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EU seeks to balance business needs, climate goals

EU seeks to balance business needs, climate goals

Push to "simplify" its environmental rules

26 febbraio 2025, 16:50

Redazione ANSA

ANSACheck
© ANSA/EPA

© ANSA/EPA

(ANSA-AFP) - BRUSSELS, FEB 26 - The EU on Wednesday unveiled a push to "simplify" its environmental rules to give businesses breathing room faced with competition from the United States and China -- while still vowing to decarbonise Europe's economy. The European Union's focus has pivoted to competitivity due to concerns over sluggish economic growth -- in a sharp move away from EU chief Ursula von der Leyen's first mandate that focused on tackling climate change. The issue has taken on acute urgency with US President Donald Trump pushing an America First strategy that risks a trade war with the EU. The bloc's industry chief Stephane Sejourne said Europe was "simplifying" green business rules to make its companies more competitive -- without resorting to the "chainsaw". "Europe knows how to reform itself.
    Without a chainsaw but with competent men and women who listen to economic players," Sejourne said -- in a nod to America's Elon Musk or Argentina's Javier Milei who have made the saw a symbol of reforming zeal. "It does not undermine any of the green goals," the EU's vice president for the clean transition, Teresa Ribera, told a press conference. Exasperated companies -- as well as key powers France and Germany -- have been urging Brussels to make it easier to do business and bring down energy costs, which are higher than in the United States. As Trump rejects his predecessor's push to bolster clean tech investment, Brussels also sees an opportunity for Europe. With all that in mind, the European Commission unveiled a package of measures to pare back red tape, cut energy costs and strengthen its clean tech sector through a "Clean Industrial Deal". For starters, the EU executive told member states to cut taxes on electricity bills to help consumers and firms. And it intends to trim back several new rules on environmental and human rights supply chain standards -- adopted with fanfare barely months ago but since attacked as too burdensome for businesses. (ANSA-AFP).
   

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