BRUSSELS — The EU is considering allowing its heavy industry to pollute for
longer under a new draft proposal aimed at breaking the deadlock on the bloc’s
2040 goal for cutting planet-warming emissions.
Under pressure to strike a deal before the COP30 climate summit starting Nov. 10
in Brazil, Denmark, which is steering the talks among EU countries, is opening
the door to slowing the EU’s climate efforts. The intention is to win support
from the majority of countries to back the target of an 90 percent emissions cut
by 2040 compared to 1990 levels.
The text, obtained by POLITICO, proposes that the EU assess progress toward
achieving the new 2040 climate goal every two years, taking into account
“scientific evidence, technological advances and evolving challenges to and
opportunities for the EU’s global competitiveness.” The European Commission
could then suggest legislative changes, the document adds, meaning Brussels
could adjust — and potentially weaken — its target in future.
The suggestion comes after EU leaders discussed competitiveness and climate
policy at a summit last week and pitched ideas to unlock the stalemate in the
negotiations. A number of leaders called on the EU to set pragmatic climate
goals and introduce more flexibilities to reach them, something that is now
reflected in the new compromise document.
But allowing the EU to decelerate its climate efforts could see it miss the 2040
goal, or force it to rely on other instruments to reach it, such as outsourcing
more emissions cuts to poorer countries.
OFFERING FLEXIBILITIES
The Danish presidency proposes to introduce measures to avoid penalizing one
sector (such as heavily polluting industries) if other sectors (e.g. forestry,
which contributes to sequestering carbon in forests) can’t meet their emissions
reduction or absorption targets.
The proposal states that “possible shortfalls in one sector would not be at the
expense of other economic sectors, notably industrial sectors under the EU
[Emissions Trading System].”
The document does not propose changing the headline 90 percent emissions cut
target as proposed by the Commission in July. But it does raise the possibility
of changing how much international carbon offsets — an instrument that allows
the EU to outsource emissions cuts abroad — should contribute to achieving the
target.
The Commission proposed capping their use at 3 percent starting in 2036, but
member countries including France and Poland have suggested 5 percent or 10
percent. It’s expected to be a key topic in negotiations this week and next,
according to one EU diplomat.
The document also states that the bloc’s climate goals should not be pursued at
the expense of the EU’s military priorities.
When designing new climate legislation, the Commission should take into account
“the need to ensure the Union’s and its Member States’ capacity to rapidly
increase and strengthen their defensive capacity by addressing possible burdens
while maintaining incentives for industrial decarbonisation,” the document
reads.
The compromise text will now be discussed by EU country envoys on Wednesday and
Friday with the aim of allowing environment ministers to strike a deal Nov. 4.
Tag - Carbon removals
The energy landscape is always evolving, and another challenge is rapidly coming
into view: data.
The rise of artificial intelligence (AI), cloud computing and machine learning
is driving unprecedented demand for electricity.
This trend is only set to accelerate as the UK seeks to establish itself as a
global leader in AI. The UK government has rightly committed to being an ‘AI
maker, not taker’. But that ambition comes with consequences.
According to the National Grid’s Future Energy Scenarios 2024, data centers
could become one of the UK’s fastest-growing sources of demand by the 2030s. AI
data centers are used to train the most advanced AI, including frontier models
such as ChatGPT, and require vast amounts of energy due to their continuous
utilization.
We cannot meet this surge in demand simply by layering data center load on top
of an already stretched energy system.
COORDINATION WILL BE CRITICAL
Last month, a report from Aurora Energy Research highlighted that an
uncoordinated approach to power sourcing could see power sector emissions
increasing by 14 percent, which would directly undermine the UK’s
decarbonization goals and drive up wholesale electricity prices.
> Without change, we risk slowing down both the deployment of AI infrastructure
> and our energy transition.
Instead, we need a coordinated way to unlock the potential of the AI sector. The
current approach, where most data centers cluster around areas like London and
the Thames Valley, driven by proximity to demand, is unsustainable. These
regions are often far from large-scale sources of generation and already face
grid constraints such as network connection bottlenecks. Different thinking is
viable for data centers geared toward AI workloads, which are less sensitive to
latency — the delay of data transfer — and therefore do not need to be sited
close to major cities. Without change, we risk slowing down both the deployment
of AI infrastructure and our energy transition.
To help mitigate this risk, we should align our energy and digital strategies
more closely. That starts with a national framework to strategically site new
data centers in areas with available grid capacity, preferably close to power
generation sources. Drax Power Station could be one of those locations.
via Drax
CO-LOCATING DATA CENTRES AND POWER GENERATION
In 2024 Drax Power Station was the UK’s single largest source of renewable power
by output. Our site in Selby, North Yorkshire, provides approximately 2.6 GW of
dispatchable power capacity, enough power for five million homes. Unlike
intermittent renewables, Drax generates power whether or not the wind is blowing
or the sun is shining.
But the site’s potential reaches beyond what it delivers today. We already
benefit from planning consents, which — alongside the right policy support and
regulatory framework — could allow us to transform Drax into the world’s largest
engineered carbon removals facility by installing bioenergy with carbon capture
and storage (BECCS) on two of our generating units. BECCS is unique. It is the
only technology that can simultaneously generate renewable power and remove
carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. And, significantly, co-locating a data
center with the power station could help enable the delivery of this world
leading technology.
> Building data centers next to power stations brings multiple advantages. It
> enhances system resilience and reduces the risk of plant curtailment. It
> minimizes energy lost in transmission, something that becomes more pronounced
> the further electricity has to travel.
Large power stations like Drax Power Station were designed to support
industrial-scale generation. They have substantial grid connections, large
surrounding estates and access to cooling water. These attributes make Drax
Power Station uniquely suited for the possibility of hosting a hyperscale data
center.
Building data centers next to power stations brings multiple advantages. It
enhances system resilience and reduces the risk of plant curtailment. It
minimizes energy lost in transmission, something that becomes more pronounced
the further electricity has to travel. It also supports the connection of new
energy capacity by relieving congestion on the grid queue.
Unlocking this potential, however, will require a rethink of current
regulations.
SEIZING THE OPPORTUNITY
At present, power stations are restricted from supplying electricity
simultaneously to both the grid and a private off-taker such as a data center.
These rules were written for a different era, one that did not anticipate
intense energy consumers such as AI clusters emerging as a major player in the
energy ecosystem.
By unpicking these constraints, we can free up untapped capacity, provide
flexible solutions for energy security and support the digital infrastructure
needed to drive economic growth.
The government’s recent announcement of AI Growth Zones is a welcome step. If
designed properly, this initiative could be the catalyst for a strategic rollout
of AI infrastructure across the UK. Rather than clustering growth in already
congested urban areas, Growth Zones can enable us to locate data centers where
power is plentiful, where local communities stand to benefit from investment and
where the grid can accommodate growth.
This is about more than just plugging in servers. It’s about creating a coherent
and forward-looking strategy that links where we generate power to where we use
it — and recognizes that AI and energy are now inextricably linked.
Subject to clear government policy support and milestones, combining BECCS with
a large-scale data center at Drax Power Station could align with this industrial
strategy. Together, these developments could create the option for a globally
unique proposition: a carbon negative data center — delivering world-leading
innovation for the UK and directly countering the perspective that AI growth
will mean more carbon emissions.
These projects could protect and create thousands of high-quality jobs in a
region that has historically powered the UK but that now faces the risk of
deindustrialization as a result of declining heavy industry. A joined-up plan
for energy and digital growth can offer lasting economic resilience to
communities that need it the most.
> It’s time to think smarter about how we build, power and place the critical
> infrastructure of the 21st century.
At Drax, we are ready to be part of that future. We are already a leading
renewable energy generator in the UK and we have the infrastructure and ambition
to implement a cutting-edge data center solution at Drax Power Station, helping
the country secure its place as a digital leader while keeping the lights on.
It’s time to think smarter about how we build, power and place the critical
infrastructure of the 21st century. We must ensure new data capacity is
integrated in ways that enhance grid stability without compromising the
transition to clean energy or negatively affecting the needs and rights of local
communities.
With the right strategy, the UK doesn’t have to choose between energy security
and digital growth. We can achieve both.
BRUSSELS — The European Commission will permit countries to outsource a portion
of their climate efforts to poorer countries from 2036, according to a draft
proposal obtained by POLITICO.
The EU executive plans to present the bloc’s 2040 emissions-reduction target on
Wednesday after several months of delay. The goal will be set at 90 percent
below 1990 levels, the draft amendment to the European Climate Law shows.
But as POLITICO reported in mid-June, the Commission intends to meet up to 3
percentage points of the new target with international carbon credits, despite
fierce criticism from its own scientific advisers. This plan aligns with
Germany’s position on the 2040 goal.
Such credits will allow the EU to pay for emissions-slashing projects in other,
usually poorer countries, and count the resulting greenhouse gas reductions
toward its own 2040 target, rather than the climate goals of the country hosting
the project. The draft proposal envisages using them only in the second half of
the decade.
“Starting from 2036, a possible limited contribution towards the 2040 target of
high-quality international credits under Article 6 of the Paris Agreement”
— global rules governing carbon credits — “of no more than 3% of 1990 EU net
emissions,” the draft states.
The Commission aims to propose legislation regulating such credits at an
unspecified date, the draft adds. “Their specific role and deployment would need
to be based on a thorough impact assessment and subject to the development of
Union law setting robust and high integrity criteria and standards, and
conditions on origin, timing and use of such credits.”
Critics, including the bloc’s scientific advisers, warn that relying even just
in part on international credits risks slowing the EU’s climate efforts at home.
The EU’s existing 2030 and 2050 targets must be met solely through domestic
measures.
But the proposal specifically excludes the possibility of integrating credits in
the EU’s carbon market, an option that some experts feared could tank the bloc’s
CO2 price, which is meant to incentivize companies to reduce their emissions.
“These international credits should not play a role for compliance in the EU
carbon market,” the draft reads.
Carbon credits are only one of 18 “elements” — effectively, promises to make the
target more palatable to skeptical governments — that the Commission plans to
integrate into the EU’s post-2030 climate policy framework, according to the
draft, which is dated June 27.
French President Emmanuel Macron joined Poland and Hungary in demanding delays.
| Pool Photo by Benoit Tessier via EPA
Others include opening the bloc’s carbon market to permanent CO2 removals — for
example through capturing carbon directly from the air, a method as yet
unavailable at scale — as well as “enhanced flexibility across sectors.”
The remaining promises to EU countries are considerably more vague, with the
Commission vowing to pay attention to everything from scientific advice and
social impacts to cost-effectiveness and economic competitiveness in its policy
framework for 2040.
The 2040 target has been met with significant pushback from governments, with
many sending Brussels long lists of conditions for supporting the goal. Last
week, French President Emmanuel Macron joined Poland and Hungary in demanding
delays.
The Commission in its draft proposal insists that “a 90% target puts the EU on
the pathway which provides the greatest overall benefits in terms of
competitiveness, resilience, independence, autonomy, a just transition and
ensuring that the EU meets its commitments under the Paris Agreement.”