The European Union remains deeply divided over plans to increase its CO2 emissions targets, with Eastern European ministers refusing to commit to bigger cuts.
The EU has agreed to unilaterally cut greenhouse gas emissions by 40% by 2030.
This target has been criticized by climate activists who claim that more radical cuts are needed to prevent ‘catastrophic’ climate change.
Responding to this campaign, the European Commission plans to publish an impact assessment of the additional cost of a revised CO2 target to 50% or 55% by 2030.
The EU would then need to agree on a new target with member states and lawmakers.
According to Reuters, a meeting of environment ministers from the EU’s 27-member states failed to find agreement on whether the target should be raised at all.
“Some are skeptical,” German Environment Minister Svenja Schulze said after the meeting.
On Monday, Poland, Slovakia, Bulgaria, Romania, Czech Republic, and Hungary wrote to the European Commission, announcing that they will not support a new CO2 target until they have seen the Commission’s economic impact assessment.
Read more at GWPF
More CO2 is better: since 1980 more CO2 has added 11% increased foliage and crop yields, Man is only responsible for 3.4% of all CO2, nature supplies the rest, meaning that even if all mankind stopped all CO2 emissions, instead of the earth hitting 405 PPM we would now be at 402 PPM. so stop wasting $ fighting something that the sun is responsible for.
Why dont the Euroweenie Union simply stop breathing all the time if their going to be as reciculous as they always have been and always will be