A group of organisations campaigning to protect the environment is legally challenging the EU taxonomy labelling gas as a sustainable economic activity, threatening to bring the European Commission to court.
Environmental law charity ClientEarth, the European Policy Office of
the WWF, NGO Transport & Environment (T&E), and the German
Federation for the Environment and Nature Conservation (BUND) have
started legal action against the Commission’s decision to include fossil
gas in the taxonomy, they announced today.
According to the organisations, “labelling gas as ‘sustainable’ risks
channelling investments into this harmful energy source, away from
genuinely sustainable sources of energy like homegrown renewables – and
skilfully reducing demand in the first place”.
Moreover, they say, the Complementary Delegated Act mentioning gas
and nuclear as sustainable economic activities contrasts with the
taxonomy itself, the European Climate Law, and the EU obligations under
the Paris Agreement.
The organisations are therefore requesting the Commission to repeal
the Complementary Delegated Act listing certain nuclear and gas
activities as sustainable.
The Commission now has up to 22 weeks to reply to the request of the
four institutions. If the Commission refuses to reply, the groups can
bring the case to the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU).
According to the Commission, gas and nuclear can be considered
sustainable economic activities under stringent conditions if
contributing to the transition to climate neutrality.
The Commission has adopted what it considers a “pragmatic and
realistic approach”, also in view of the war in Ukraine and the
consequent decision to cut import of Russian energy, to transition to
clean energy, using nuclear if it fulfills safety requirements, and gas
if it contributes to the transition from coal to renewables, it said.
IPE
© IPE International Publishers Ltd.
Key
Hover over the blue highlighted
text to view the acronym meaning
Hover
over these icons for more information
Comments:
No Comments for this Article