EU demands Hungary slash its 2008-12 emissions cap
Source: Reuters
(adds
reaction of Hungarian Environment Ministry)
By Jeff Mason
BRUSSELS, April 16 (Reuters) - The European Commission told Hungary on
Monday to slash its proposed cap for industrial carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions
in 2008-2012 by more than 12 percent, making it the 16th country to face a cut
by Brussels.
The European Union executive set Hungary's cap at 26.9 million tonnes
annually, a 12.4 percent reduction from the country's proposed cap.
The Commission has forced most European Union states to reduce their caps
for the 2008-2012 period in an effort to shore up the emissions trading scheme,
the EU's key tool to fight global warming and meet commitments under the Kyoto
Protocol.
"Today's decision reinforces the strong signal we gave with previous
decisions that Europe is fully committed to achieving its Kyoto target and to
making the Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) a successful weapon for fighting
climate change," Environment Commissioner Stavros Dimas said in a statement.
"The Commission is assessing all national plans in a consistent way to
ensure equal treatment of Member States and to create the necessary scarcity in
the European carbon market."
Hungary said it was surprised by the EU executive's announcement and it
could not rule out the possiblity of taking legal action against Brussels over
its decision.
"We are still assessing the ruling, but even at the first glimpse this
reduction looks massive. Whether Hungary will take this issue to court I cannot
yet tell, but this is something of a surprise," Environment Ministry official
Jozsef Feiler said.
ISSUES
"We also have some issues with the methodology the commission employs to
establish the final emissions caps for member states and we have informed the
commission about our concerns but apparently they were unheeded," Feiler said.
He said Hungary will give an official reaction next week at the earliest.
Environment Minister Miklos Persanyi had said earlier Hungary would not
accept substantial reductions from the original proposal.
The ETS is the 27-nation European Union's key tool to fight global
warming and meet commitments to reduce emissions agreed under the Kyoto
Protocol.
The scheme sets limits on the amount of CO2 that big factories may emit
and allows them to trade permits if they overshoot or come in below their caps.
EU governments across the board gave industry more emissions rights in
the first phase of the scheme than were needed, sparking a crash in carbon
prices last year.
The Commission has demanded 16 countries cut their proposed caps for the
next trading phase. It has ruled on 19 member states' plans so far.
Hungarian companies covered by the scheme reported verified 2005
emissions of 26 million tonnes, meaning they emitted far less CO2 that year than
the government, which allocated rights to emit 31.3 million tonnes, had allowed.
The country had proposed a cap of 30.7 million tonnes per 2008-2012. The
Commission said Hungary's plan covered emissions equivalent to 1.4 million
tonnes of CO2 in sectors that did not report emissions in 2005, the base year
that has been used by Brussels when determining the caps.
The Commission said Hungary would have to make other changes to its
national allocation plan. It said Hungary's plan included guarantees for
emissions rights beyond 2012, which would likely be deemed incompatible with EU
state aid rules.
(additional reporting by Sabina Zawadzki in Brussels and Gergely Szakacs
in Budapest)
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