HSE & Sustainability

EU Parliament Committee Rubber-Stamps Climate Change Law

Lawmakers on the European Parliament’s environment committee voted to approve the EU’s landmark climate change law, clearing one of the final hurdles before it enters into force.

EU flags
European Union flags flutter outside the EU Commission headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, on 5 May 2021.
Credit: Yves Herman/Reuters.

Lawmakers on the European Parliament’s environment committee on 10 May voted to approve the EU’s landmark climate change law, clearing one of the final hurdles before it enters into force.

Negotiators from parliament and the European Union’s 27 member states last month struck a deal on the landmark law to make the bloc’s climate change targets legally binding.

Those targets are to cut net EU greenhouse gas emissions by at least 55% by 2030 from 1990 levels and eliminate them by 2050.

Parliament had pushed for a tougher target to cut emissions by 60% by 2030, a position spearheaded by lawmakers on its environment committee.

On 10 May, the committee gave the green light to the law, including its 55% emissions-cutting target for 2030, with 52 votes in favor, 24 against, and 4 abstentions. Green lawmakers who wanted tougher goals were among those to vote against it.

The law faces two further votes before it enters into force.

Read the full story here.