Europe’s Green Deal: EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen Announces “Europe’s Man on the Moon Moment” (Videos)
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As some act to stall progress, the forward motion provided by European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and all she represents is a remarkable step forward. Presenting a Green Deal plan for Europe at the European Parliament in Brussels, Belgium, she and her colleagues took a seed from US progressives and gave it the watering and care it needed in the fertile ground of Europe.
The new deal includes a commitment to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050, which President Ursula von der Leyen referred to as “Europe’s man on the moon moment.”
However, despite the honorable intention and strong words, many still wonder if this will match the need. Even the European Council statement acknowledges there’s a big gap between current reality, including country-by-country plans, and future targets.
European Council meeting (12 December 2019) conclusions: “In the light of the latest available science and of the need to step up global climate action, the European Council endorses the objective of achieving a climate-neutral EU by 2050, in line with the objectives of the Paris Agreement. One Member State, at this stage, cannot commit to implement this objective as far as it is concerned, and the European Council will come back to this in June 2020.”
The group of European countries encompasses 28 nations and 500 million people. How swiftly can people, businesses, financial markets, and consumers at large in these countries transition to the necessary standard.
The Washington Post outlines some specifics while questioning and trying to answer, “How big is Europe’s Green Deal?#8221;
The European Commission plans will affect everything related to climate and addresses concerns of holdouts such a Poland, which relies too much on coal. It covers energy production, transport, farming, and the design of cities. The plan is comprehensive in terms of market segments.