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Carbon emissions drop across Europe in 2020 - Eurostat

by Reuters
Friday, 7 May 2021 12:10 GMT

ARCHIVE PICTURE: The lignite (brown coal) power plant complex of German energy supplier and utility RWE is reflected in a puddle in Neurath, north-west of Cologne, Germany, February 5, 2020. REUTERS/Wolfgang Rattay

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Eurostat observes a reduction in oil and oil products consumption in almost all EU member states, while natural gas consumption falls in 15 countries

May 7 (Reuters) - Carbon emissions from use of fossil fuels fell across the European Union last year, the bloc's statistics office estimated on Friday, citing COVID-19 restrictions that shut down travel and factories across the region.

CO2 emissions from the combustion of fossil fuels - such as oil, coal and natural gas - dropped 10% in 2020 compared the previous year, according to Eurostat.

Eurostat observed a reduction in oil and oil products consumption in almost all member states, while natural gas consumption fell in 15 countries.

"In contrast, the share of renewables (especially wind, hydro and solar) in electricity generation grew considerably," it said.

Though emissions fell in each of the EU's 27 member states, Eurostat reported the biggest dips in Greece, Estonia and Luxembourg - all down around 18%.

Germany, which generates a quarter of the EU's total CO2 emissions, saw emissions drop nearly 9%, while in Italy, France and Poland, other major CO2 producers, they fell 8% to 11%.

The EU's target to become climate neutral by 2050, helping curb dangerous global warming, will require a green transition in industrial sectors through a take-up of technologies like renewable hydrogen fuel and energy storage.

However, courts in France and Germany have ruled that the countries must do more to curb the emissions, while Poland's reluctance to divest from coal has jeopardised its access to the EU's green transition funding.

Poland was the only member state not to commit to climate neutrality by 2050 when the bloc set the target in 2019 and the government has long courted political support from interests in coal.

For interactive graphic, click: (https://tmsnrt.rs/3eZYg6p)

(Reporting by Sarah Morland in Gdansk Editing by Tomasz Janowski)

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