http://ca.news.yahoo.com/010529/5/5gis.html

Tuesday May 29 12:25 PM EST 

EU Agency Pushes U.S. to Publish Environment Stats 

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The head of the EU's European Environment Agency
challenged the United States on Tuesday to publish environmental data so people
could compare the green credentials of the world's two biggest trading blocs.

Domingo Jimenez-Beltran said the United States might lead the world in tackling
air pollution but was trailing far behind on energy conservation and climate
change and that the public should be aware of the facts.

"It's important to benchmark the (European) Union against the United States,"
Jimenez-Beltran told a news conference where he unveiled the agency's latest
annual environmental report.

The head of the EEA -- the EU body responsible for compiling environmental data 
-- was scathing about U.S. plans to increase energy production and said 
consumers worldwide should be made more aware of the poor U.S. record on energy 
conservation.

"(President George W.) Bush is saying 'we need more energy', but he doesn't say 
that the United States uses 70 percent more energy per million dollars 
(generated by the economy) than the EU," Jimenez-Beltran said.

The fact that petrol (gasoline) costs half as much in the United States as in 
Europe could almost be considered economic "dumping," he said, because cheap 
energy meant U.S. products cost less to make than those in the highly taxed EU.

Jimenez-Beltran suggested that products should be labeled to show consumers if 
they were built in a country where energy efficiency was taken seriously or not.

Such a label should identify whether the product was built in a country that 
respects the 1997 Kyoto agreement on reducing greenhouse gases -- the deal 
rejected by Bush earlier this year.

"People should know if a product that uses a lot of energy (when produced) 
comes from a country that's in the protocol (or not)," he said.

The EU's greenhouse gas emissions are down four percent from 1990 levels, but 
U.S. emissions are up 11 percent, Jimenez-Beltran said, but added the EU could 
still miss its Kyoto target of an eight percent reduction by 2012.

The EEA report, a snapshot of the state of Europe's environment, showed the 
biggest environmental challenges were the growing demand for transport and 
energy and tackling an ever growing mountain of waste.

Jimenez-Beltran said to tackle these problems the EU should look at harmonizing 
energy taxes, particularly on petrol, and introduce tax on aviation fuel which 
is currently tax free everywhere in the world. 

Copyright � 2001 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.

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