http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20060622/sc_afp/environmentclimateeu_060622134212
- Yahoo! News
EU way off course for meeting Kyoto targets: latest figures

by Richard Ingham Thu Jun 22, 9:42 AM ET

PARIS (AFP) - New data has shown that the
European Union (EU) remains embarrassingly off track for meeting its 
pledges under the Kyoto Protocol, the UN climate-change pact it 
championed after a US walkout.

Instead of falling, EU greenhouse-gas pollution actually rose in the 
latest year of monitoring, adding to the task of meeting the Kyoto 
goals, according to figures released by the European Environment 
Agency (EAA) in Copenhagen.

"Despite the various policy initiatives, this report highlights that 
the trend is still going in the wrong direction," declared EAA 
Executive Director Jacqueline McGlade.

"Europe must implement all planned policies and measures relating to 
reducing greenhouse-gas emissions," said McGlade.

She warned that EU members needed to take "ambitious" steps when 
crafting the next phase of their Emissions Trading System (ETS), a 
Kyoto mechanism designed to reduce pollution by big industry.

The EU-15 has pledged to reduce emissions by eight percent by 2012 as 
compared with a benchmark of 1990.

But between 2003 and 2004, emissions rose by 0.3 percent, or 11.5 
million tonnes, marking the second annual year of increase, the EAA 
said in its annual report.

Emissions in 2004 were just 0.6 percent lower than the base year of 
1990 -- more than four percentage points adrift of where they should 
have been by that time.

For the EU-25, after the "Big Bang" membership enlargement, the 
increase was 0.4 percent in 2004, or 18 million tonnes, over 2003.

"An increase of 0.4 percent may appear small; however, the magnitude 
of GHG (greenhouse-gas emissions) is such that the actual increase is 
significant," said McGlade.

"(It) is comparable to the amount of CO2 emissions released by three 
million people if they were to drive their cars around the world."

The EU saved Kyoto from collapse after the United States abandoned 
the treaty, then still in draft form, in March 2001 in one of
President George W. Bush's first acts in office.

The pact requires industrialised countries that have ratified it to 
trim outputs of carbon dioxide (CO2) and other gases that trap solar 
heat and could wreak havoc with the planet's delicate climate system.

Making these cuts can carry a significant cost, in making equipment 
more fuel-efficient and cleaner or in weaning an economy away from 
dirty fossil fuels and converting it to renewable sources, which is 
why Bush walked out.

The EAA report makes these points:

-- Road transport contributed most to the increase, accounting for a 
rise of 12 million tonnes of carbon dioxide (CO2) among the EU-15. 
Iron and steel makers were also culprits, upping their CO2 pollution 
by eight million tonnes.

-- Spain and Italy had the biggest GHG rise, with 4.8 and 0.9 percent 
respectively. Spain switched to fossil fuels after the 2003 drought 
hit power from hydro. Italy emitted more through oil refining and 
road transport.

-- Germany, Denmark and Finland did best, seeing reductions of GHGs 
of 0.9 percent, 8.1 percent and 4.9 percent respectively. Germany 
offset a rise from the iron and steel sector by big reductions in CO2 
in households and services. Denmark and Finland made further moves to 
switch from fossils to hydro in electricity production.

Friends of the Earth Europe reacted bitterly.

"Europes governments make grand statements about their commitment to 
reduce greenhouse gas pollution," it said.

"Yet economy and industry ministers continue to block or water down 
policy measures to switch to renewable energies, reduce energy waste 
or introduce fuel consumption standards for cars."

The report is the second bad jolt for the EU's Kyoto ambitions in 
less than two months.

In April, the ETS, a "carbon market" where companies buy and sell 
quotas of CO2 under the EU's cap-and-trade system, went into a 
tailspin. It emerged that some national governments had been hugely 
over-generous in allocating these firms pollution quotas in the first 
phase of the scheme.

The EAA report is sent to Kyoto's parent body, the UN Framework 
Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), under clauses requiring 
signatories to provide an annual inventory of man-made GHGs.

Its sources are national governments, although the data is also reviewed by the
European Commission and the EAA.


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