EU countries split over 2040 climate goal as COP30 looms

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EU leaders are struggling to agree on a climate target ahead of the COP30 climate summit, which starts in Brazil on Nov 6.

EU leaders are struggling to agree on a climate target ahead of the COP30 climate summit, which starts in Brazil on Nov 6.

PHOTO: AFP

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  • The EU is struggling to agree on a 90% emissions reduction target by 2040, facing internal disagreements over costs and foreign carbon credits.
  • Failure to agree risks undermining the EU's climate leadership at COP30, with a key meeting scheduled for November 4 to resolve sticking points.
  • Disagreements persist over the use of foreign carbon credits and France's "emergency brake" proposal, highlighting divisions among member states.

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BRUSSELS - European Union countries remain split over their new climate change target and are still debating changes, just days before their ministers are due to approve the goal, according to diplomats and EU documents seen by Reuters on Oct 31.

The EU is

racing to approve

a climate target, with the European Commission aiming to reduce planet-warming emissions by 90 per cent by 2040, even as some member states worry over the costs to struggling domestic industries.

Failure to reach an agreement would leave Commission president Ursula von der Leyen without a target to present when she meets other world leaders at the UN’s COP30 climate summit, undermining the EU’s claim to climate leadership.

Asked whether EU governments would agree on a target ahead of the Nov 6 leaders’ gathering at COP30, one EU diplomat told Reuters the bloc was “walking a knife’s edge”.

Countries including China, Britain and Australia have already announced their new climate targets, but

the EU missed a UN deadline to do so

in September as it struggled to overcome internal disagreements.

Central sticking points still unresolved

EU ambassadors gathered in Brussels to lay the groundwork for an agreement on Oct 31 failed to resolve central sticking points, diplomats told Reuters, leaving final negotiations to a meeting of ministers on Nov 4.

“Ministers will have to work hard on Tuesday,” the EU diplomat said.

That EU diplomat and others, all of whom asked not to be named due to the sensitivity of talks, said it was still unclear if an agreement could be struck.

Support from at least 15 of the 27 EU members is needed to pass the goal.

Countries like Italy and Poland have warned the proposed 90 per cent target is too restrictive, while others, including Spain and Sweden, want ambitious emissions cuts.

Disagreement over foreign carbon credits

A central point of contention is the use by EU countries of foreign carbon credits from developing nations to meet their targets.

France has said credits could potentially cover 5 per cent of the 90 per cent emissions cuts, while Poland also wants a bigger share. Germany has publicly backed 3 per cent, while others including Denmark originally did not want to use foreign carbon credits at all.

The latest draft proposal, seen by Reuters, showed countries have not yet agreed on the percentage of emissions they can offset with foreign carbon credits – which the commission, in its original proposal, said should be 3 per cent – or the year they can start employing them.

Ahead of the Oct 31 meeting, France also proposed a so-called “emergency brake” that could allow countries to reduce the 90 per cent emissions target by 3 per cent in future, if their forests absorb less CO2 emissions than expected.

The proposal aims to win over sceptical governments by addressing concerns their industries could be forced to cut emissions faster to meet the 2040 goal if forests under-deliver.

A French government spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment. REUTERS

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