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On Wednesday 8 March, Commissioner Piebalgs will present the new Green Paper on European Energy Policy, outlining some major challenges for a future common European approach to questions related to security of energy supply and climate change.
High oil prices, Europe's energy dependency on OPEC and Russia, new insecurities concerning long-term availability of fossil fuels and the urgency of new greenhouse gas mitigation measures have restarted a debate on the need for a European Energy Policy.
In November 2000, the Commission had issued a previous Green Paper on the security of energy supply. It underlined the need to diversify energy sources in view of an increasing dependency on Russia for gas and the Middle East for oil. The Green Paper led to new legislative initiatives on the use of renewables and on energy efficiency. The Commission also continued its efforts to improve the internal energy market by liberalising the electricity and gas sector.
The new Green Paper on a "secure, competitive and sustainable energy policy for Europe" will try to make the case for greater integration and cooperation of EU energy policies.
In a draft version seen by EurActiv, the paper identifies 5 "headline goals":
The paper proposes six priority areas that should lead to the development of a "reinvigorated European Energy Policy":
It is questionable how far member states will be willing to follow the Commission in its ideas to "Europeanise" their energy policies. As recently demonstrated in the merger battles over Gaz de France and Suez or Spanish Endesa and German E-On, national governments are very sensitive when it comes to giving up some of their "crown jewels" or transferring sovereignty to the European Union.
It seems significant that, parallel to the Commission's writing of the Green Paper, the Council's Energy Working Group has been preparing a "New Energy Policy
" which focuses heavily on issues of energy supply but is quite thin on new actions.
In a press release published on 3 March, Greenpeace has already expressed its disappointment about the upcoming Energy Green Paper and urged the Commission to develop a 'greener" paper. "The Commission has failed to set out crucial and fundamental questions about the future of EU energy policy. It does not, for example, question the wisdom of an EU25 dominated by large centralised fossil fuel and nuclear power plants, nor ask how to make the uptake of renewable energy and efficiency binding," Greenpeace said.
The environmental organisation also tackles the Commission's suggestion to re-open a debate on the future of nuclear power. Referring to a recent Eurobarometer
survey which showed that only 12% of Europeans support nuclear energy, Greenpeace claims that "this debate should be long closed."
Greenpeace finally points to its own "Energy Revolution Scenario" which shows that "Europe can phase out nuclear power and, at the same time, reduce carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions by 30% by 2020 to avoid dangerous climate change. By 2050, half of Europe’s energy demands could come from renewable energy sources and CO2 emissions could be reduced by nearly 75%."