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Setting climate targets based on scientific evidence and EU values: initial recommendations to the European Commission

Page Last modified 04 May 2023
2 min read
This page was archived on 04 May 2023 with reason: Other (The Advisory Board has a new website, visit https://climate-advisory-board.europa.eu/)
To provide constructive and timely input to the European Commission for the preparation of a proposal for a climate target for 2040 in the European Union (EU), the European Scientific Advisory Board on Climate Change provided recommendations on how to ensure the approach taken is systematic, transparent and guided by EU values. This initial input will be followed by a quantitative advice within the first half of 2023, before the Commission finalises its proposal.

To limit the impacts of climate change, over 190 countries around the world, including the European Union, have adopted the Paris Agreement goal of keeping global warming well below 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, while pursuing efforts to limit the increase to 1.5 degrees.

In pursuit of this temperature goal, the European Climate Law sets out a binding objective for the EU to reach climate neutrality by 2050 and sets the 2030 target for the EU, which is to reduce net domestic greenhouse gas emissions by at least 55% compared to 1990 levels. The law also requires the European Commission to propose a 2040 climate target for the EU in the first half of 2024, accompanied by an indicative EU greenhouse gas budget for the period 2030-2050.

With this document, the European Scientific Advisory Board on Climate Change (the Advisory Board) provides an initial input on key issues for the European Commission to consider when preparing its 2040 target proposal and accompanying budget.

Key recommendations

The Advisory Board recommends that the European Commission follow an approach that is systematic, transparent and guided by EU values, when preparing its EU 2040 climate target proposal and accompanying greenhouse gas budget.

To this end, the Advisory Board recommends that the European Commission’s analysis consider the following five key areas, presented in detail in the initial advice document:

  1. The scientific and legal context
  2. Physical limits to global emissions and the EU’s ‘fair share’
  3. Transformation scenarios towards net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 for the EU
  4. The implications of different pathways in terms of side effects, co-benefits, resilience and feasibility
  5. The use of value judgements, especially when addressing tensions between different issues and principles

 

In the preparation of its proposal of an EU 2040 climate target and accompanying greenhouse gas budget, the European Commission should consider five key areas: (1) the scientific and legal context; (2) the physical limits to global emissions and the EU’s ‘fair share’; (3) the transformation scenarios towards net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 for the EU; (4) the implications of different pathways in terms of side effects, co-benefits, resilience and feasibility; and (5) the use of value judgements, especially when addressing tensions between different issues and principles.

The Advisory Board’s letter to the Commission and initial advice can be found here.

The Advisory Board intends to publish additional, quantitative, advice within the first half of 2023. This is expected to consist of an indicative range of emission pathways for the EU, based on available modelling results selected in accordance with the principles and method described in this initial input, as well as the associated interim target values, and discussion of the implications of choosing between different pathways.

The European Scientific Advisory Board on Climate Change

The European Climate Law sets out a binding objective of climate neutrality in the European Union by 2050 in pursuit of the long-term temperature goal set out in the Paris Agreement. It also provides a framework for achieving progress in pursuit of the global adaptation goal established in the Paris Agreement.

To support the achievement of these objectives, the European Climate Law established a European Scientific Advisory Board on Climate Change to serve as a point of reference for the European Union on scientific knowledge relating to climate change. The Advisory Board will provide independent scientific advice and produce reports on EU measures, climate targets and indicative greenhouse gas budgets and their coherence with the European Climate Law and the EU's international commitments under the Paris Agreement.

Further information on the Advisory Board, its composition and its work programme is available here.

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