from the Daily Press
By CONSTANT BRAND
BRUSSELS, Belgium - EU lawmakers voted Thursday to cut in half an ambitious target for using crop-based biofuels for 10 percent of its road transport needs by 2020.
The vote by the European Parliament's industry committee deals a blow to climate change goals agreed to by EU leaders last year to try to cut carbon dioxide emissions.
Environmental and aid groups had criticized the EU's 10 percent biofuels target, claiming it harmed efforts to fight global poverty and effectively tackle carbon emissions, and caused deforestation.
The biofuels target is part of an ambitious climate change package the 27 EU leaders embraced last year, which they hope to enact by year's end.
The overall aim is for the EU to draw 20 percent of all its energy from renewable sources by 2020 — up from 8.5 percent now.
Lawmakers pushed EU governments to move away from so-called first generation biofuels, which use food crops to make transport fuels, and instead use more alternative green technologies such as electric and hydrogen powered vehicles.
An amended climate change bill now goes to the full European Parliament for a vote and back to EU governments for further negotiations. EU governments and the EU assembly all have to agree on the climate change plan before it becomes law.
France, which currently holds the EU presidency, wants the legislative measures in place before international climate change talks in December.
The European Commission, which drafted the original climate change bill, had steadfastly ignored critics who said the 10 percent biofuels target contributed to rising food prices.
Link to full article. May expire in future.
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