European Green Deal: Out with a bang or with a
bust?
Amid a growing backlash, the European Commission
readies a new package of environmental legislation.
BY BARTOSZ
BRZEZIŃSKI
JULY 4,
2023 12:36 PM CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/european-green-deal-out-with-a-bang-or-with-a-bust/
With EU
elections looming next summer, Brussels had hoped to end its five-year marathon
of unprecedented environmental legislation with a final sprint.
Instead,
it's looking more and more like the crowd is getting restless and the exhausted
runner's legs are turning to jelly within sight of the finish line.
On
Wednesday, the European Commission is due to publish a package of food and
biodiversity rules as part of its flagship Green Deal agenda, in one of its
last legislative pushes before the end of the year.
The various
proposals aim to curb soil degradation and food and textile waste, while
enabling the development of a new generation of agricultural crops better
suited to a changing climate.
But they
come amid growing pushback from the political right that threatens to derail
other related measures, including the EU nature restoration law and pesticide
reduction targets, which are shaping to become a wedge issue when voters elect
a new European Parliament next June.
Manfred
Weber, leader of the Parliament's largest group, the center-right European
People's Party, has vowed to kill any EU law that he says will lead to higher
food prices while threatening farmers' livelihoods and global food supplies as
the war in Ukraine rages.
Ursula von
der Leyen's Commission has racked up some important wins in executing its green
agenda, banning imports linked to global deforestation, adopting targets to
slash greenhouse gas emissions, phasing out the sale of new combustion engine
cars by 2035 and unleashing a wave of investment in renewable energy.
But, with
time running out to complete all the legislative initiatives under the Green
Deal before its mandate expires, many in the Brussels bubble wonder whether the
EU executive will compromise and opt for weaker proposals.
Can of
worms
At least
one of this week’s files — on soil health — may have already fallen victim to
the backlash.
Soil is
essential for the production of food. It also purifies water, protects against
flooding and helps combat drought.
"Without
healthy soils, we won't be able to grow food and we won't have clean drinking
water, it's as simple as that," said Swiss soil expert Madlene Nussbaum,
who works at the University of Bern. "Europe is rich enough that we can
always import food from somewhere else — but you can't easily import
water."
Most of the
EU's soils are in poor condition, suffering from erosion, excessive nutrient
inputs and other problems. Soil degradation costs member states more than €50
billion a year, according to the European Environment Agency.
The new
legislation would give soil a legal status similar to that of air and water,
with the goal of dramatically improving soil conditions by 2050. But it also
touches on the thorny issues of land ownership and land use.
The
Commission proposed a similar soil directive in 2006, but agricultural
powerhouses such as the U.K., France, Germany and the Netherlands blocked it,
forcing its eventual withdrawal in 2014.
Now, with
EU environment chiefs Virginijus Sinkevičius and Frans Timmermans poised to
reopen the can of worms, environmental groups have urged them not to give in to
pressure.
“The EU
must adopt the soil health law without delay,” said Caroline Heinzel, associate
policy officer at the European Environmental Bureau.
But not at
any cost, she added: “The law must be ambitious and well designed.”
Heinzel
cited legally binding targets and an application of the polluter-pays principle
as some of the elements necessary to achieve the law's goals.
A leaked
draft contains neither.
Cakeism
But while
environmental advocacy groups are pushing for greater ambition in some areas of
the Green Deal, they are not in favor of all its elements.
In
particular, the groups are critical of Brussels’ decision to regulate a new
generation of gene-edited crops differently from classic genetically modified
organisms (GMOs), warning that this will increase corporate capture of the
agricultural sector and threaten non-GM and organic production. The draft
suggests the Commission plans to scrap risk assessment and traceability
requirements for at least some of the crops.
Another
file expected this week, on regulating what kind of seeds can be traded and
sold within the EU, could criminalize the work of small farmers and
conservation networks that preserve and exchange traditional varieties, the
groups say.
In both
files, environmentalists accuse the Commission of siding too much with Big Agri
interests.
"You
can't have your cake and eat it too," said a senior EU official, who was
granted anonymity to speak freely. "Environmental groups always say that
some of our proposals aren't ambitious enough, or that we've been too
industry-friendly in others."


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