ThemenRubriken
MiniRubriken
Head of Unit - Corporate Services M/F (Grade AD 10)
Permanent representative in Madrid
Principal, Border Management Staff College (P5)
Stagiaire / Trainee - for the leading EU policy media
Junior Scientific and Technical Advisor
Assistant Communications & Public Affairs Departments
Stellenangebot registrierenDie EU-Umweltminister treffen sich am heutigen Tag (17. Oktober), um die EU-Verhandlungsstrategie für das Ende des Jahres in Montreal stattfindende Treffen der COP-11 festzulegen. Auf der Tagesordnung stehen unter anderem die Emissionsgrenzen für den Zeitraum bis 2050.
The target issue is set to dominate the agenda of environment ministers as they meet on 17 October to discuss the EU strategy for post-Kyoto talks due to take place in Montreal from 28 November to 2 December.
The UK Presidency has proposed to re-establish targets agreed by Environment ministers in March to cut emissions of global warming gases by 60 to 80% by 2050. But those had subsequently been dropped a few days later by EU heads of state and government, notably at the insistence of Austria and Germany (EurActiv, 23 March 2005).
EU Environment Commissioner Stavros Dimas said in September he did not expect any binding agreement to come out of the Montreal meeting. "I would like to have an agreement in Montreal but that's unrealistic," Dimas told reporters in September. The best he hoped for, he added, was an agreement to start negotiations.
The ministerial talks come as EU countries prepare for the second round of national action plans (NAPs) which will define CO2 emission ceilings granted to industry under the EU emissions trading scheme (ETS). Commission sources have indicated that some EU countries, led by Poland, are pushing for a watered down version of ETS, which will undergo a full review in mid-2006.