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EU leaders to decide tougher climate goal in December
by Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) Oct 15, 2020

EU leaders on Thursday said they will decide on a more stringent climate target for 2030 at a summit in December, leaving more time to forge a united response to climate change.

Ambitious climate goals are backed by big EU powers including France and Germany, as well as many major businesses, but face resistance from eastern member states still dependent on coal for energy.

The 27 leaders meeting in Brussels said they will return to the issue "with the aim of agreeing on a new emission reduction target for 2030", conclusions from the summit said.

As part of its commitments to Paris Climate Agreement, the EU has pledged to being climate-neutral by 2050 when it would offset or capture more greenhouse gas than it emits.

However, the current interim target for 2030 -- a 40 percent reduction in CO2 emissions compared to 1990 -- is not sufficient to achieve the goal.

The European Commission, the EU's executive arm, has therefore proposed a target of at least 55 percent, while the European Parliament has gone even further with 60 percent.

Germany, which hold the rotating EU presidency, decided to postpone a possible agreement to the summit on December 10.

Eleven countries, including France, Spain and the Netherlands, expressed their support for a reduction of "at least 55 percent" in a joint letter on Wednesday.

But several Eastern European countries are opposed, including Poland, which is still heavily dependent on coal and refuses to commit to carbon neutrality.

"If it's a median target for the EU as a whole, there's no problem -- some countries could reduce (their emissions) more. But we, the Czech Republic, will not achieve it," Czech prime minister Andrej Babis said on Thursday.

Bulgarian Prime Minister Boiko Borissov pointed to the economic cost to his country's mining sector: "Our preliminary calculations suggest that a 40 percent cut is a ceiling," he warned.

The holdout states are expected to ask for additional funding, through something called the EU Just Transition Fund.

"All member states will participate in this effort, taking into account national circumstances and considerations of fairness and solidarity," the summit's conclusions said.


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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Nature backs Biden over 'disastrous' Trump for US president
Paris (AFP) Oct 14, 2020
The journal Nature said Wednesday it was backing Democratic candidate Joe Biden for US president in a full-fronted attack on Donald Trump's "disastrous" handling of the pandemic and undermining of global efforts to tackle climate change. One of the world's most prestigious scientific publications, Nature said that "no US president in recent history has so relentlessly attacked and undermined" vital institutions such as science agencies, the Department of Justice and the electoral system itself. ... read more

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