Subscribe to daily environment news





 

Click for news Click for pictures
National Tree Day

Planet Ark Home


France Says Burying CO2, EU Gas Shipments Urgent
Mail this story to a friend | Printer friendly version

BELGIUM: October 10, 2008


BRUSSELS - The European Union must urgently find funding for a new technology to trap and bury carbon dioxide underground and should increase the region's capacity for liquefied gas shipments, the EU's French presidency said.


The proposals would form part of an EU drive to tackle climate change and secure reliable supplies of energy, something which has soared to the top of the EU's agenda after Moscow's invasion of key gas transit country Georgia in August.

The 27-nation bloc should also find ways of freeing up spare gas supplies so member states can help each other out if their neighbours suffer energy crises, said a draft document prepared for Friday's meeting of energy ministers and seen by Reuters.

In a surprise move this week, EU lawmakers backed about 10 billion euros (US$13.7 billion) of aid to test carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology, fitted to coal plants, which many scientists regard as a climate-change silver bullet.

But funding must now get approval from member states, some of which are expected to oppose the move so more funds can be used to help east European nations rebuild their highly polluting communist-era coal plants.

But France said CCS was useful not just for curbing greenhouse gas emissions blamed for global warming, but also for making more domestic energy sources available to use in the EU.

Legislation to pave the way for the CCS will have to be implemented as soon as possible, it added.

"The Council and the Commission are invited to identify the financing, in addition to private sector investment, which will be necessary for the 12 demonstrations to be put in place in 2015," said the document.

It said shipments of liquefied natural gas (LNG) could also be used to increase the range of energy sources available to Europe, provided enough import terminals were built, backed by a wide distribution network.

"The current situation as regards infrastructure is unsatisfactory, particularly in the north of Europe," it said. "That issue should also be examined closely."

And it called on EU nations to look at how they could help each other get through energy droughts by finding ways to free up spare gas supplies.

"It would be useful to put a mechanism in place whereby each member state would lay down security margins enabling it, in an emergency, to free up a certain percentage of its peak consumption, whether by drawing on stocks, increasing production or imports, or reducing consumption," it said. (Reporting by Pete Harrison; editing by James Jukwey)


REUTERS NEWS SERVICE

Reuters



© 2008 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters.
top

 
TODAY'S
ENVIRONMENT
NEWS

AUSTRALIA:
Malaria and Dengue the Sting in Climate Change

AUSTRALIA:
Torrential Rains Hit Australia State, One Dead

BELGIUM:
Global Warming Could Lead To More Arctic Energy

BELGIUM/UK:
Not Promising The Earth, Ethical Banks Win Custom

GERMANY/BELGIUM:
EU Carmaking Nations in CO2 Deal as Italy Signs Up

SINGAPORE:
Aussie Miners Turn To Solar Tower Power

SPAIN:
Greenpeace Blockades Ageing Spanish Nuclear Plant

UK:
UN Publishes Draft Proposal Ahead of Climate Meet

US:
ANALYSIS - Weak Economy Could Curb Obama Coal Cleanup Plan

US:
Volkswagen Diesel Car Wins "Green Car of the Year"

US:
Automakers Detail Electric Car Plans at LA Show

US:
Wal-Mart in Wind Energy Deal with Duke Energy

US:
Broad Schwarzenegger Emissions Pledge Caps Summit

US:
Ex-EPA Official Faults Probe of BP Pipeline Spills



previous day