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Post an EU jobThe Commission's Biomass Action Plan should reduce oil imports by 8%, prevent greenhouse gas emissions of 209 million tons CO2-equivalent per year and create up to 300,000 new job. Too good to be true?
The Commission adopted the Biomass Action Plan on 7 December 2005. The main objective of the Action Plan is to double the use of bio-energy sources (wood, wastes, agricultural crops) in the EU's energy mix by 2010. Currently, the EU meets about 4% of its energy needs from biomass. The plan outlines 31 measures to promote biomass in heating and cooling, electricity production and transport (biofuels).
Main actions proposed include:
The Commission's report states several benefits from the doubling of biomass energy:
The direct cost would be around 9 billion euros per year. This is equivalent to an increase of about 1.5 cents per litre of petrol and 0.1 cents per kWh of electricity, according to the report.
Three Member States (the Netherlands
, Germany
and the UK
) already have or are preparing national biomass action plans.
The use of more biomass energy poses several challenges and faces quite a number of important obstacles:
Green NGOs WWF, Greenpeace, BirdLife and the EEB warned the Commission to ensure that the biomass action plan "include adequate environmental and social safeguards". “If managed sustainably, bioenergy can help us to cut greenhouse gas emissions and restore degraded land,” said Ariel Brunner, BirdLife's Agriculture Policy Officer. “However, poorly managed production does little to reduce emissions and can have a devastating impact on the environment.”