Berliner Boersenzeitung - Austria's support gets EU biodiversity law over the line

EUR -
AED 4.273878
AFN 76.929127
ALL 96.379094
AMD 444.029361
ANG 2.083179
AOA 1067.160055
ARS 1669.416082
AUD 1.756076
AWG 2.097662
AZN 1.986139
BAM 1.953746
BBD 2.344036
BDT 142.270436
BGN 1.958507
BHD 0.438716
BIF 3450.523461
BMD 1.163752
BND 1.50922
BOB 8.07055
BRL 6.312773
BSD 1.163777
BTN 104.758321
BWP 15.48279
BYN 3.365776
BYR 22809.531139
BZD 2.340649
CAD 1.611051
CDF 2597.493612
CHF 0.938927
CLF 0.027431
CLP 1076.097443
CNY 8.227841
CNH 8.228277
COP 4460.75294
CRC 568.302563
CUC 1.163752
CUP 30.839417
CVE 110.149204
CZK 24.289713
DJF 206.821409
DKK 7.468003
DOP 74.611563
DZD 151.371482
EGP 55.249686
ERN 17.456274
ETB 180.916386
FJD 2.627056
FKP 0.872848
GBP 0.873489
GEL 3.136351
GGP 0.872848
GHS 13.296079
GIP 0.872848
GMD 84.953493
GNF 10116.36502
GTQ 8.914628
GYD 243.485079
HKD 9.053639
HNL 30.651777
HRK 7.535521
HTG 152.379808
HUF 384.442972
IDR 19425.807019
ILS 3.75211
IMP 0.872848
INR 104.919534
IQD 1524.597244
IRR 49008.486669
ISK 148.925001
JEP 0.872848
JMD 186.573861
JOD 0.825134
JPY 181.251401
KES 150.415155
KGS 101.769713
KHR 4659.122046
KMF 491.102923
KPW 1047.376277
KRW 1709.271735
KWD 0.357353
KYD 0.969885
KZT 594.694818
LAK 25239.574959
LBP 104218.886105
LKR 359.122467
LRD 205.414937
LSL 19.761725
LTL 3.436256
LVL 0.703942
LYD 6.324351
MAD 10.750998
MDL 19.732341
MGA 5189.566687
MKD 61.575268
MMK 2443.912111
MNT 4128.961065
MOP 9.326695
MRU 46.412208
MUR 53.672132
MVR 17.921437
MWK 2018.087126
MXN 21.224848
MYR 4.786529
MZN 74.375488
NAD 19.761725
NGN 1687.975205
NIO 42.82498
NOK 11.782974
NPR 167.613514
NZD 2.013983
OMR 0.447466
PAB 1.163782
PEN 3.914685
PGK 4.938808
PHP 68.915001
PKR 328.919419
PLN 4.236737
PYG 8003.58611
QAR 4.24204
RON 5.089434
RSD 117.39691
RUB 89.085229
RWF 1693.319872
SAR 4.367546
SBD 9.578365
SCR 17.319792
SDG 699.993726
SEK 10.936484
SGD 1.509985
SHP 0.873115
SLE 27.577665
SLL 24403.286774
SOS 663.904912
SRD 44.989471
STD 24087.308281
STN 24.474271
SVC 10.183295
SYP 12867.404641
SZL 19.756231
THB 37.121382
TJS 10.677875
TMT 4.084768
TND 3.418506
TOP 2.802035
TRY 49.542303
TTD 7.884745
TWD 36.286352
TZS 2851.191739
UAH 49.062922
UGX 4117.671236
USD 1.163752
UYU 45.462207
UZS 13954.330301
VES 296.235219
VND 30676.491878
VUV 141.795077
WST 3.245249
XAF 655.270952
XAG 0.020049
XAU 0.000278
XCD 3.145097
XCG 2.097495
XDR 0.81481
XOF 655.26814
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.612714
ZAR 19.80193
ZMK 10475.154659
ZMW 26.912823
ZWL 374.727537
  • CMSC

    -0.0350

    23.395

    -0.15%

  • BCC

    -0.5800

    72.47

    -0.8%

  • RIO

    -0.0260

    73.034

    -0.04%

  • NGG

    -0.0600

    75.35

    -0.08%

  • BTI

    0.4850

    57.495

    +0.84%

  • RBGPF

    0.8500

    79.2

    +1.07%

  • GSK

    0.1100

    48.52

    +0.23%

  • SCS

    0.0000

    16.14

    0%

  • RYCEF

    0.3100

    14.8

    +2.09%

  • AZN

    0.5500

    90.73

    +0.61%

  • JRI

    -0.0900

    13.7

    -0.66%

  • RELX

    -0.8060

    39.514

    -2.04%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    23.28

    +0.13%

  • BCE

    -0.2850

    23.265

    -1.23%

  • VOD

    0.0050

    12.475

    +0.04%

  • BP

    0.0350

    35.865

    +0.1%

Austria's support gets EU biodiversity law over the line
Austria's support gets EU biodiversity law over the line / Photo: Henrik MONTGOMERY - TT News Agency/AFP/File

Austria's support gets EU biodiversity law over the line

EU member countries on Monday gave final approval to a key biodiversity measure, a bloc-wide nature restoration law, after Austria's climate minister defied her chancellor to back it.

Text size:

The about-face by the minister, Leonore Gewessler, gave the law the majority support it needed to be adopted, confirmed Belgium, which holds the rotating EU presidency.

Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer declared her decision "unlawful".

The law is a central part of the EU's ambitious environmental goals under its Green Deal, which aims to have the bloc become carbon-neutral by 2050, and ecological groups hailed its definitive adoption.

Belgium issued a statement saying EU environment ministers had validated the law, which had already received European Parliament assent in February.

The approval means protecting EU "biodiversity and the living environment of European citizens," said Alain Maron, environment minister for the Brussels region, who chaired the meeting.

"It is our duty to respond to the urgency of the collapse of biodiversity in Europe, but also to enable the European Union to meet its international commitments," he said.

The legislation requires the European Union's 27 member states to put in place measures to restore at least 20 percent of the bloc's land and seas by 2030.

It focuses particularly on tracts with the most potential to capture and store carbon and to prevent and reduce the impact of natural disasters.

Its passage has sparked anger from some farmers' groups who warn it will threaten their livelihoods and add to what they say is excessive regulation at a time of heightened competition from importers outside the bloc.

The conservative European People's Party -- the main grouping in the European Parliament which emerged strengthened from EU elections just over a week ago -- had echoed the farmers' complaints and called the law badly drafted.

But after the parliament passed it 329 votes to 275, it was Austria that remained the final obstacle, preventing a weighted majority of EU member states signing off on it.

Vienna had threatened legal action against the law at the European Court of Justice.

- Impasse broken -

The impasse endured until Monday, when Gewessler, a member of the Greens party in Austria's ruling coalition, added her country's backing.

Nehammer, who belongs to the conservative Austrian People's Party partnered with the Greens in government, slammed his minister's move.

Ahead of Monday's vote, his office said it had "informed the Belgian Council Presidency (of the EU) that federal minister Gewessler's approval of EU renaturation would be unlawful".

The Brussels minister Maron said that was viewed as an "internal controversy in Austria" and he emphasised the vote was final.

Gewessler said her decision to support the bill was legal.

"I'm deeply convinced that today is the day for action... It's a decisive day for nature and our planet in Europe," she told reporters before the vote.

Pro-environment groups welcomed the majority vote by EU member states.

Greenpeace called the law's adoption "a ray of hope for Europe's nature, future generations and the livelihoods of rural communities".

A coalition of organisations comprising WWF, ClientEarth, EEB and Birdlife Europe said: "Today's vote is a massive victory for Europe's nature and citizens who have been long calling for immediate action to tackle nature's alarming decline."

It said that, following "one of the most tumultuous journeys in the history of EU legislation... we are jubilant that this law is now reality -- this day will go down in history as a turning point for nature and society".

(K.Lüdke--BBZ)