Nieuws-items bij Europese aanpak klimaatverandering
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21-05Video viEUws.eu: EU wil opener energiemarkten, volgens de Commissie (en)
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21-05Presentaties gegeven tijdens vliegpad biobrandstoffen in luchtvaart 25 april 2013 (en)
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21-05Europarlementariërs willen vast doel voor Europese hernieuwbare energie (en)
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17-05Europese Commissie looft €31.5 miljoen uit voor beste duurzame projecten (en)
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16-05Emissiehandel: minder emissie en groeien surplus van quota (en)
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15-05EESC wil door middel van 'poldermodel' de doelen van Rio 20+ uitvoeren (en)
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14-05Conclusies ECOFIN over klimaatfinanciën (en)
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14-05EU financiert meer klimaatbeheersing dan gedacht (en)
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14-05Commissie start breed debat klimaatverandering in zuid en oost Europa (en)
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14-05Europese Commissie start met publieksdebatten in EU-landen over klimaatverandering (en)
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07-05Merkel: zo snel mogelijk handelen tegen klimaatverandering (en)
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07-05Superkredieten en gelimiteerde maximumsnelheid voor reductie uitstoot bestelbusjes (en)
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30-04Video viEUws.eu: Commissie over betere marktomstandigheden voor hernieuwbare energie (en)
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30-04Verbetering registratie emissiehandelssysteem gepaard met strengere opzet (en)
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30-04Gemiddelde CO2-uitstoot nieuwe auto's in EU daalt verder (en)
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26-04Video viEUws.eu: Brusselse update over energie, april 2013 (en)
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26-04Schijnwerpers op levensbron Afrika: eerste bodematlas van Afrika (en)
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25-04Op weg naar 95g CO2-uitstoot per kilometer voor personenwagens
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25-04EP-commissie Milieu stemt in met eisen voor schonere auto's (en)
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24-04EU-parlement eist zuiniger auto's
Parties to the United Nation Framework Convention for Climate Change (UNFCCC) met in Bonn over the last two weeks for its mid-year climate change talks. Commissioner Hedegaard made the following statement as the session concluded:
''The European Union is almost the only player taking a second commitment period under the Kyoto Protocol and so keeping it alive. Because we believe climate change needs to be addressed in a legally-binding international framework, we are willing to do this, even when other major economies are at present only willing to enter into voluntary commitments.
But - and it is a big but - we need other major economies and significant emitters to play ball. The world cannot afford that a few want to backtrack from what was agreed in Durban only five months ago. Durban was - and is - a delicately balanced package where all elements must be delivered at the same pace. It is not a pick and choose menu.
It is very worrisome that attempts to backtrack have been so obvious and time-consuming in the Bonn talks over the last two weeks. Regrettably, only procedure, no substance was discussed.
This week, the International Energy Agency (IEA) has reported that global emissions have reached their highest ever level. At the same time, in Bonn, some of the world's largest emitters have wasted too much energy in trying to move backwards rather than in securing progress. This is not just irresponsible. It is untenable for a UNFCCC process that wants to remain relevant - the only process the world has that everybody says they support.
It is good that a significant group of developed as well as developing countries that share a wish to secure and deliver ambition in the end broke the deadlock in Bonn. But it is frankly too little and it is getting very late. Given the urgency of the problem, it is disturbing to watch climate negotiations moving at a pace that is clearly not going to deliver the necessary results in Doha. This is clearly in nobody's interest''
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