EU tells COP27 it will increase climate ambition

EU climate chief Frans Timmermans speaks at the COP27 UN Climate Summit on Nov 15, 2022, in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt. (PETER DEJONG / AP)

SHARM EL SHEIKH, Egypt – The European Union plans to update its emissions-cutting target under the Paris climate accord, the EU climate policy chief told the COP27 summit on Tuesday, with the upgrade expected before next year's United Nations summit.

The announcement attempts to convince others that the 27-country EU is sticking to its commitments to fight climate change, even as it battles an energy crisis.

The EU has among the most ambitious climate change policies of major emitters, having committed to cut its net greenhouse gas emissions 55 percent by 2030, from 1990 levels, and eliminate them by 2050

"The EU stands ready to update our NDC," EU climate chief Frans Timmermans told the COP27 summit in Egypt, referring to the bloc's Nationally Determined Contribution, or target to reduce emissions in line with the 2015 Paris agreement to curb global warming.

"So don't let anybody tell you, here or outside, that the EU is backtracking," he said.

The EU has among the most ambitious climate change policies of major emitters, having committed to cut its net greenhouse gas emissions 55 percent by 2030, from 1990 levels, and eliminate them by 2050.

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Electricity pylons are seen in front of the cooling towers of the coal-fired power station of German energy giant RWE in Weisweiler, western Germany, on Jan 26, 2021. (INA FASSBENDER / AFP)

EU countries and lawmakers are negotiating legislation to deliver those goals, which Timmermans said should be finished by the end of the year. An EU official said the bloc planned to then upgrade its target before next year's UN climate summit in November 2023.

Updating the EU's NDC does not necessarily mean the law containing its emissions-cutting targets also needs to be changed.

Ahead of COP27, the EU rushed through deals on three of the laws, including a 2035 ban on selling new fossil fuel cars. If implemented, those policies would cut EU countries' net emissions by 57 percent, rather than 55 percent, said EU climate chief Frans Timmermans

Ahead of COP27, the EU rushed through deals on three of the laws, including a 2035 ban on selling new fossil fuel cars. If implemented, those policies would cut EU countries' net emissions by 57 percent, rather than 55 percent, Timmermans said.

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EU policymakers say the use of more fossil fuel is temporary, and cite plans to expand renewable energy that the European Commission proposed making more ambitious this year to help countries quit gas faster.

But the optics of European countries burning more coal and funding new projects to burn more gas – while at the same time urging poorer countries to wean themselves off the fuel – have led some countries at the COP27 summit to complain of backsliding on green goals.

Chancellor Olaf Scholz said in May Germany wanted to pursue gas projects with Senegal, which has billions of cubic meters of gas reserves – even after pledging last year to stop funding overseas fossil fuel projects.

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The confluence of crises this year, from war in Europe to soaring inflation, has distracted many leaders' attention from climate change. Nearly 200 countries agreed at last year's UN climate conference in Glasgow to update their climate targets in 2022. So far, only around 30 have done so.

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