BETA

4 Amendments of Jérôme RIVIÈRE related to 2021/2102(INI)

Amendment 44 #
Motion for a resolution
Recital G
G. whereas the defence sector is not mentioned in the 2015 Paris Agreement, leaving it to national governments to decide whenation states must be able to retain full freedom in their to include mitigation efforts by the defence sector in their national commitments towards the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)security and defence policy, including with regard to international climate commitments;
2021/11/12
Committee: AFET
Amendment 73 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 3
3. Calls on the Vice-President of the Commission / High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy (VP/HR) to make sure that climate change is mainstreamed in the Union’s external action; calls for climate-specific strategies, policies, procedures, measures and capabilities to be developed; calls on the VP/HR to make sure that the development of a Union policy on climate security and defence entails the implementation of a human security approachonsiders that the climate issue should not be used as a pretext for the European Union to interfere further in the defence and security prerogatives of the Member States;
2021/11/12
Committee: AFET
Amendment 165 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 21
21. Statresses that all military capabilities and services used by the Union shouldthe EU Member States, in particular France, are among the world’s most exemplary countribute to reaches ing the EU’s climate targets and adapt to increasingly challenging climate conditions in order to be able, inter alia, to guarantee the fulfilment of their tasks at home and abroaderms of CO2 emissions, and that the European nations should therefore give priority to addressing the dangers that are an immediate threat to them, including radical Islam;
2021/11/12
Committee: AFET
Amendment 194 #
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 28
28. Recalls that the importance of cooperation as a corner stone of the EU’s leading role in addressing climate change, as set out in the Roadmap; welcomes ongoing staff-to-staff exchanges with the UN and NATO, and stresses the need for closer cooperation in this field; calls on the EEAS and the relevant Commission services to further establish dialogue with other partners, such as the African Union, the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, Canada and the United States; stresses that there is also a need to address the current lack of reliable and internationally comparable data on energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions in the defence sectjects the concept of ‘climate refugees’ introduced by European Union bodies, which is a hoax that seeks to justify an increase in illegal migration flows and which would create a new channel for immigration that Europe's countries cannot afford;
2021/11/12
Committee: AFET