Wednesday, May 2, 2018

European Parliament Alerts from the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety committee

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Highlights - Union Civil Protection Mechanism - Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety
02-05-2018 05:16 PM CEST

A search and rescue team managed to rescue an earthquake survivor
On 17 May, the ENVI Committee is set to vote on the draft report on the Union Civil Protection Mechanism (UCPM). The rapporteur seeks inter alia to increase the flexibility in the definition of the assets which will make up RescEU and suggests the creation of a Civil Protection Erasmus.

The EC presented its proposal for a strengthened UCPM on 23 November 2017 as part of Juncker's "Europe that protects" agenda. The increased recurrence of natural disasters and the inability of the current system to respond effectively to all the requests for support by Member States underpin the overhaul of the UCPM system. The centrepiece of the proposal is rescEU, a reserve at European level of civil protection capabilities additional to those available to Member States.

Source : © European Union, 2018 - EP
02-05-2018 05:16 PM CEST

Black car emitting carbon dioxide with a blue background
On 16 May, the ENVI committee will consider the draft report on the EC proposal on post-2020 CO2 emission standards for new passenger cars and vans. The targets, based on the new WLTP test, are set for the EU-wide fleet as % reductions of 15% in 2025 and 30% in 2030 respectively compared to the average of the specific emission targets for 2021. The proposal also includes a "bonus" mechanism to incentivise zero- and low-emission vehicles, by setting benchmarks of 15% and 30% for 2025 and 2030.

The draft report seeks to step up the proposal's ambition to bring it more in line with the long-term Union and Paris targets by boosting the CO2 targets for 2025 & 2030 to 25% and 50% respectively and the ZEV/LEV benchmarks to 20% and 50% respectively, while also introducing a "malus" aspect to this mechanism. It further deletes both the mass utility parameter and the derogations for OEMs with 10,000-300,000 vehicles per year. It also seeks to ensure the real-world representativeness of emissions measured at type approval by requesting the Commission to develop a real-world CO2 test. Exceedances are to be measured using data from fuel consumption meters and a not-to-exceed limit is introduced to ensure that discrepancies between lab and on the road values are kept under control. Last but not least, the draft sets up the framework for life-cycle emissions analysis by demanding OEMs to report such data as of 2025 and the Commission to provide the analysis by end of 2026.

Source : © European Union, 2018 - EP

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