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Flagship EU law to restore nature must not be
derailed, warns environment chief
Rejection of key legislation on pesticides and
restoration of wildlife ‘would send a dangerous, negative signal to the world’
Patrick
Greenfield
@pgreenfielduk
Tue 16 May
2023 01.00 EDT
A flagship
law to restore nature across Europe must be agreed by member states or risk
sending “a dangerous, negative signal to the world”, the EU’s environment
commissioner has warned, amid growing opposition to the legislation.
Last June,
the European Commission revealed proposals for legally binding targets for all
member states to restore wildlife on land, rivers and the sea. The nature
restoration law was announced alongside a separate law proposing a crackdown on
chemical pesticides, and both were welcomed as a milestone by environmentalists
ahead of the Cop15 biodiversity summit in Montreal.
But they
have since faced strong opposition from agricultural, fishing and forestry
lobbying groups and some member states. The centre-right European People’s
party (EPP) – the largest group in the parliament – has called for the
legislation to be scrapped, saying it would have a negative impact on farmers
and claiming it would jeopardise climate commitments.
Documents
seen by the Guardian indicate that some member states are trying to water down
both proposals, with particularly strong opposition to the creation of areas
designated for restoration and to curbs on pesticide use.
“We are
standing on the edge of the cliff with biodiversity collapse and the rejection
of the nature restoration law would be jumping into the void,” Virginijus
Sinkevičius, the EU commissioner for the environment, oceans and fisheries,
told the Guardian. “The rejection of the most ambitious proposal ever to
restore nature would send a dangerous, negative signal to the world that the EU
and its member states backtrack on commitments.” A separate commissioner
oversees the pesticides law proposal.
“There is
no possibility to implement the Green Deal without nature,” Sinkevičius added. “We
can do excellent work in decreasing emissions. We can get to zero. But if
ecosystems degrade, if soil degrades, if our forests degrade, if marine
ecosystems degrade, they are not able to absorb carbon or mitigate heat. We
have no technologies to replace them. The nature restoration law is equivalent
to the climate law and I hope it will be taken as seriously,” he said.
Ariel
Brunner, regional director at BirdLife Europe, said the opposition from member
states and lobbyists went beyond normal horse-trading in Brussels, and said
abandoning commitments in Europe would undermine calls from member states to
protect key ecosystems in other parts of the world, such as the Amazon
rainforest.
“This is
very serious. There is a high-level attempt by the farming, forest and fishing
lobby to kill the legislation. This is not a debate about details with the
usual games, here there really is an attempt to just knock it off,” he said.
“These two
pieces of legislation [nature restoration and pesticides] are one of the three
legs of the European Green Deal. Killing them means abandoning the Green Deal.
It would be terrible for Europe’s standing in the world and would give credence
to the Bolsonaros of this world who say that all the climate and biodiversity
stuff is an attempt to keep us poor by the rich world so they can stay rich,”
Brunner added.
Time is
running out on the EU’s legislative agenda to pass the proposals ahead of
European elections next year.
The EU was
a key player in driving the environmental ambition of the final agreement at
Cop15 in Montreal, which included targets to protect 30% of the planet for
nature by the end of the decade and restoring 30% of degraded ecosystems.
“It was not
an easy task to find a balanced position between 27 member states in Montreal
and negotiate with the rest of the world, but we managed to achieve it,”
Sinkevičius, leader of the EU negotiations, said. “We helped set the standards
of the agreement and it would do huge damage to lose this strategic position
[if we do not pass the nature restoration law].”
He said the
bloc would make good on a scale-up of financing for biodiversity, as well as
supporting public-private investments on nature.
He added:
“I’m extremely worried that Europe is heading to one of the worst droughts in
its history. This summer could be truly difficult and those pressures will be
felt by those who work day by day with the environment. By that, I mean our
farmers. We have to do all we can to build in resilience and at some point it’s
going to be too late.”
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