying to support struggling industries.

In an attempt to win over governments that are sceptical, the Commission has proposed flexibility measures which would allow European companies to achieve the 90 percent emissions target.

Bolesta stated that countries raised concerns at the Friday meeting, including lack of clarity about how these flexibility would work.

The EU has a deadline of mid-September to submit to the U.N., a new climate target for 2035 - a goal that the Commission says should be derived directly from the U.N.'s 2040 target. (Reporting and editing by Alex Richardson; Stine Jacobsen and Kate Abnett)

(source: Reuters)