ECOS | Environmental Coalition on Standards

09 December 2021

EU sets technology-neutral threshold for ‘sustainable’ energy production ‘in line with science’, but gas threat remains

The first half of the EU ‘taxonomy’ has officially been approved and will enter into force in January. A second delegated act will be discussed by EU member states in the coming days. It could potentially allow investments in gas infrastructure to be included in the list.

The first half of the EU ‘taxonomy’ has officially been approved and will enter into force in January. [1] A second delegated act will be discussed by EU member states in the coming days. It could potentially allow investments in gas infrastructure to be included in the list.
 
The ’taxonomy’ is a list of activities that are to be officially considered as sustainable investments, aiming to lure investors into activities supporting a change towards a truly sustainable world.
 
ECOS is a member of the Platform on Sustainable Finance, a group of experts officially advising the Commission on the matter.
 
EU member states had time until yesterday midnight to reject the first delegated act for the ‘EU taxonomy’. Despite opposition from a few countries, the proposal passed.  
 
A technology-neutral 100g CO2/kWh limit for electricity and heat production
 
Following the approval of yesterday’s bill, the EU law now establishes that only energy and heat-production infrastructure emitting less than 100g of CO2/kWh can be considered ‘environmentally sustainable’. These criteria can only be met by renewable sources such as solar, wind and hydropower.
 
This emission threshold is in line with the Paris Agreement. It is also scientifically in line with the EU objective to become carbon neutral by 2050 [2].
 
In addition, the EU law now defines as causing ‘significant harm to the environment’ any power generation system whose direct emissions exceed 270 g CO2/kWh. No fossil fuel production can go below that level of emissions, not even the most efficient combined heat-and-power natural gas-fired plants.
 
Both the 100g ‘sustainable’ limit, and the 270g ‘significant harm’ threshold are technology-neutral. This is required by Article 19 of the Taxonomy Regulation, which applies to all technologies.

Despite these positive aspects, yesterday’s first delegated act is far from perfect and includes provisions which could have a negative impact on the environment, in particular for land-based sectors. It classifies forestry and bioenergy as sustainable, even though current forestry practices such as industrial logging lead to erosion and [3] and that bioenergy can emit more CO2 than coal, when emissions are properly accounted for.

Mathilde Crêpy, Senior Programme Manager, ECOS – Environmental Coalition on Standards
 
‘The first half of the taxonomy sets a clear path towards climate neutrality for heat and power generation. Unfortunately, nothing is set in stone: the EU might still end up favouring industry interests over climate if a few national leaders have their way a couple of weeks from now. We cannot label energy produced from fossil gas as “sustainable”. Doing so would mean that the Commission denies the science-based and technology-neutral principles, now enshrined in the regulation. Member states must ensure that the taxonomy stays credible, and truly serves the planet’.

 

Notes: 
 
[1] Approved delegated act in official EU journal – https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX%3A32021R2139&qid=1639037016630
 
[2] EU Technical Expert Group on Sustainable Finance (TEG). Briefing on the eu technical expert group’s recommendation for the eu taxonomy electricity generation threshold – 7 key points about the EU Taxonomy’s 100g emissions threshold ) https://ecostandard.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/EUTaxonomy_100g_7points.pdf
 
[3] – ECOS analysis after Commission’s proposal in April 2021. EU climate taxonomy: the good, the bad, and the ugly. https://ecostandard.org/news_events/good-bad-ugly-taxonomy/
Contact points at ECOS: 

Mathilde Crêpy, senior programme manager at ECOS – mathilde.crepy@ecostandard.org 

Ivo Cabral, press manager at ECOS  ivo.cabral@ecostandard.org

ECOS is co-funded by the European Commission and EFTA Funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or EISMEA. Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.

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