Ursula
von der Leyen amputates the Green Deal to save its life
Last year’s
European election reshaped EU politics. The Commission president must
acknowledge a new alternative right-wing majority even as she fights to
preserve her signature political achievement.
June 25,
2025 8:28 pm CET
By Karl
Mathiesen
https://www.politico.eu/article/ursula-von-der-leyen-green-deal-eu-politics-economy-policy/
Dr. Ursula
von der Leyen has never had a patient quite like the Green Deal — and the
treatment she’s prescribing for the viral politics infecting her landmark
policy is amputation.
Europe’s
green agenda is under attack from a motley coalition of corporate lobbyists,
far-right rabble rousers and von der Leyen’s own political family, the
center-right European People’s Party (EPP).
Von der
Leyen, the top EU executive and a medical doctor before she entered politics,
is adamant she wants to save the patient, even if that means removing some of
its minor limbs.
After all,
von der Leyen considers the Green Deal one of her signal political
achievements.
“We’re
standing firm by the European Green Deal. Climate change won’t go away,"
said European Commission Chief Spokesperson Paula Pinho.
Launched at
the beginning of her first term as European Commission president in 2019, the
Green Deal promised to completely overhaul the EU economy — slashing
climate-warming pollution to zero, reshaping agriculture, transport and energy,
and bringing industry, corporations and citizens into harmony with nature.
But last
year’s EU election delivered an alternative right-wing majority in the European
Parliament — in addition to the centrist one that backed von der Leyen’s second
term. EPP President Manfred Weber has since been using that right-leaning
majority to target green legislation.
In response,
von der Leyen has supported looser rules on car emissions, stripped-down
corporate regulations and redirected green funds — to name a few items.
But thus
far, the Green Deal’s core — a net-zero drive for 2050 and the laws to deliver
it — has not changed. And that’s von der Leyen’s strategy.
“We’re
standing firm by the European Green Deal. Climate change won’t go away,"
said European Commission Chief Spokesperson Paula Pinho. |
“We're in a
very different place than we were at the beginning of the first mandate” in
2019, said a Commission official who is familiar with von der Leyen’s thinking
and was granted anonymity to protect their relationship. “[The president]
remains committed to the Green Deal, it just now has to incorporate some of
these changed realities.”
Slimming
down
In 2020, von
der Leyen said the Green Deal was about “much more than cutting emissions.” Yet
EU officials and von der Leyen's advisers now say her vision has shifted away
from an all-encompassing drive for sustainability on every level.
While some
of those broader goals remain, the emphasis is now on preserving what von der
Leyen views as the core of the Green Deal: its climate change laws and the EU’s
efforts to stamp out its greenhouse gas pollution by 2050.
This is
closer to what Weber is prepared to accept as well.
That shift
has guided von der Leyen in making compromises on a flock of environmental
rules — often under the guise of easing the bureaucratic burden on companies.
"Simplification
is in the interest of the European Green Deal. If it gets too complex, it won’t
be done,” Pinho said.
The
Commission has binned requirements for companies to report on their
environmental impacts and exposure to climate risks. It has watered down a ban
on the sale of combustion engine vehicles by 2035. It has killed a law
controlling pesticides. The list could go on.
Meanwhile,
the prospect of an attempt to regulate carbon pollution from agriculture — a
major emitter — has faded.
Frustration
has been mounting among those political groups that want to preserve a
full-bodied vision of the Green Deal. They argue that the climate, nature and
corporate responsibility drives are all interlinked, and that companies and
citizens need to be given a clear sense of direction.
Meanwhile,
the impacts of spiraling declines in biodiversity, natural habitats and the
stability of the climate grow worse by the day.
It has
watered down a ban on the sale of combustion engine vehicles by 2035.
“All this
demonization of the climate policies … creates a lot of uncertainty,” said Vula
Tsetsi, co-chair of the European Green Party. It is von der Leyen’s role, she
said, “to defend what for her has been so important in the previous
legislation, meaning the Green Deal. And she should not give up.”
Last Friday,
von der Leyen seemed to make her most dramatic concession yet to Weber’s
demands. After the EPP and far-right groups pushed the Commission to ditch an
anti-greenwashing measure, the EU executive seemed to indicate it would
withdraw the bill.
An enormous
row ensued. Centrist and center-left parties accused von der Leyen of being
subservient to Weber and the far right’s anti-green agenda.
“VDL needs
to get EPP in line," said Socialist European Parliament member Tiemo
Wölken, who worked on the law, using the Brussels nickname for von der Leyen.
The European Parliament's biggest group is trying to "kill everything
related to the sustainability agenda,” he added.
But in a
twist, it turned out the Commission hadn’t meant it, or misspoke — it wasn't
clear.
And von der
Leyen’s position, as POLITICO reported on Tuesday, is that she stands by the
proposal, as long as the greenwashing rules don’t apply to the smallest
companies.
But even as
that conflict rumbles on, a new, direct attack on the Green Deal’s core climate
mission is gathering steam.
Next week
the Commission is to present its 2040 climate target, but a coalition of
countries is pushing to stop the goal from affecting more near-term climate
efforts. That could further delay EU attempts to establish a critical
milestone, which is already far behind schedule — and weaken other climate
efforts in the process.
The EPP also
has its grumbles about the 2040 target, seeking more flexibility on how
countries can reach their goals.
The
Commission is listening. According to a draft of the EU executive's 2040
proposal, countries will be allowed to outsource some emissions cuts to poorer
nations. Notably, however, von der Leyen's preferred 90 percent emissions-cut
target remains — another concession made to save the overall goal.
What will
von der Leyen do if the virus enters the body? Leeches? Or euthanasia?
Louise
Guillot contributed reporting from Brussels.
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