. Earth Science News .
EU Chief Defends Euro Bloc Emissions Trading Scheme

Satellite image of Europe.
by Staff Writers
Berlin (AFP) Nov 15, 2006
European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso on Wednesday defended the European Union's innovative emissions trading scheme which has been criticised by economists and the World Wildlife Fund. The scheme "had shown how cost-effective solutions to reduce greenhouse gases can be found, which oblige companies to find their own ways to reduce emissions", Barroso wrote in the German daily Berliner Zeitung.

"It is the cornerstone of a growing international trade in carbon dioxide and it is not surprising that many big US companies are demanding a similar system for the United States."

The scheme is supposed to be the main thrust of EU efforts to cut greenhouse gas emissions under the Kyoto Protocol, but the WWF warned last week that the credibility of the fledgling initiative is under threat because member states are allotting more permits to pollute than industrial plants need.

More quotas were issued than polluters could use in 2005 and the European Commission has found that most of the EU member states that have already filed their allocation plans for the 2008-2012 period have once again handed out too many emissions permits.

Source: Agence France-Presse

Related Links
Our Polluted World and Cleaning It Up
The Economy

Australia Gets Heated Over French Global Warming Threat
Sydney (AFP) Nov 15, 2006
Australia hit back at France Wednesday over its threat to impose a tax on industrial goods from countries that ignore the Kyoto Protocol on global warming. Prime Minister John Howard described the plan as "silly", while the mass-circulation Daily Telegraph headlined its report: "Back off, Frogs".







  • Joining Forces To Predict Tsunamis
  • Indian Disaster Warning System To Be Ready By 2007 Says Space Agency
  • Japan Probes Damage From Killer Twister
  • Developing Models To Predict Organizational Response To Extreme Events

  • Australian PM To Embrace Carbon Trading At APEC
  • Global Warming Triggers North Sea Temperature Rise
  • Global Warming Threatens Canada Hydro Power, Oil Exports
  • Stakes Rise At UN Climate Poker Game Amid Hopes For A US Shift

  • SciSys Wins Software Role For CryoSat-2 Mission
  • Next Generation Imaging Detectors Could Enhance Space Missions
  • SSTL Signs Contract With Federal Republic Of Nigeria For Supply Of EO Satellite
  • NASA Snow Data Helps Maintain Largest And Oldest Bison Herd

  • Wireless Energy Transfer Can Potentially Charge Cell Phones Without Cords
  • Australia And US Bonnie And Clyde Of Global Warming
  • Ukraine, Poland Urge Faster Odessa-Brody Oil Pipeline Extension
  • Cheaper Color Printing By Harnessing Ben Franklin's Electrostatic Forces

  • 26,000 Russians Contracted HIV Since Start Of Year
  • Next Flu Pandemic: What To Do Until The Vaccine Arrives
  • Industrial Chemicals Are Impairing The Brain Development Of Children Worldwide
  • Indonesia Given A Hand In Bird Flu Fight

  • Global Warming Increases Species Extinctions Worldwide
  • Crystalline Life Patterns
  • The Milky Way Shaped Life On Earth
  • At Least 1,000 Orangutans Killed In Indonesian Fires

  • China Vice Premier Stresses Safe, Clean Mining Operations
  • No Magic Bullet For Carbon Pollution Says IEA
  • Silicon Valley Trying To Lead By Green Example
  • Zanzibar Plastic Bag Ban Takes Effect As Environment Woes Mount

  • Buffet for Early Human Relatives Two Million Years Ago
  • Unraveling Where Chimp And Human Brains Diverge
  • Researchers Discover How Brain Protein Might Control Memory
  • SimCity For Real

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement