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Future EU Climate Change Policy - Challenges and Opportunities for New Member States, Acceding and Candidate Countries

Conference, Warsaw, 23-24 January 2006



Background

Background paper [pdf, 250 kb, English]

 

2005 has been a particularly important year for international and European climate policy. With the Kyoto Protocol's entry into force, industrialised countries are subject to legally binding commitments to limit their emissions of greenhouse gases. The start of the European Emission Trading Scheme, along with the debates that preceded it, brought the consequences of the practical implementation of Kyoto commitments to the attention of policy-makers and businesses in the new and old EU Member States alike.


While discussions are ongoing on the best ways to fulfil the Kyoto commitments, an even more difficult debate is already on the agenda: the question of how the future climate policy regime will be shaped and what commitments will be taken after 2012, when the first commitment period under the Kyoto Protocol expires. At the international level, the first discussions on this subject will be held in November/December 2005 at the Conference of the Parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change / meeting of the Parties to the Kyoto Protocol (COP/MOP) in Montreal. At the European Council in March 2005, EU heads of government took a first position in this regard by agreeing on a flexible target of 15-30 % greenhouse gas reductions compared to 1990 by 2020 (see Presidency conclusions, pp. 15-16 [pdf, 234 kb, English]).


While EU climate change policy has been a subject of common debate and action for the EU-15 since the early 1990s, new EU Member States have had much less time to enter into this debate. The new Member States adopted the current European climate change provisions as part of the acquis communautaire with their accession. Thus, full involvement of the new Member States in the climate policy discussion is still not given in practice. Domestic factors, such as limited resources and the relatively low priority the issue is given in public debate, contribute to this situation. However, in order to exert adequate influence on decision-making at the international and especially the EU level and make informed contributions, a high level of public awareness in new Member States, Acceding and Candidate Countries will be needed.

 

Further Links

Post-2012 pages of the European Commission

Communication from the European Commission "Winning the Battle Against Global Climate Change", COM(2005) 35 final, 9.2.2005

[pdf, 184 kb, English]

Commission Staff Working Paper "Winning the Battle Against Global Climate Change"

[pdf, 728 kb, English]

For further information, see also EurActiv pages on EU post-2012 climate change policy


 

 

 

 


 

Conference financed by:

European Commission - DG Environment

 


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