Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2008-12-17-Speech-3-224"
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"en.20081217.16.3-224"2
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"The Danish Social Democrats have voted in favour of the majority of the EU climate package because, even though not all of the methods used are as we would have wished, it establishes an ambitious target for the reduction of CO
emissions of either 20% or 30%, depending on whether or not a global agreement is entered into.
The Social Democrats voted against the proposal on effort sharing (that is to say the reduction in, for example, agriculture, transport, etc.). The reason for this is that it is so easy to purchase credits in developing countries that the EU will be able to fulfil up to 60% to 70% of its reduction obligation by purchasing reductions in the world’s poorest countries. In reality, this will mean that the richest countries would buy themselves free of the necessary switchover and so will not invest in the technological development that is necessary to meet the long-term target of an 80% reduction.
The Social Democrats voted against the proposal on CO
emissions from cars. Contrary to what the European Commission had proposed and directly counter to the results of the vote in the Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety, the proposal would delay the requirement for industry to emit not more than 120 g CO
/km from 2012 by a further three years. The car industry already entered into a voluntary agreement on the reduction of CO
ten years ago and has had an enormous amount of time to adjust to the rules that are necessary if we are to combat global warming."@en1
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"2"1
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