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EU plans to finish green investment rules for gas, nuclear next year

The bloc is considering whether to include nuclear and natural gas in its "sustainable finance taxonomy", a rulebook that will restrict which activities can be labelled as climate-friendly investments.

Kate Abnett (Reuters)
Brussels, Belgium
Tue, December 21, 2021

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EU plans to finish green investment rules for gas, nuclear next year The Bugey nuclear power plant in Saint-Vulbas, France, is shown in this file photo taken on April 8, 2016. France is among the EU member countries defending the role of nuclear in the region's energy transition. (Agence France -Presse/Philippe Desmazes)

T

he European Commission plans to finish next year its long-awaited rules on whether to label gas and nuclear energy as climate-friendly investments under European Union (EU) green finance rules, its environment policy chief said on Monday.

The EU executive Commission is considering whether to include nuclear and natural gas in its "sustainable finance taxonomy", a rulebook that will restrict which activities can be labelled as climate-friendly investments.

"We are going to have most likely a discussion tomorrow in college, which then will lead... to approval next year," EU environment commissioner Virginijus Sinkevicius told a news conference on Monday, referring to the Commission's weekly "college" meeting.

Before the Commission publishes its proposal for the rules, it must share them with member states and its group of expert advisers from finance, industry and civil society groups.

The Commission is expected to start the consultation process before the end of the year, which would mean the proposal itself would not be published until January 2022.

"We will kick start the process when it comes to the proposal on taxonomy before the end of the year," a European Commission spokesman told a regular briefing on Monday.

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The Commission had planned to adopt the climate section of its taxonomy this year, but has struggled to overcome rifts among EU member states, who disagree on whether gas and nuclear help or harm attempts to avert disastrous climate change.

Once published, a majority of EU countries or European Parliament could block the proposed rules.

Brussels' decision on gas and nuclear has faced intense lobbying from EU countries, who are split. Some countries say gas investments are needed to help them quit more-polluting coal and others warn labelling a fossil fuel as green would undermine the credibility of the rules and the EU's leadership in tackling climate change.

Nuclear energy is similarly divisive. France, the Czech Republic and Poland are among those saying the fuel's low CO2 emissions make it vital in the transition to green energy. Germany, Luxembourg and Austria are among those opposed, citing concerns around radioactive waste.

The EU taxonomy will not ban investments in activities not labelled "green". But by limiting the green label to those activities deemed truly climate-friendly, the EU aims to steer cash into low carbon projects and stop companies or investors from making unsubstantiated environmental claims.

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