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Slovenia: Presidency failing to take EU driving seat in green issues

Environmental NGO Greenpeace warns that the Slovenian EU Presidency has failed to takle important environmental issues. With only 2 months to go, time is running out

di Staff

With only two months of the Slovenian EU presidency left to go and a number of crucial environmental issues on the agenda, Greenpeace has warned that Slovenia must sharpen up its act if it wants to leave a lasting mark on the EU political scene.

?The Slovenian presidency must take the EU?s driving seat and not sit back while bigger EU players steer decisions to their own advantage,? said Nina Stros, Greenpeace policy coordinator based in Ljubljana.

Although one of the EU?s smaller member states and the first ever Eastern European country to hold the presidency, Slovenia has shown poor leadership in advancing the EU?s environmental ambition. In November 2007, Greenpeace launched the ?Slovenian EU Presidency Watch? to monitor the environmental performance of Slovenia during its six-month EU presidency from January to June 2008.

Greenpeace will judge Slovenia on progress in the following issues:

  • On legislation to reduce car emissions: Slovenia must ensure that EU- wide negotiations are not hijacked by big car manufacturing countries, such as France and Germany, with a vested interest in weakening environmental requirements. Discussions must involve all member states at Council level and ensure a strong commitment to make cars more efficient by 2012.
  • On climate targets: after the disappointing outcome of the March European summit, Slovenia must put Europe back on track to reach ambitious climate targets and reject protectionist pressures in favour of heavy industry. Slovenia must show climate leadership at the summer European Council in June and call for scientifically viable 30% emission cuts.
  • On GMOs: Slovenia must respond to the concerns of a majority of member states and expose the flaws of the EU?s GMO authorisation process and the inadequacy of the European Food Safety Authority. A wide-ranging debate on these issues must be held at the environment Council on 5 June, as suggested by France.

?Slovenia might present itself as a good host and a capable organiser, but now time is running out and it will have to work hard to make up for a disappointing first term at the helm of Europe,? said Stros.

More info
www.greenpeace.org


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