Africa: The Climate Law the Fossil Fuel Industry Doesn't Want

  • 📰 allafrica
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 35 sec. here
  • 2 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 17%
  • Publisher: 99%

المملكة العربية السعودية أخبار أخبار

المملكة العربية السعودية أحدث الأخبار,المملكة العربية السعودية عناوين

Press Release - Europe's biggest polluters - Shell, BP, TotalEnergies and ENI - are fighting to stop a law that would force them to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions. Our governments cannot allow them to succeed.

Europe's biggest polluters - Shell, BP, TotalEnergies and ENI - are fighting to stop a law that would force them to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions. Our governments cannot allow them to succeed.Wildfires, flooding and record heatwaves have left a trail of devastation in their wake across the world in 2023, as climate change worsens.

The Parliament's negotiating position on the law - known as the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive - includes a powerful set of tools that could force big companies to reduce their emissions in line with the Paris climate agreement. All three lobby groups have secured numerous high-level meetings with key policymakers about the law over the last two years.

And if climate plans for big polluters becomes a reality, they won't be forced to act alone. Instead, they would be part of a transformation of the wider economy away from fossil fuels, as the law would oblige the biggest companies in Europe across other sectors to curb their emissions too.

 

شكرًا لك على تعليقك. سيتم نشر تعليقك بعد مراجعته.
لقد قمنا بتلخيص هذا الخبر حتى تتمكن من قراءته بسرعة. إذا كنت مهتمًا بالأخبار، يمكنك قراءة النص الكامل هنا. اقرأ أكثر:

 /  🏆 1. in SA

المملكة العربية السعودية أحدث الأخبار, المملكة العربية السعودية عناوين

Similar News:يمكنك أيضًا قراءة قصص إخبارية مشابهة لهذه التي قمنا بجمعها من مصادر إخبارية أخرى.

South Africa: Academy for Young Winemakers Aims to Diversify South Africa's Wine Industryitemprop=description content=One of the world's top 10 wine producers, South Africa owes some 9 percent of its GDP to the wine sector - but the industry remains dominated by the white minority. A training academy for young South Africans from disadvantaged backgrounds aims to change that.
مصدر: allafrica - 🏆 1. / 99 اقرأ أكثر »