Author (Person) | Bower, Helen |
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Publisher | ProQuest Information and Learning |
Series Title | In Focus |
Series Details | 10.10.02 |
Publication Date | 10/10/2002 |
Content Type | News, Overview, Topic Guide | In Focus |
The European Parliament will hold its first reading on 10 October 2002 of the European Commission's proposed Directive aimed at establishing an EU framework for emissions trading and an EU-wide market for emissions. The European Commission presented the proposal in October 2001 as part of a major package of initiatives to combat climate change. including a a proposal for the EU to ratify the Kyoto Protocol - an act which the EU completed on 1 June 2002. The European Commission believes that establishing an internal EU system for emissions trading offers the most cost-effective way to achieve the Kyoto target on greenhouse gas emissions whilst ensuring the proper functioning of the internal market and preventing distortions of competition that might arise from separate national emission trading schemes. The main features of the European Commission's proposal are:
The Commission proposal has been examined in detail by the European Parliament's Economic and Monetary Affairs Committee. The rapporteur, Portuguese MEP Jorgue Moreira da Silva, is expected to broaden the scope of the proposal - suggesting that the emissions trading scheme should apply to other gases than just the carbon dioxide targeted in the Commission's proposal and that the scheme should be extended to other industries, including chemical and aluminium producers. In addition, a proposal to allow British firms to opt out of the EU emissions trading scheme is also likely to debated by the European Parliament. The opt out would allow companies such as British Airways, Barclays Bank and Shell who all participate in the current UK scheme to continue trading emission 'credits' until 2006. Although the European Parliament is expected to support the proposal, which will be put to environment ministers later in October, the European Commission is against the UK opt out. Despite having authorised the UK scheme in November 2001, it indicated that the scheme would need to be brought in line with any future EU wide trading scheme. Whilst the current UK trading system targets emissions at the point of consumption, the EU scheme would target those at the point of generation. The European Commission believes that if the two schemes run side by side then emissions may either be counted twice or not at all. It also fears that if the UK opt out is agreed, other countries might seek exemptions, which would undermine the system overall. Helen Bower The European Parliament will hold its first reading on 10 October 2002 of the European Commission's proposed Directive aimed at establishing an EU framework for emissions trading and an EU-wide market for emissions. |
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Subject Categories | Environment |