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Politics

Don't overdo climate worries: EU parl chief

December 26, 2019

Inundating citizens about the climate crisis is "as bad as doing nothing," European Parliament President David Sassoli has warned. He believes shaming regions still dependent on coal could create a social tinderbox.

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A Greenpeace banner reads Climate Emergency
Image: picture-alliance/AP/F. Seco

European Parliament President David Sassoli has called for the climate transition to be "made fair" to those communities still reliant on fossil fuel industries.

In an interview with Germany's Funke Media Group, Sassoli warned that overwhelming European citizens with information about the need for climate protection would be "as bad as doing nothing."

He said policies that, for example, ignored people in regions dependent on coal, could be "enormously socially explosive," and would not work in the long term.

Read more: Climate negotiators reach watered-down deal at COP25

Sassoli's interview, to be published in full on Friday by Germany's third-largest newspaper and magazine group, welcomed the European Union's plan for a Green Deal, which aims to make the bloc climate neutral by 2050.

Will investment offset losses?

The Italian politician called for the €100 billion ($111 billion) climate transition budget to be earmarked for those areas that will be worst impacted by the move to greener fuels.

He said the success of the policy would depend on whether the ambition can be seen as an opportunity — with major political backing for environmental innovations, economic growth and jobs.

Sassoli said the EU must show other countries that "the European way not only leads to more climate protection but also brings many other advantages, for example, in terms of innovation or energy independence."

China, among other nations, is watching "with interest" the EU's climate protection plans, he added.

His statement came as young people around the world in the Fridays for Future movement have called for massive changes to reach climate neutrality, protect the environment and keep the average global temperature from rising more than 2 degrees Celsius, the limit scientists predicted would prevent the most catastrophic consequences of climate change.

Read more: Greta Thunberg's trip home on a crowded German train

Earlier this month, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, the head of the EU's executive branch, announced the European Green Deal — a play on the vast New Deal infrastructure program launched in 1933 by former US President Franklin D. Roosevelt to help the United States recover from the Great Depression.

Melting ice brings new dangers

Profound economic restructuring

Von der Leyen hailed the plan as Europe's "man on moon moment," and predicted that EU economies would undergo a profound restructuring and would require billions of euros of investment.

But the deal has received huge opposition from eastern European countries. Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic — which are reliant on coal-fired power plants — have yet to commit to the goal of net-zero CO2 emissions by 2050. 

The EU plan also includes a "carbon border tax" on polluting foreign firms in selected industries from 2021.

mm/sms (AFP, dpa)

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