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Member states move to weaken EU energy efficiency targets

14 March 2017
Economics&Markets
energynomics

EU member states have moved to weaken the bloc’s 2030 energy efficiency goals, setting up tough negotiations with the European Parliament, which backs stronger legislation. The EU is revising its Energy Efficiency Directive, putting measures to meet its UN commitments to cap global warming into law.

The European Commission’s bill is being amended by both the Council of Ministers and the Parliament. Both MEPs and national diplomats must agree an identical text before it becomes law, according to Euractiv.com.

Malta holds the rotating Presidency of the EU. Leaked documents, prepared by Malta, revealed that member states will accept the executive’s proposed 30% increase in energy efficiency compared to 1990 levels. But governments have pushed back at the Commission’s demand that the 2030 targets be made binding, calling for them to be “indicative” (non-binding) instead. In October 2014, EU leaders supported a 27% 2030 energy efficiency target. They watered down the executive’s preferred option of a 30% binding goal.

The Commission, which has vowed to put “efficiency first” in its energy policy, has argued that the December 2015 Paris Agreement on climate justified increasing the draft target back up to 30%. Energy efficiency helps to prevent environmentally harmful emissions and will be vital if the bloc is to succeed in its low-carbon economy roadmap. That calls for an 80% cut in greenhouse gas emissions, compared to 1990 levels, by 2050.

The European Parliament has backed resolutions demanding a 40% binding efficiency target and is likely to call for greater ambition in the bill. “Member states should be seeking to increase ambition to 40%, as demanded by the European Parliament, not already scheming about how they might get away with future underperformance,” said Roland Joebstl of the European Environmental Bureau. Malta’s compromise is designed to please those member states that want a higher goal and others which resent hard targets imposed on them from Brussels.

The Presidency has said it wants to deliver an agreed position from member states on the EED before the end of its six-month term in June. The documents, dated 9 March, are subject to change as discussions continue.

“The compromise proposed by Malta falls short of providing certainty to the energy efficiency sector,” said Marion Santini of the Coalition for Energy Savings, a group of businesses, trade unions, authorities and civil society organisations. “Both a 40% binding target for 2030 and a 2050 perspective for annual energy savings are needed for the EU to act convincingly on energy efficiency and bring tangible benefits to citizens.”

“Now is the time to demonstrate political courage. The industry needs a strong signal to keep investing in innovation in energy efficiency. The binding nature of the energy efficiency target clearly gives the industry such clear signal,” said Alix Chambris, director of EU Public Affairs at Danfoss, which makes energy efficiency products.

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