A meeting of the European Union’s environment ministers has been told the bloc will cut its carbon emissions in 2020 by a bigger margin than it has pledged it would under United Nation climate change treaties
“Europe will be overachieving in 2020,” Hans Bruyninckx, Executive Director of the European Environment Agency said after presenting his organisation’s findings to ministers and European Commission officials in the Greek capital, Athens.
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euters Newsagency reports the EU has unilaterally pledged under the UN Kyoto Protocol for Climate Change to reduce its emissions to 20 per cent below 1990 levels by 2020.
Australia, per capita one of the world’s biggest polluters, has by comparison pledged only to cut emissions by five per cent and some analysts say that on current plans it will fail to reach that target.
The EU has already almost met its 20 per cent target and now expects to beat it easily by 2020.
“For the year 2020, total emissions are projected to be 24.5 per cent below base year levels,” it said in a document submitted to the UN on April 30.
Environmental campaigners welcomed the lower EU emissions but said this was no substitute for setting deeper targets.
“Without targets and new policies there is no guarantee that circumstances won’t change and emissions rise back up,” said Wendel Trio of green group coalition CAN Europe.
Reuters reports the ministers were meeting ahead of next month’s resumption of UN climate talks in Bonn, Germany, when nations with Kyoto targets had agreed to review their commitments under the pact.
Mr Trio said there was no chance the EU would agree on a deeper commitment at the summit but urged the bloc to toughen its goal eventually to “pile pressure on other big emitters into taking more action.”
Scientists and environmental campaigners have urged the bloc to continue its leadership in tackling climate change.
They say this would ensure global temperature rises are kept below the two degree Celsius level that UN-backed scientists say is needed to prevent a huge increase in droughts, flooding and rising sea levels.
Reuters reports EU member states remain split over how to meet an even more ambitious European Commission proposal to cut carbon emissions by 40 per cent in 2030, the bloc’s Greek EU Presidency said.
“There are three groups of member states,” said Greek Energy and Environment Minister Yannis Maniatis.
Some member states support the EC’s proposal while others hesitate to adopt any targets at all.
A third group, including Greece, wants to go even further, Mr Maniatis said.
The EU has pledged to agree on the 2030 targets and measures





