With Fit for 55, Europe is the global first mover in turning a long-term net-zero goal into real-world policies, marking the entry of climate policy into the daily life of all citizens and businesses.
The European Commission’s long-awaited ‘Fit for 55’
package, intended to facilitate a European Union greenhouse gas
emissions cut of 55% by 2030 compared to 1990, has as its core mission
to turn the 2020s into a transformative decade for climate action. If
agreed and implemented, the Fit for 55 proposals (Figure 1) would both
deepen and broaden the decarbonisation of Europe’s economy to achieve
climate neutrality by 2050. Without the package, under current EU
climate legislation, Europe will only achieve a 60% emissions reduction by 2050.
Fit for 55: a transformative package
The broad package containing hundreds of
pages of legislative proposals, includes the creation of a new EU
emissions trading system (ETS) for buildings and road transport, a
profound restructuring of energy taxation in Europe, increased renewable
energy and energy efficiency targets, the introduction of a carbon
border adjustment mechanism and revised CO2 emissions standards for new
cars (see Annex).
Looking at the wide variety of 13
proposals, it is first interesting to note how certain items represent
an evolution of current EU climate policymaking. It should be stressed
that, while not innovative, this upgrade of existing instruments would
deliver the majority of emission reductions by 2030 (Table 1). This is
the case with the toughening of renewable energy and energy efficiency
targets, and with the more rapid tightening of the ETS cap (ie the
linear reduction factor – already made steeper when the EU jumped from
the 2020 to the 2030 climate target).
Transport and buildings get the climate policy spotlight
The package also contains major new
components, not least emissions trading for buildings and transport.
There is a clear reason for action in this area: so far, EU climate
policy has predominantly focused on the decarbonisation of the
electricity and industrial sectors, notably through the ETS and binding
targets for renewable energy and energy efficiency. Consequently,
emissions from the electricity sector have fallen fast, and emissions
from the industrial sector have also decreased, though to a lesser
extent. However, emissions from the building sector have not decreased
significantly, while transport sector emissions have even increased
steadily (Figure 2)....
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