Brussels, 10 March – European Finance
Ministers failed to lay hard cash on the table today to support decarbonising
economies in developing countries and to compensate for coping with the
consequences of climate change [1].
Carbon offsetting schemes, such as the Clean Development Mechanism, have been
put forward as mechanisms to tackle climate change and encourage financial
flows to the global South. Friends of the Earth Europe believes that they are a
loophole for industrialised countries to avoid making necessary emission cuts
at home.
Finance ministers meeting today at the
Economic and Financial Affairs Council in Brussels have dodged responsibility
for providing developing countries with the funds they will need to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions and respond to the already existing impacts of climate
change. Taking into account the historical responsibility of the EU countries
for producing emissions, and their capacity to pay, the EU’s fair share of the
bill is of at least Euro 35 billion per year.
Esther
Bollendorff, climate campaigner at Friends of the Earth Europe, said: “At a time when we are
facing the most severe economic crisis of the last 50 years, the EU cannot
afford to make poorly thought out and selfish financial choices, bailing out
the car industry and bankrupt bankers. The EU has a moral and historical
obligation to help the developing world tackle climate change, a problem that
Europeans helped to create. The EU has to pay its fair share – estimated to be
at least Euro 35 billion per year”
Finance ministers have also endorsed the role of the Clean Development
Mechanism as an important tool to deliver substantial financial flows from the
EU to developing countries, and as a way to engage developing countries in the
carbon trading market. The Clean Development Mechanism has however led to
well-documented negative impacts on communities and the environment in the
global South [2]. “The Clean Development
Mechanism is inherently unfair and is based on the failure of industrialised
countries to achieve necessary emissions reduction targets at home,”
said Bollendorff. She
added: “EU leaders have to acknowledge that
the ability to buy credits abroad will not provide any incentive for European
economies to develop the technologies needed for much steeper emission cuts.”
Friends of the Earth Europe ask that the EU commit to 40% cuts in domestic
greenhouse gas emissions by 2020[3]. The current target of 20% gives no
significant chance to stay below a 2 degree temperature increase and includes
unacceptably high levels of external credits.
***
For more information, please contact:
Esther Bollendorff,
climate campaigner of the Friends of the Earth Europe: Tel: +32 2542 6102 and
+32 484 564680 (Belgian mobile),
esther.bollendorff@foeeurope.org
***
NOTES
[1] Failing to agree on the EU’s fair share needed to finance adaptation and
mitigation in developing countries, Environment Ministers forwarded this
decision last week to today’s ECOFIN Council and ultimately to the Heads of
State meeting next week on the 19th and 20th.
[2] Is the CDM fulfilling its environmental and sustainable development
objectives?
http://assets.panda.org/downloads/oeko_institut__2007____is_the_cdm_fulfilling_its_environmental_and_sustainable_developme.pdf
[3] In March 2007 the EU agreed to cut its emissions by 20% by 2020 in case there is not international agreement and by 30% by 2020 if other countries agree to take
on similar reduction objectives.