EU agrees climate change deal

EU agrees climate change deal

European Union leaders have unanimously agreed on a deal to tackle climate change, which would see EU greenhouse gas emissions cut by one-fifth by 2020.

Nine eastern European countries, heavily dependent on coal, had threatened to veto the deal before a two-day summit in Brussels on Friday.
A number of concessions to industry helped secure the deal, which is already being criticized by environmental groups.
Jose Manuel Barroso, the European commission president, said the agreement showed that the 27-nation bloc was serious about tackling global warming.
He said: "These are the most ambitious proposals anywhere in the world. Europe has today passed its credibility test. We mean business when we talk about climate."
Nicolas Sarkozy, president of the EU, described the deal as "historic".
Under the agreement, European industries exposed to international competition will get free emissions permits if they face a five per cent increase in costs.
'Dark day'
But Greenpeace, WWF and other environmental groups denounced the agreement as "a dark day for European climate policy".
"European heads of state and government have reneged on their promises and turned their backs on global efforts to fight climate change," they said in a statement.
They accused the leaders of choosing "private profits of polluting industry over the will of European citizens, the future of their children and the plight of millions of people around the world".
The French concessions allowed more "polluting rights" to be given out for free rather than be paid for, the statement said.
The groups called on the European parliament, which must also approve the deal, to "amend the worst parts".
UN conference
Meanwhile, delegates at a UN climate conference in Poland said that they had agreed to unblock millions of dollars held in an adaptation fund to help poor countries cope with the effects of climate change.
Mozaharul Alam, who heads Bangladesh's climate adaptation effort, said government ministers have recognized the legal right to operate the climate change fund that now has about $60m.
Until now, the fund could not operate because its board had no right to sign contracts.
Alam said it could still take up to a year before money is distributed to poor nations.
Oxfam, the international aid agency, said the negotiations had not shown the urgency and political will needed to fight climate change and keep millions of people safe.
Barry Coates, senior Oxfam executive, said: "The lack of progress in Poznan merits outrage – most of all from the millions of poor people already experiencing the devastating impacts of climate change. They cannot afford delay."
While it recognized progress on the adaptation fund had been made, it said the amount available was far too little.
Coates said: "Here in Poznan, the negotiators looked into the money box, but it is still almost empty, less than one per cent of what is needed.
"It is irresponsible that rich countries should use the financial crisis as an excuse. The amounts of funding required are a tiny fraction of the finance bail-outs."
PHOTO CAPTION
EU Commissioner for the Environment, Stavros Dimas, gives a press conference of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change in Poznan, Poland.
Al-Jazeera

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