From the “models didn’t predict this” and the “Climate Action” department:
An investigation found that Brussels blew the colossal sum of cash on a drive to build underground storage facilities for CO2 emissions – but no such facilities were ever constructed.
This week the architect of the scheme, a former Lib Dem MEP, admitted this was because officials bungled their predictions for the environmental costs facing businesses.
The revelations, uncovered by the website EUobserver, will heap further pressure on EU chiefs who are already facing increased scrutiny over their spending due to Brexit.
Britain’s departure from the bloc is set to blow a £9 billion a year hole in its budget, with a number of member states actively calling for Brussels’ largesse to be be reined in.
Eurosceptics in the UK have long complained about the cost and red tape related to European environmental regulations which they accuse of stifling entrepreneurial enterprise.
However, many academics and officials have raised concerns about Britain lowering standards once it leaves the EU and the detrimental impact this could have on the public health and the environment.
The reports concern a Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) project the EU set up in 2007, which was designed to help companies reduce their emissions and so save money on Brussels’ green taxes.
Under the scheme businesses could buy pollution permits, or allowances, from eurocrats the proceeds of which would then be spent by the EU on capturing and storing carbon emissions.
However the fund, called NER300, did not support a single such project after officials catastrophically miscalculated carbon emissions pricing in Europe, which they expected to go up but which actually dropped drastically just after the programme was announced.
Reflecting on the scheme he helped create, former Lib Dem MEP Chris Davies told EUobserver: “The expectation was that the carbon price would rise from thirty euros up to a hundred euros.
“The incentive to not to have to pay a hundred euros a tonne for every tonne of CO2 emitted, was very strong indeed. The assumption was industry would do it, without us requiring any other means. Industry would take all these risks.”
However, he said that when the carbon price crashed – it now stands at just seven euros – the scheme attracted virtually no participants and only ended up funding projects already in the renewable category.
More from the Global CCS Institute:
The failure of NER300
But it should all have been so different. Back in 2008, collaborative advocacy from industry and non-government organisations helped the European Parliament and Member States to secure an innovative funding mechanism for CCS. The NER300 scheme would sell allowances from the EU’s Emissions Trading System (ETS) to create a funding mechanism to support a suite of CCS demonstration projects, as requested by the European Council the year before. With carbon prices heading toward €30/tonne, it was hoped that up to €9 billion would be raised—providing the world’s largest fund for supporting innovative low–carbon technologies. Soon afterward, the European Energy Programme for Recovery (EEPR) selected six projects to receive fast-tracked assistance and a further €1.1 billion of public funding. The future looked bright.
In late December 2012, European Commissioner for Climate Action Connie Hedegaard finally announced the outcome of the first NER300 funding round—but could only award €1.2 billion to 23 innovative renewables projects across Europe. Not one CCS project was funded. What should have been the centrepiece of European CCS efforts had failed to deliver. It had taken EU institutions two years to finalise the programme, and a further two to scrutinise the bidding projects. This was far too long for a supposedly urgent process. But the roots of European difficulties on CCS reach far beyond the administration of the NER300 programme itself.
TWO FUNDING MECHANISMS, TWO FAILURES
Neither of the EC funding approaches has been able to cope with changed circumstances. But the blame must be shared beyond Brussels.
The EEPR funding provided by DG Energy has failed to secure a single project that has been able to move forward. The Vattenfall project at Jänschwalde pulled out due to public opposition and the failure of the German Government to pass an adequate CO2 storage law. Other projects have experienced technical delays or an absence of Member State support. Only Rotterdam’s ROAD project continues to sit in the starting blocks, but it is waiting for partners to emerge to share some of the funding gap. Its utility sponsors are unwilling to absorb on their own a financial hit anticipated to be in the region of €100 million. This is understandable from an individual company perspective, but mind-blowingly short-sighted from the energy sector as a whole. Other industrial players need to step up and provide support.
In respect of the NER300 funding process, it was primarily Member States that failed to deliver on the agreed milestones. They were asked to confirm the projects they would support, together with the level of co-funding they would contribute. Only the French Government confirmed co-funding for the proposed ArcelorMittal steel mill CCS project at Florange, and €275 million was assigned by the EC. Bizarrely, ArcelorMittal withdrew at the last minute, citing technical problems. The CCS project had become a political football, kicked out of the ground rather than toward the goal.
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When any government, anywhere, allocates $683 million for such a useless project, we need to completely redefine our concept of ‘government.’
For that and many, many other reasons, we need to constitutionally restrain and restrict democratic government and specifically politicians from spending outside of very narrow parameters. The politicians in our democracies are the greatest danger to our safety and wellbeing.
Constitution and laws are paper barriers, that are easily trespassed with no restriction.
Have a look at 1936 USSR constitution (Stalin’s work !): it guarantees lots of sensible rights, including freedom of speech, of the press, of assembly, of religion, etc. makes election the core of the system (with secret voting), and only marginally mention the communist party as “vanguard of the working people in their struggle to strengthen and develop the socialist system” with no special power
UK has no constitution, but it has people willing to fight for what they think matters, and they got Brexit.
USA 1st and 2nd amendment are already infringed and would be effectively nullified without being repelled, if it were not for caring people.
you aren’t living in a country which spends millions on aircraft carriers which won’t have any planes, I take it.
Yes, and even the Americans would have to explain how they can have 60 admirals under investigation…in most nations, that would be the total of everyone who had ever admiraled…
Then again, here in Canada, we have more generals than we have tanks.
And, I believe at one time, our army had more captains than we had non-coms.
In the interests of sustainability, the headline should be shortened to:
“The EU Blows.”
Save the planet – make shorter headlines.
The “EU” actually sucks.
meanwhile in the soils….
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/11/171108092406.htm?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+sciencedaily%2Ftop_news%2Ftop_science+%28ScienceDaily%3A+Top+Science+News%29
Who says they didn’t capture anything?
https://video.search.yahoo.com/search/video?fr=yfp-t&p=ghost+busters+storage+facility#id=1&vid=d578b01a19f71fa00f50be20b0a85bec&action=click
CCS works but is very expensive. The Sidel Carbon Capture Utilization System transforms the CO2 into calcium carbonate and a bio fuel and a bio fertilizer. Return On Investment
We are ready for testing and certification, and are looking for an investor.
http://www.SidelGlobal.com
My remark would be ONLY $683m was spent? They must be cutting back the spending on stupid!
100% graft efficiency!
A heater is the only 100%-efficient physical mechanism, because “waste” is the desired output.
The EUrocrats are working hard to develop their Socialist empire to its political equivalent.
Godspeed, I say; the world can always use more bad examples. Right?
Where do I put all these expenses Boss?
You’re new her aren’t you kid? File it under admin.
Actually you wonder if ‘fracking’ can be so bad when the Greens want to pump a liquefied gas underground. Although not poisonous in itself, liquid CO2 is a highly effective solvent and could leach chemicals from rock and transport them to aquifers, or to the surface. I could see that resulting in oil contamination of water supplies.
Huh. I could capture more carbon with two balloons tied BEHIND my back than the EU. Huh. Huh.
Brussels gives new meaning to the term B-Ark.
Here in New Zealand we have just changed our government and the new government has stated that they will plant millions of trees ,New Zealand has the largest area of planted forest in the world and raidiata pine grows extremely well in our climate .We are harvesting pine trees on a 25 to 28 year rotation .A great deal of logs are exported to China and other Asian countries .We also export sawn timber and a lot of moldings for finishing work .On steep erodible country forestry is a good option and if the trees are well pruned and thinned.a better return can be made than farming sheep and cattle .The problem is that you have to wait 25 + years for your pay check.The draw back to the scheme is that the government want to bring in an emissions trading scheme and all stock farmers will be paying an emissions bill for the methane that their live stock emit .This money will go towards tree planting as a subsidy on marginal land and as the trees grow they will earn carbon credits .Methane from livestock does not add any carbon to the atmosphere as all the fodder that the stock have consumed has absorbed CO2 and the small amount of methane belched is oxidized in the upper atmosphere into CO2 and H2O .The average life of methane in the atmosphere is 8.4 years. Methane from livestock is cyclic and should never have been included in the Kyoto accord .
Stop breeding livestock, grow vegetables instead and charge the government for taking co2 out of the atmosphere. I take the odds that they never find out what is wrong with that.
There is far more CO2 emitted from large scale vegetable growing than pastoral farming .New Zealand is as far away from Europe as any country and we export dairy and meat products to the world New Zealand has a population of 4.6 million people and we export high quality food to feed 45million people around the world .
.No other country in the world has included methane from livestock in their emission trading schemes .Why would any government impose penalties on there farmers who generate the major portion of foreign exchange for the country .It will disadvantage our pastoral industries and the New Zealand economy to make the government look good in the eyes of the UN.
For what gain ?
NZ lamb is of good quality and sold at competitve prices here and sells well, not just because I buy it myself, occasionally. Too bad that the NZ government does not quite get how to promote and encourage livestock farming. As many governments, they seemingly do not dare to say no to such a nonsense as the Paris climate “accord” because they are in fear of not being elected or re-elected. Trying to be everybody’s darling does not work and causes harm.
“Non Nomen November 10, 2017 at 12:21 pm”
NZ had, at one time, one market consumer in the 70’s, and that was the UK. NZ lamb, the best in the world. NZ lost that market in one go thanks to the decision by Heath to take the UK into the common market.
NZ is big on dairy, beef and lamb, forestry with growing (Sarc) olive oil and wine industries.
Not to mention pineapples, oranges and dates :=)
A mere £520 million? That’s peanuts.
Try this:
https://www.politico.eu/article/corruption-costs-eu-990-billion-year-rand-study-fraud-funding/
Note that those are the EU Parliament’s own figures!
Can’t understand why so many here are so upset. After all, its only other people’s money! And we know so much better than the peasants how to waste their money! (Sarc, in case someone thinks I mean this!)