Welcome to the Brussels Edition. I’m Suzanne Lynch, Bloomberg’s Brussels bureau chief, bringing you the latest from the EU each weekday. Make sure you’re signed up. Today was supposed to be the day European Union countries signed off on ambitious climate targets to cut emissions by 2040. Instead, representatives from the bloc’s 27 member states are mired in disagreement at a meeting of environment ministers underway in Brussels. The trouble started with a French-led initiative to push today’s scheduled discussion to leaders’ level at an EU summit in October, as our Bloomberg team first reported. Germany and others soon followed suit. This means the EU will miss this month’s deadline to present the bloc’s official pledge to slash greenhouse-gas emissions to the United Nations ahead of the COP climate summit in Brazil this November. Instead, ministers are at the moment trying to hammer out a “statement of intent,” pledging to come forward with a commitment to cut emissions between 66.3% and 72.5% by 2035. The delay also threatens to open up a Pandora’s box at the leaders’ summit in late October, when EU heads of state and government will discuss the climate targets, potentially bringing a laundry list of national concerns and issues to the table. There was plenty of finger-pointing as environment ministers arrived at today’s meeting. German State Secretary for Climate Jochen Flasbarth insisted that his government still supports the essential elements of the European Commission’s proposal, which was unveiled this summer, including the target. But he criticized the EU’s executive arm for delaying its announcement. “If the commission would have provided the dossier earlier then we would be in a different situation.” he told reporters. He also said it was natural that leaders would want to discuss the issue, given that the landmark proposal will “frame the environmental and industrial policy for Europe for the next 15 years.” Sweden’s Climate and Environment Minister Romina Pourmokhtari Photographer: Ludovic Marin/AFP Sweden’s Climate Minister Romina Pourmokhtari, however, criticized the postponement of the decision until next month, warning that hesitancy “is a luxury we cannot afford” and arguing that the proposal won’t become a better product by prolonging things. Europe’s divisions over these targets risk undermining the region’s credentials as a leader in the fight against climate change, especially at a time when the US has pulled out of the Paris agreement. |