The UK government was today again accused of seeking to water down the EU's
package of climate change regulation after it emerged that officials at the
Department for Business Enterprise and Regulatory Reform (BERR) were lobbying
for aviation to be excluded from renewable energy targets.
Under the proposals, aviation is to be included in targets to ensure 20 per
cent of Europe's energy mix comes from renewable sources, paving the way for far
wider use of biofuels by airlines.
However, documents leaked to the BBC show that the UK is leading attempts to
have aviation excluded from the targets on the grounds that aviation biofuels
are still at an early stage of development and it will be difficult for the
industry to produce enough biofuel in a sustainable manner.
The document says that "member states want the aviation sector to be
excluded from the denominator used to calculate the overall target. They
consider that in the present state of technology we cannot expect it to be
possible for biofuels that can replace kerosene to be certified for commercial
aviation by 2020."
But environmental groups countered that the target would not require aviation
to source 20 per cent of its fuel from biofuels, but would instead require other
sectors to cover any shortfall by increasing their reliance on renewables.
They argued that exempting aviation from the target would effectively mean
that the overall target for the EU economy would be reduced from 20 per cent to
18.5 per cent.
Friends of the Earth energy campaigner Robin Webster accused the government
of "acting disgracefully" by attempting to "wriggle out" of the targets. “EU
renewable energy plans are an essential part of its climate change strategy,"
he said. "Ignoring aviation would be like going on a calorie-controlled diet but
refusing to count calories from chocolate."
The government's contention that the aviation industry would struggle to make
significant use of biofuels by 2020 was also disputed by aviation industry
experts, with a spokesman for Virgin Atlantic telling the Guardian
newspaper that it expected to run 10 per cent of its fleet on biofuels by 2020.
In an unusual move, Claude Turmes, the MEP leading the development of the
renewable energy legislation for the European parliament, openly criticised the
UK government for attempting to water down the targets.
"I find it outrageous," he told the BBC. "Prime minister Brown came here and
said he would stick to the 20 per cent. [But] now his civil servants in Brussels
are not following that. They are trying to dilute the target in the directive –
they are attacking it."
However, a spokeswoman for BERR insisted that while the government remained
committed to meeting the EU targets it made sense to exempt aviation from the
renewable energy goal, adding that its inclusion in the EU's emissions trading
scheme would ensure that the sector made a contribution to tackling climate
change.
"The UK believes the renewables target should apply to sectors where
renewable energy can be realistically rolled out within the next 12 years," she
said. "Aviation is already excluded from the 10 per cent renewable transport
target – which also forms part of this directive – because biofuel technology
for aircraft is many years away."
The leaked documents also revealed that the UK is lobbying to have rules that
would require renewable energy technologies to be fitted to all new and
refurbished buildings scrapped, and is seeking to dilute further the 20 per cent
goal by allowing renewables projects that have started by 2020, but are not yet
complete, to count towards meeting the target.
The news comes hot on the heels of
revelations
last week that UK officials were also lobbying to increase the extent to
which European governments could use investment in carbon reduction projects in
the developing world to count towards domestic emission reduction targets.
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