
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
(EurActiv) — Negotiations between the European Parliament and EU member states on the bloc’s coronavirus recovery fund concluded early on Friday morning (18 December), unlocking €265 billion
of the total €672.5 available for the green transition in EU countries.
The political agreement, reached around 02.00 a.m., dedicates 37% of expenditure exclusively for the green transition.
Under the deal, all investments under the recovery fund will have to respect the emission thresholds laid out in the EU’s green finance taxonomy. And 100% of expenditure will be subject to
the “do no significant harm” principle defined in the taxonomy regulation, which will de facto exclude the vast majority of fossil fuels.
That means gas-fired power stations could receive funding from the remaining 63%, as long as their emissions are below the 100gCO2e/KWh listed in the taxonomy – a threshold so low that no
gas plant is currently able to comply.
“The entire plan must respect the principle of ‘do no harm’, in line with new EU sustainable finance rules. This means that the facility cannot be used to finance any activity that
significantly harms the environment,” said Ernest Urtasun, a Greens lawmaker who was negotiator on the recovery fund from the Parliament’s economic affairs committee.
Member states will also need to set aside at least 20% of expenditure for investments and reforms on the digital transition, which the Commission hopes will boost jobs and help create a
sustainable economy.
Overall, the recovery fund will make an unprecedented €672.5 billion available in loans and grants to support reforms and investments in EU countries. It aims to mitigate the economic and
environmental impact of the pandemic and make Europe more sustainable and resilient.
“We managed to turn the largest ever EU spending programme into a key instrument for the green transition: it commits almost €250 billion to combat climate change, it tracks spending based
on a modern methodology, and it includes a strict ‘do no significant harm’ provision,” said Damian Boeselager, a Green lawmaker who was negotiator on the recovery fund for the Parliament’s
budgetary committee.
However, Parliament’s push to secure a binding target on biodiversity did not make it into the agreement, something WWF calls a major blow to the Green Deal and to nature.
The text of the agreed regulation now needs to be finalised and then rubber-stamped by the Parliament and the EU Council of Ministers. Once it is in force, EU member states will be able to
submit recovery and resilience plans with their planned reforms and investments.
Together with the EU’s coming €1.1 trillion multi-annual budget, the European Union will have a unprecedented €1.8 trillion spending capacity over the next seven years (2021-2027).
By Srijan Sharma The guns have fallen silent along the Line of Control (LoC) between Pakistani- and Indian-administered Kashmir. A
When War In Ukraine Ends, Impact On Russia Could Be Economically And Politically Explosive! Is it true or it will…
keep building castle in sky. if you have destroyed so many location where is the proof . My elder brother…
Holy moly, I almost finished this article thinking it was satire. I read the headline and laughed because it sounds…
Re your "...Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s August 2019 revocation of Article 370 of the Indian Constitution..." Even your unfortunate students,…
Dear Eurasia Review: quick heads-up; due perhaps to solar flares or disturbances in the upper atmosphere, your articles are being…