Dubai Telegraph - Europe's Greens have the blues as climate measures rolled back

EUR -
AED 3.817974
AFN 76.486449
ALL 99.064354
AMD 408.91773
ANG 1.872499
AOA 948.093906
ARS 1105.822713
AUD 1.67502
AWG 1.871237
AZN 1.771407
BAM 1.954167
BBD 2.097827
BDT 126.233293
BGN 1.953743
BHD 0.391761
BIF 3077.542918
BMD 1.039576
BND 1.401036
BOB 7.179035
BRL 6.125811
BSD 1.039022
BTN 90.849515
BWP 14.380567
BYN 3.400275
BYR 20375.694158
BZD 2.087066
CAD 1.501284
CDF 2983.584164
CHF 0.937667
CLF 0.025927
CLP 994.885262
CNY 7.574509
CNH 7.580512
COP 4309.823166
CRC 527.261906
CUC 1.039576
CUP 27.54877
CVE 110.172929
CZK 25.05279
DJF 184.753897
DKK 7.457255
DOP 64.727464
DZD 140.627677
EGP 52.6561
ERN 15.593643
ETB 134.044724
FJD 2.41546
FKP 0.823336
GBP 0.825985
GEL 2.905657
GGP 0.823336
GHS 16.104619
GIP 0.823336
GMD 74.333704
GNF 8986.490046
GTQ 8.017146
GYD 217.369391
HKD 8.085237
HNL 26.565288
HRK 7.532878
HTG 136.479227
HUF 400.972354
IDR 17189.393005
ILS 3.741959
IMP 0.823336
INR 90.881886
IQD 1361.095273
IRR 43766.159757
ISK 145.499491
JEP 0.823336
JMD 163.805472
JOD 0.737376
JPY 156.29409
KES 134.317201
KGS 90.909943
KHR 4167.39707
KMF 492.759498
KPW 935.638716
KRW 1516.986065
KWD 0.320886
KYD 0.865851
KZT 518.019586
LAK 22547.265834
LBP 93094.349379
LKR 306.765114
LRD 207.620501
LSL 19.187996
LTL 3.069599
LVL 0.62883
LYD 5.07783
MAD 10.343256
MDL 19.428203
MGA 4946.889708
MKD 61.501352
MMK 2182.194599
MNT 3606.171826
MOP 8.323802
MRU 41.340657
MUR 48.656057
MVR 16.020263
MWK 1801.702993
MXN 21.399719
MYR 4.639113
MZN 66.432798
NAD 19.187996
NGN 1559.271179
NIO 38.239147
NOK 11.689401
NPR 145.359223
NZD 1.856933
OMR 0.40024
PAB 1.039137
PEN 3.817773
PGK 4.182505
PHP 60.265798
PKR 290.504225
PLN 4.16552
PYG 8235.117963
QAR 3.78669
RON 4.976975
RSD 117.150925
RUB 92.91477
RWF 1486.714658
SAR 3.898911
SBD 8.763013
SCR 14.972422
SDG 624.785669
SEK 11.154851
SGD 1.40362
SHP 0.826074
SLE 23.754703
SLL 21799.39967
SOS 593.806615
SRD 36.949142
STD 21517.129118
SVC 9.091402
SYP 13516.727178
SZL 19.181063
THB 35.614882
TJS 11.335482
TMT 3.648913
TND 3.299443
TOP 2.434796
TRY 37.947241
TTD 7.046145
TWD 34.207295
TZS 2708.096434
UAH 43.071905
UGX 3819.771097
USD 1.039576
UYU 44.113135
UZS 13397.803538
VES 66.696332
VND 26566.370623
VUV 128.567066
WST 2.9397
XAF 655.390381
XAG 0.033563
XAU 0.000366
XCD 2.809507
XDR 0.791442
XOF 655.409279
XPF 119.331742
YER 257.061252
ZAR 19.410036
ZMK 9357.437313
ZMW 29.585418
ZWL 334.743123
  • RBGPF

    2.2800

    67.13

    +3.4%

  • JRI

    0.1400

    12.91

    +1.08%

  • CMSC

    0.0290

    23.539

    +0.12%

  • BCC

    0.3100

    102.86

    +0.3%

  • SCS

    -0.0200

    12.13

    -0.16%

  • RIO

    -0.5650

    60.145

    -0.94%

  • BCE

    -0.2650

    23.125

    -1.15%

  • NGG

    0.1300

    61.6

    +0.21%

  • RELX

    0.3200

    47.93

    +0.67%

  • RYCEF

    0.2800

    9.41

    +2.98%

  • CMSD

    0.1335

    23.755

    +0.56%

  • AZN

    -0.1600

    75.49

    -0.21%

  • VOD

    0.0150

    8.765

    +0.17%

  • GSK

    -0.1350

    37.165

    -0.36%

  • BTI

    0.0550

    38.765

    +0.14%

  • BP

    -0.1100

    33.01

    -0.33%

Europe's Greens have the blues as climate measures rolled back
Europe's Greens have the blues as climate measures rolled back / Photo: SEBASTIEN BOZON - AFP

Europe's Greens have the blues as climate measures rolled back

After five years of breakthroughs in the climate fight, Europe's Greens are watching in dismay as Brussels unpicks part of that legacy in the name of spurring growth -- amid fears it may just be the beginning.

Text size:

"It's one of the worst scenarios you could imagine," summed up Marie Toussaint, a French lawmaker with the European Parliament's Greens. "Emotionally, we are all wondering how to get through this."

Ursula von der Leyen's first mandate as European Commission chief from 2019 to 2024 saw the adoption of a landmark environmental Green Deal -- spurred by youth marches demanding action against global warming.

And in a major step, the 27-nation European Union agreed to outlaw the sale of new combustion engine vehicles by 2035, with a target of reaching carbon-neutrality by 2050.

Fast forward to the present, and the contrast is stark.

Europe's Greens lost a quarter of their seats in European elections last June -- a contest marked by right and far-right gains across the bloc.

The shift was most pronounced in powerhouses Germany and France, where Toussaint's list for the Greens barely hit the five-percent threshold to qualify for EU parliament seats.

"It was a pretty serious shock," the 37-year-old lawmaker told AFP.

Hostility to the EU green agenda had been swelling for months before the elections -- with right-wing parties egging on protests by farmers denouncing the weight of new environmental rules.

With US President Donald Trump now threatening a trade war, von der Leyen insists the EU remains committed to its green goals -- but has made clear the priority of her second term is boosting competitiveness.

This week the commission proposed paring back environmental rules for businesses -- the ink barely dry on some of them -- to give European industry more space to compete with US and Chinese rivals.

- 'The best we got' -

"Many of us had a bit of a shock," said Denmark's Kira Peter-Hansen, who was elected as the European Parliament's youngest member in 2019.

"Personally, I truly realised in September or October that the context had completely changed," said the 27-year-old -- who regrets "we didn't appreciate the 2019-2024 years more, realising 'Wow, that was the best we got'".

"Now the political situation is different," she said. "As Greens we are all trying to figure out if we want to save whatever we can -- or if we should be in the opposition," she said.

Reluctantly, she has so far gone with the first option -- working with the conservative-led EU majority as it seeks to balance economic and environmental goals.

- 'Backlash' -

The Greens' frustration is shared by environmental groups, who are being forced into a much more defensive posture than five years ago.

"Looking at the political landscape in the Council (of EU member states) and the parliament, the prospect of having any ambitious environmental legislation is actually pretty slim," said ClientEarth's John Condon.

For Phuc-Vinh Nguyen of the Jacques Delors institute, the worst may be yet to come for Europe's environmentalists.

"There is a clear backlash taking place on these subjects," he said.

Feeling the wind in their sails, industry leaders are calling for Brussels to roll back more climate measures deemed too onerous for business.

In the EU parliament, the leader of the hard-right Patriots for Europe, France's Jordan Bardella, is calling for the Green Deal to be repealed outright.

"Some laws have fallen victim to the anti-green backlash," conceded centrist EU lawmaker Pascal Canfin, who sits on parliament's environment committee.

"But it's wrong to say it's all going to be undone," said Canfin -- who unlike some Green colleagues insists he is not "depressed" by the turn of events.

"We need to convince people that making the green transition is in our economic interest -- and to keep on fighting," he said.

G.Koya--DT