EU
rollback on environmental policy is gaining momentum, warn campaigners
Observers shocked at scale and speed of deregulation drive they say is
watering down European Green Deal and laws
Ajit
Niranjan
Thu 26 Jun
2025 05.00 BST
The European
Union’s rollback of environment policy is gaining momentum, campaigners have
warned, in a deregulation drive that has shocked observers with its scale and
speed.
EU
policymakers have dealt several critical blows to their much-vaunted European
Green Deal since the end of 2023, when opinion polls suggested a significant
rightward shift before the 2024 parliamentary elections. Environment groups say
the pace has picked up under the competition-focused agenda of the new European
Commission.
The most
striking examples are the “omnibus” packages that water down sustainable
finance rules, some of which have been put on hold even before they came into
force, and which member states proposed diluting further on Monday. The
European Commission has promised more simplification measures to “radically
lighten the regulatory load” on people and businesses.
In the first
six months of the new European Commission mandate, the EU also delayed a law to
stop deforestation in supply chains by one year, gave carmakers two extra years
to meet pollution targets and downgraded the protection status of the wolf.
Environmental NGOs have found themselves in the crosshairs of a funding freeze
they argue undermines democracy.
The
political tensions reached a high this week after an anti-greenwashing law was
seemingly killed in the final stages of negotiations.
The warnings
of green backsliding come amid a global slump in efforts to cut pollution. In
the UK, the government has faced growing political resistance to its target to
hit net zero by 2050. In the US, Donald Trump has begun his second term with a
series of attacks on environment agencies and policies as he seeks to promote
fossil fuels. “DRILL, BABY, DRILL!!!” he told the US Department of Energy in a
social media post on Monday. “And I mean NOW!!!
Green groups
say similar – albeit less sensational – shifts are under way in Brussels, which
boasts some of the most ambitious rules to clean up a polluting economy.
“There has
been a radical change in political priorities – and this came before Trump was
even close to election in the US,” said Marco Contiero, Greenpeace EU’s
agricultural policy director.
Bold green
policies from the EU’s executive body have typically been watered down as they
pass through protracted negotiations with other institutions. Critics say
ambition is now being lost at the top while resistance is growing stronger
throughout the legislative process. After farmers’ protests swept across Europe
last year, lawmakers and member states nearly killed off a nature restoration
law that EU institutions had already negotiated.
It was the
first sign of open revolt against the Green Deal that the centre-right
president of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, had put forward in
2019 after student climate protests.
“The fact
that the Green Deal became the poster child of the first von der Leyen
Commission was received with surprise by civil society, industry, and lobbies,”
said Contiero. “In a very similar manner, so has her decision to radically
change her approach.”
In mission
letters to commissioners in September, von der Leyen set targets to reduce
administrative burdens by 25% for all companies and by 35% for small- and
medium-sized enterprises, with a “one in, one out” principle to ensure that new
rules displaced existing ones. The Commission also promised to fight
“gold-plating” measures, in which member states add their own rules that go
beyond what the EU requires.
The push to
cut red tape has been led by the European People’s party (EPP), the largest
group in parliament and the political home of 10 of the 27 commissioners,
including von der Leyen. Its shift in tone has increasingly led to it siding
with far-right forces. The cancellation of the anti-greenwashing law this week
came after EPP and far-right lawmakers separately wrote to the European
Commission to withdraw the bill. The EPP later celebrated the bill’s withdrawal
as “a win for European companies”.
Tiemo
Wölken, a German MEP from the centre-left S&D grouping who led negotiations
of the proposal, said: “The Commission obviously wanted to fulfil the wishes of
the right, and this is what is so scandalous. The EPP is again working with the
far right to get rid of Green Deal files, but are pretending they are still in
the middle and working with pro-European democratic forces.”
The
Commission has said it is pursuing an agenda of simplification rather than
deregulation, and that its focus on competitiveness does not contradict the
environmental aims of the Green Deal. It has also put forward plans to green
industry, such as the Clean Industrial Deal, which have been celebrated as
driving the energy transition in the EU forward.
Paul de
Clerck, a campaigner at Friends of the Earth Europe, said the scale of the cuts
in the first omnibus proposal in February showed that the simplification
argument was “basically bollocks”.
The
Commission’s plans postpone corporate sustainability reporting requirements by
two years and reduce the number of companies in its scope by 80%; delay
corporate due diligence rules by one year; remove a requirement to conduct
in-depth impact assessments; scrap a civil liability clause that would make it
easier to sue companies; and exclude about 90% of businesses from the carbon
border adjustment mechanism. Member states on Monday proposed reducing the
scope even further.
De Clerck
said: “This is highly relevant because it’s the first proposal under the
simplification agenda that’s been put forward and … it’s not just weakening it
a little bit, it’s slashing it. The heart of the proposal has basically been
taken out.”
Political
support for environment rules has dried up in several wealthy economies in the
past year, even as the energy transition gains pace and an overwhelming
majority of people say they want governments to cut pollution faster.
European
businesses have long complained of complex rules that hamper innovation and
make it harder for them to compete with foreign companies.
“The Green
Deal often overlooked challenges like high energy costs or lengthy and complex
permitting procedures,” said Markus Breyer, the director general of the
industry association BusinessEurope. “The current focus on competitiveness
reflects a more balanced and pragmatic approach that better aligns climate
goals with economic realities.”
Critics
counter that failing to quickly transition to a clean economy will jeopardise
economic prosperity in the medium term, as well as saddling individuals and
governments with the cost of climate damages. Contiero said the EU would be
“crushed by larger blocs such as the US and China” if it continued to play by
20th-century rules.
“Investing
in the Green Deal means decoupling economic growth from the use of natural
resources – that was the essential element that made an awful lot of sense for
the 21st century,” he said. “Abandoning such a critical approach will take away
the competitive advantage that Europe could have had.”

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