EURACTIV — 2022-12-27
News from Brussels
The ‘Fit for 55’ climate law package, which aims to reduce CO2 emissions in the EU by 55% by 2030 compared to 1990 levels, dominated the transport legislative agenda in Brussels in 2022.
Lawmakers from the European Parliament and Council, having defined their positions before the summer break, spent much of the year’s second half locked in negotiations – known in EU vernacular as trilogues.
While major deals have been struck, some transport files proved more challenging to reach an agreement on than others, leaving the EU institutions at loggerheads.
In 2023 will see renewed efforts to break the remaining deadlocks, shifting the “Fit for 55” package from a Commission proposal to the new EU reality.
Below, EURACTIV looks at what has been agreed upon and what is left to negotiate.
Maritime
The EU will soon become the first market to require ship operators to pay for their carbon emissions.
Under the ETS Maritime deal, ships travelling within the EU will be required to pay for 100% of their emissions, while 50% of the emissions of journeys to or from a non-EU destination will be covered.
Non-CO2 emissions, such as methane and nitrous oxide, will also be included in the ETS from 2026.
In world first, EU legislators agree to price shipping emissions
EU legislators agreed to include maritime transport within the EU’s emission trading scheme (ETS) during talks that lasted until late Tuesday 29 November, a move that will force ship operators to pay for their carbon emissions for the first time.
While the carbon market extension was agreed upon smoothly, another major maritime file continues to be debated.
FuelEU Maritime, the sister legislation to the aviation sector’s green fuel law, aims to spur ship operators to choose lower-carbon fuels over heavy oil.
To the outrage of environmentalists, this approach leaves the door open to natural gas. Supporters, however, say the EU’s approach is “technology neutral”, empowering the industry to decide how best to decarbonise.
The second round of inter-institutional negotiations took place on 8 December, with the file expected to be agreed upon in 2023.
Parliament backs EU's maritime fuel law to curtail shipping emissions
The European Parliament voted Wednesday 19 October to rein in maritime emissions by strengthening greenhouse gas intensity limits for maritime fuels and obliging large ship owners to use a percentage of green-hydrogen derived fuels by 2030.
Road transport
One EU law dominated debate in the road transport sector in 2022: The CO2 emissions standards for vehicles regulation, which essentially bans the sale of petrol and diesel cars from 2035.
The law locks in the bloc-wide shift to electric vehicles, consigning the internal combustion engine to automotive history.
But one inclusion in the final text has raised eyebrows.
At the behest of Germany, a non-binding recital clause asks the European Commission to make a proposal to permit vehicles “running exclusively on CO2-neutral fuels” beyond 2035.
For some, this was seen as a reprieve for combustion engines, so long as e-fuels power them.
For others, the recital was merely an example of “strategic ambiguity” – a means to allow politicians of all stripes to claim victory in the negotiations.
EU finalises deal spelling death of diesel and petrol cars
European Union legislators agreed to a deal late Thursday, 27 October requiring new cars and vans to be zero-emission as of 2035, a momentous agreement that sets Europe on a trajectory to a largely electric automotive future.
This EU-mandated shift to clean vehicles will require a rapid increase in the number of charging points available throughout Europe.
The car industry and green NGOs formed an unusual alliance this year to lobby EU officials to speed up the rollout of electric vehicle charging stations, arguing that the low number has hurt consumer confidence in the technology.
Legislatively, this is being tackled by the Alternative Fuels Infrastructure Regulation (AFIR).
AFIR will set targets for the number of charging points along key EU motorways while making it easier to pay for charging, particularly when travelling across borders.
Negotiations are ongoing, with a third trilogue set to take place in early 2023.
Will paying for EV charging be as easy as refuelling petrol cars?
The European Parliament wants to make charging for electric vehicles easier by making payment terminals for credit and debit cards obligatory at all charging points. But charging operators warn that a requirement to retrofit existing stations might slow down infrastructure roll-out.
A new ETS for buildings and road transport was agreed on 18 December, putting a price on carbon emissions from heating and driving for the first time.
Lawmakers were careful to ensure the new tariff did not stir public anger.
The carbon price of the ETS2, which will come in 2027 at the earliest, will be capped at €45 per tonne – significantly less than the main ETS price. According to Green lawmaker Michael Bloss, it will mean a maximum increase of around 10 cents per litre on petrol or diesel.
The agreement will also see the majority of the ETS2 revenues ringfenced for the Social Climate Fund, a reserve intended to alleviate the impact on the poorest in society.
December additionally saw the EU tackle the sustainability of batteries sold in the bloc. Lawmakers struck a deal that promises to address supply chain abuses and make EU batteries the greenest in the world.
EU batteries to be the world's greenest under new rules
Batteries produced in Europe will be the most sustainable in the world, under new rules agreed upon by EU lawmakers on Friday, 9 December.