The Climate action and renewable energy package, Europe's climate change opportunity
On 23 January 2008 the European Commission put forward a far-reaching package of proposals that will deliver on the European Union's ambitious commitments to fight climate change and promote renewable energy up to 2020 and beyond. In December 2008 the European Parliament and Council reached an agreement on the package that will help transform Europe into a low-carbon economy and increase its energy security.The EU is committed to reducing its overall emissions to at least 20% below 1990 levels by 2020, and is ready to scale up this reduction to as much as 30% under a new global climate change agreement when other developed countries make comparable efforts. It has also set itself the target of increasing the share of renewables in energy use to 20% by 2020.
The "Climate action and renewable energy package" sets out the contribution expected from each Member State to meeting these targets and proposes a series of measures to help achieve them.
Central to the strategy is a strengthening and expansion of the Emissions Trading System (EU ETS), the EU's key tool for cutting emissions cost-effectively. Emissions from the sectors covered by the system will be cut by 21% by 2020 compared with levels in 2005. A single EU-wide cap on ETS emissions will be set, and free allocation of emission allowances will be progressively replaced by auctioning of allowances by 2020.
Emissions from sectors not included in the EU ETS – such as transport, housing, agriculture and waste – will be cut by 10% from 2005 levels by 2020. Each Member State will contribute to this effort according to its relative wealth, with national emission targets ranging from -20% for richer Member States to +20% for poorer ones.
The national renewable energy targets proposed for each Member State will contribute to achieving emissions reductions and will also decrease the European Union's dependence on foreign sources of energy. These include a minimum 10% share for biofuels in petrol and diesel by 2020. The package also sets out sustainability criteria that biofuels will have to meet to ensure they deliver real environmental benefits.
The package also seeks to promote the development and safe use of carbon capture and storage (CCS), a suite of technologies that allows the carbon dioxide emitted by industrial processes to be captured and stored underground where it cannot contribute to global warming. Revised guidelines on state aid for environmental protection will enable governments to support CCS demonstration plants.
Documents
- Citizen's summary EU climate and energy package [pdf ~25-115 KB]
- Texts approved by the European Parliament
- Press release on the final adoption of Europe's climate and energy package (December 2008)
- Questions and answers on the Commission's proposal for effort sharing (December 2008)
- Questions and answers on the Commission's proposal to revise the EU Emissions Trading System (December 2008)
- Questions and answers on the proposal for a directive on the geological storage of carbon dioxide (December 2008)
- 20/20/20 by 2020: Europe's climate change opportunity (January 2008)
- Joint impact assessment on the package of implementation measures for the EU's objectives on climate change and renewable energy for 2020 [pdf 113 KB]
Annex to the Impact Assessment [pdf 970 KB] - Read more about the Energy questions related to the "Climate Action and Renewable Energy" package
- Read more about the new guidelines on State aid to environmental protection
- Press release on Boosting growth and jobs by meeting our climate change commitments (January 2008)
- Questions and answers on the Renewable Energy and Climate Change Package (January 2008)
- Questions and answers on the first assessment of National Energy Efficiency Action Plans (NEEAP) (January 2008)
- Questions and answers on state aid: guidelines on state aid for the environment (January 2008)
- Video news release "Climate action: putting Europe´s new energy policy into practice"
- "20% renewable energy by 2020" and other info clips on EUTube
- The full audiovisual coverage of the "Climate Action and Renewable Energy" package on the European Commission's Audiovisual Service website
- Combating Climate Change: the EU leads the way
- Leading global action to 2020 and beyond - Chinese
- Research and development to fight climate change
- EU emissions trading: an open system promoting global innovation
- Working with developing countries to tackle climate change
- Energy Baseline Report: Trends to 2030 - Update 2007
- Model-based Analysis of the 2008 EU Policy Package on Climate Change and Renewables
- Appendixes to Model-based Analysis of the 2008 EU Policy Package on Climate Change and Renewables
- Emission scenarios for non-CO2 greenhouse gases in the EU-27: Mitigation potentials and costs in 2020
- Detailed information on emissions and costs of non-CO2 greenhouse gases from the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)