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EU reaches provisional deal on 2030 renewable energy goals
Updated 16:55, 30-Mar-2023
CGTN

The European Union reached a provisional deal on Thursday on higher renewable energy targets, an important pillar of the bloc's plans to fight climate change and end dependence on Russian fossil fuels.

Negotiators of the European Parliament and the Council, representing EU members, agreed that by 2030, the 27-country EU would commit to sourcing 42.5 percent of its energy from renewable sources like wind and solar, with a potential top-up to 45 percent.

The EU's current 2030 target is for a 32 percent renewable energy share.

The EU got 22 percent of its energy from renewable sources in 2021, but the level varied significantly between countries. Sweden leads the 27 EU countries with its 63 percent renewable energy share, while in Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands and Ireland, renewable sources make up less than 13 percent of total energy use.

A rapid shift to renewable energy is crucial if the EU is to meet its climate change goals, including a legally binding aim to cut net greenhouse gas emissions by 55 percent by 2030, from 1990 levels.

EU countries will have to raise to 29 percent the share of renewables in energy used by the transport sector. EU industry would increase its use of renewables by 1.6 percent per year, with 42 percent of the hydrogen it uses deriving from renewable sources by 2030 and 60 percent by 2035.

The directive added targets for buildings and sought accelerated permitting processes for renewable energy projects.

(Cover: Wind turbines on a levee and offshore in Flevoland, The Netherlands on April 20, 2022. /CFP)

Source(s): Reuters

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