Next event: Text adopted by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading 2024/04/10 more...
- Decision by Parliament, 1st reading 2024/04/10
- Approval in committee of the text agreed at 1st reading interinstitutional negotiations 2024/03/11
- Coreper letter confirming interinstitutional agreement 2024/03/08
- Text agreed during interinstitutional negotiations 2024/03/08
- Results of vote in Parliament 2023/11/21
- Decision by Parliament, 1st reading 2023/11/21
- Matter referred back to the committee responsible 2023/11/21
- Referral to associated committees announced in Parliament 2023/11/20
- Debate in Parliament 2023/11/20
- Contribution 2023/11/17
- Committee report tabled for plenary, 1st reading 2023/11/03
- Vote in committee, 1st reading 2023/10/24
- Contribution 2023/09/15
- Committee opinion 2023/09/13
- Amendments tabled in committee 2023/06/29
- Specific opinion 2023/06/29
- Amendments tabled in committee 2023/06/02
- Amendments tabled in committee 2023/06/02
- Contribution 2023/05/15
- Referral to associated committees announced in Parliament 2023/05/11
- Committee draft report 2023/05/10
Progress: Awaiting Council's 1st reading position
Role | Committee | Rapporteur | Shadows |
---|---|---|---|
Lead | ENVI | PEREIRA Lídia ( EPP) | WÖLKEN Tiemo ( S&D), WIESNER Emma ( Renew), NIINISTÖ Ville ( Verts/ALE), GRISET Catherine ( ID), ZALEWSKA Anna ( ECR), WALLACE Mick ( GUE/NGL) |
Committee Opinion | ITRE | BUŞOI Cristian-Silviu ( EPP) | Cornelia ERNST ( GUE/NGL), Seán KELLY ( PPE), Josianne CUTAJAR ( S&D), Klemen GROŠELJ ( RE), Manuela RIPA ( Verts/ALE) |
Committee Opinion | AGRI | HLAVÁČEK Martin ( Renew) | Luke Ming FLANAGAN ( GUE/NGL), Zbigniew KUŹMIUK ( ECR), Pär HOLMGREN ( Verts/ALE), Colm MARKEY ( PPE), Paola GHIDONI ( ID), Achille VARIATI ( S&D) |
Lead committee dossier:
Legal Basis:
RoP 57, TFEU 192-p1
Legal Basis:
RoP 57, TFEU 192-p1Subjects
Events
The European Parliament adopted by 448 votes to 65, with 114 abstentions, amendments to the proposal for a regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council establishing a Union certification framework for carbon removals.
The matter was referred back to the committee responsible for interinstitutional negotiations.
Subject matter
The objective of this Regulation is to facilitate and encourage the deployment and enhancement of carbon removals, carbon farming and carbon storage in products by operators or groups of operators as a complement to the irreversible and gradual reduction of anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions across all sectors. To that end, this Regulation establishes a voluntary Union framework for the certification of carbon removals, carbon farming and carbon storage in products .
Rules on the issuance and use of units
A new article has been included on the rules on the issuance and use of units. It stated that carbon farming sequestration and emission reduction units should be issued by 31 December each year, provided that an annual monitoring check does not show any non-compliance with the requirements set out in this Regulation and does not show a reversal. The certification body should be responsible for the annual monitoring check based on reliable real-world data.
Sustainability
A carbon storage in product activity should at least have a neutral impact on each of, and should generate co-benefits for at least one of, the following sustainability objectives:
- the avoidance of the risk of carbon leakage in third countries;
- climate change adaptation;
- sustainable use and protection or improvement of water quality and marine resources;
- transition to a circular economy, including the efficient use of sustainably sourced bio-based materials;
- pollution prevention and control;
- protection and restoration of biodiversity and ecosystems.
Innovative carbon removal technologies
Under the EU certification framework, activities that, under normal circumstances, ensure the permanent storage of atmospheric or biogenic carbon for several centuries through geological storage of CO2, such as bioenergy with carbon capture and storage and direct air carbon capture and storage, or through permanently bound carbon mineralisation, should be considered permanent carbon removals .
Carbon farming and carbon storage in products
Members amended the definition of ‘carbon farming’ to mean an activity related to land management, coastal management or animal husbandry, that results in carbon farming sequestration or carbon farming emission reductions for a period of at least five years .
Members also stated that carbon farming activities should not negatively affect the Union’s food security and shall not lead to land grabbing or land speculation.
In light of the uncertainties in the measuring and monitoring methodologies related to many potential applications of carbon storage in products in early development stages, the certification of carbon storage in products should initially be limited to harvested wood products or materials for construction storing atmospheric and biogenic carbon stored for at least five decades .
Platform on Carbon Removal, Carbon Farming and Carbon Storage in Product Activities
Members called for the establishment of a Platform on Carbon removal and Carbon farming Activities which should, inter alia :
- advise the Commission on the technical certification methodologies, including on the minimum sustainability requirements, as well as on the possible need to update those certification methodologies;
- analyse the impact of the technical certification methodologies in terms of the potential costs and benefits of their application;
- monitor and regularly report to the Commission on trends at Union and Member State level regarding carbon removal and carbon farming.
Certification of compliance
The amended text stressed that the certification scheme should appoint a certification body which should conduct a certification audit to verify that the requested information is accurate and reliable. When multiple different carbon farming activities take place at farm level, the certification audits may be conducted on a single occasion.
Periodic re-certification audits should take place at least every 5 years for carbon farming activities, and at least every 10 years for other activities, following a risk-based approach.
Union registry
The Commission should establish and maintain an interoperable and public Union registry in order to ensure transparency, trustworthiness and full traceability of certificates, and to avoid the risk of fraud and double counting. All information in the Union registry should be easy to navigate and search.
Review
The Commission should assess the possible benefits and trade-offs of the inclusion of other long-lived carbon storage products based on the latest scientific evidence. By 12 months from the date of entry into force of this Regulation, the Commission should report to the European Parliament and to the Council on the establishment of Union targets for permanent carbon removals and for land-based sequestration as an integral part of the post-2030 Union climate framework.
The Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety adopted the report by Lídia PEREIRA (EPP, PT) on the proposal for a regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council establishing a Union certification framework for carbon removals.
The committee responsible recommended that the European Parliament's position adopted at first reading under the ordinary legislative procedure should amend the proposal as follows:
Subject matter
The objective of this Regulation is to facilitate and encourage the deployment and enhancement of carbon removals, carbon farming and carbon storage in products by operators or groups of operators as a complement to the irreversible and gradual reduction of anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions across all sectors to meet the objectives and targets laid down in Regulation (EU) 2021/1119 and the goals of the Paris Agreement.
Rules on the issuance and use of units
A new article has been included on the rules on the issuance and use of units. It stated that carbon farming sequestration and emission reduction units should be issued by 31 December each year, provided that an annual monitoring check does not show any non-compliance with the requirements set out in this Regulation and does not show a reversal. The certification body should be responsible for the annual monitoring check based on reliable real-world data.
Sustainability
A carbon storage in product activity should at least have a neutral impact on each of, and should generate co-benefits for at least one of, the following sustainability objectives:
- the avoidance of the risk of carbon leakage in third countries;
- climate change adaptation;
- sustainable use and protection or improvement of water quality and marine resources;
- transition to a circular economy, including the efficient use of sustainably sourced bio-based materials;
- pollution prevention and control;
- protection and restoration of biodiversity and ecosystems.
Platform on Carbon Removal, Carbon Farming and Carbon Storage in Product Activities
Members called for the establishment of a Platform on Carbon removal and Carbon farming Activities which should, inter alia:
- advise the Commission on the technical certification methodologies, including on the minimum sustainability requirements, as well as on the possible need to update those certification methodologies;
- analyse the impact of the technical certification methodologies in terms of the potential costs and benefits of their application;
- monitor and regularly report to the Commission on trends at Union and Member State level regarding carbon removal and carbon farming.
Certification of compliance
The amended text stressed that the certification scheme should appoint a certification body which should conduct a certification audit to verify that the requested information is accurate and reliable. When multiple different carbon farming activities take place at farm level, the certification audits may be conducted on a single occasion.
Re-certification audits should take place at least every 5 years for carbon farming activities, and at least every 10 years for other activities, following a risk-based approach.
Certification bodies
Concerning the certification bodies, the report stated that these should be remunerated by the certification scheme in order to ensure the independence of the certification or re-certification audits. The list of accredited certification bodies shall be made publicly available in the Union registry.
Operation of certification schemes
For the purpose of handling complaints and appeals, certification schemes should put in place easily accessible complaint and appeal procedures. Those procedures should be made publicly available in the Union registry. Members suggested that a certification scheme should submit all relevant data and reporting that are required to be included in the Union registry.
Review
The Commission should assess the possible benefits and trade-offs of the inclusion of other long-lived carbon storage products based on the latest scientific evidence. By 12 months from the date of entry into force of this Regulation, the Commission should report to the European Parliament and to the Council on the establishment of Union targets for permanent carbon removals and for land-based sequestration as an integral part of the post-2030 Union climate framework.
PURPOSE: to establish a new EU-wide certification framework for carbon removals.
PROPOSED ACT: Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council.
ROLE OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT: the European Parliament decides in accordance with the ordinary legislative procedure and on an equal footing with the Council.
BACKGROUND: the EU has committed to reaching climate neutrality by 2050. The first and most urgent priority is the reduction of EU greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. At the same time, the EU needs to compensate for residual emissions that cannot be eliminated, by scaling up carbon removals , or in other words by removing carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere. This proposal for a carbon removals certification scheme is an important tool to achieve this goal.
Carbon can be removed and stored in three broad ways:
1) permanent storage : industrial technologies such as BECCS (bio-energy with carbon capture and storage) or DACCS (Direct Air Capture with Capture and Storage), capture carbon from the air either indirectly (through the processing of biomass in the case of BECCS) or directly (in the case of DACCS) and store it in a stable form;
2) carbon farming : carbon can be naturally stored on land through activities that enhance carbon capture in soils and forests (e.g. agro-forestry, forest restoration, better soil management), and/or reduce the release of carbon from soils to the atmosphere (e.g. restoration of peatland);
3) carbon storage in products: atmospheric carbon captured by trees or industrial technologies can also be used and stored in long-lasting products and materials, such as wood-based or carbonate-bonded construction materials.
The Commission's proposal does not cover the capture of fossil carbon for Storage (CCS) or Utilisation (CCU). These technologies help recycle or store fossil CO2 emissions but they do not remove carbon from the atmosphere.
CONTENT: this proposed Regulation seeks to develop a voluntary Union certification framework for carbon removals , with the view to incentivise the uptake of high-quality carbon removals, in full respect of the biodiversity and the zero-pollution objectives.
Its main objectives are to:
- ensure the high quality of carbon removals in the EU;
- establish an EU governance certification system to avoid greenwashing by correctly applying and enforcing the EU quality framework criteria in a reliable and harmonised way across the Union.
To ensure the transparency and credibility of the certification process, the proposal sets out rules for the independent third-party verification of carbon removals, as well as rules to recognise certification schemes that can be used to demonstrate compliance with the EU framework. To ensure the quality and comparability of carbon removals, the proposed regulation establishes four QU.A.L.ITY criteria :
1) Quantification : carbon removal activities need to be measured accurately and deliver unambiguous benefits for the climate;
2) Additionality : carbon removal activities need to go beyond existing practices and what is required by law;
3) Long-term storage : certificates are linked to the duration of carbon storage so as to ensure permanent storage;
4) Sustainability : carbon removal activities must preserve or contribute to sustainability objectives such as climate change adaptation, circular economy, water and marine resources, and biodiversity.
The proposal also aims to:
- develop certification methodologies that are tailored to each type of carbon removal activity, in order to promote a harmonised and correct implementation of the QU.A.L.ITY criteria;
- increase the public trust in carbon removals by ensuring the transparency and robustness of the certification process, including the certification schemes recognised by the Commission and the public registries of carbon removals.
The proposal also imposes the obligation for certification schemes to set up and maintain public registries for evidence of carbon removal activities and carbon removal units. It is of key importance that registries use automated systems and are interoperable in order to prevent fraud and avoid double counting.
The proposed Regulation affects economic operators such as farmers, foresters but also industrial companies that will develop carbon removal activities on the ground; private organisations and Member States authorities, who may develop private or public certification schemes to implement and control the certification process.
Budgetary implications
Major budgetary implications for the EU concern the preparation of the non-legislative acts and operation of the Expert Group on Carbon Removals which includes approximately 70 members. Budgetary implications for the Commission are associated to the recognition process of public or private certification schemes that would be responsible to implement the certification framework in one or more Member States. Budgetary implications are also foreseen for those Member States that intend to establish and operate a national certification scheme, including the supervision of independent certification bodies and the establishment and operation of a national registry.
Documents
- Text adopted by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading: T9-0195/2024
- Decision by Parliament, 1st reading: T9-0195/2024
- Approval in committee of the text agreed at 1st reading interinstitutional negotiations: PE759.876
- Coreper letter confirming interinstitutional agreement: GEDA/A/(2024)001377
- Text agreed during interinstitutional negotiations: PE759.876
- Results of vote in Parliament: Results of vote in Parliament
- Decision by Parliament, 1st reading: T9-0402/2023
- Debate in Parliament: Debate in Parliament
- Contribution: COM(2022)0672
- Committee report tabled for plenary, 1st reading: A9-0329/2023
- Contribution: COM(2022)0672
- Committee opinion: PE746.718
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE749.197
- Specific opinion: PE746.892
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE749.223
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE749.224
- Contribution: COM(2022)0672
- Committee draft report: PE745.292
- Contribution: COM(2022)0672
- Contribution: COM(2022)0672
- Contribution: COM(2022)0672
- Economic and Social Committee: opinion, report: CES6159/2022
- Committee of the Regions: opinion: CDR3978/2022
- Document attached to the procedure: EUR-Lex
- Document attached to the procedure: SEC(2022)0423
- Document attached to the procedure: SWD(2022)0377
- Document attached to the procedure: EUR-Lex
- Document attached to the procedure: SWD(2022)0378
- Legislative proposal published: COM(2022)0672
- Legislative proposal published: EUR-Lex
- Document attached to the procedure: EUR-Lex SEC(2022)0423
- Document attached to the procedure: SWD(2022)0377
- Document attached to the procedure: EUR-Lex SWD(2022)0378
- Committee of the Regions: opinion: CDR3978/2022
- Economic and Social Committee: opinion, report: CES6159/2022
- Committee draft report: PE745.292
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE749.223
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE749.224
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE749.197
- Specific opinion: PE746.892
- Committee opinion: PE746.718
- Coreper letter confirming interinstitutional agreement: GEDA/A/(2024)001377
- Text agreed during interinstitutional negotiations: PE759.876
- Text adopted by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading: T9-0195/2024
- Contribution: COM(2022)0672
- Contribution: COM(2022)0672
- Contribution: COM(2022)0672
- Contribution: COM(2022)0672
- Contribution: COM(2022)0672
- Contribution: COM(2022)0672
Activities
- Herbert DORFMANN
Plenary Speeches (0)
- Seán KELLY
Plenary Speeches (0)
- Peter LIESE
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- Katarína ROTH NEVEĎALOVÁ
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- Jiří POSPÍŠIL
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- Anne SANDER
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- Tiemo WÖLKEN
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- Clare DALY
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- Mick WALLACE
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- Pär HOLMGREN
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- Lídia PEREIRA
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- Anna ZALEWSKA
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- Martin HOJSÍK
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- Catherine GRISET
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- Martin HLAVÁČEK
Plenary Speeches (0)
- Emma WIESNER
Plenary Speeches (0)
- Colm MARKEY
Plenary Speeches (0)
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