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EU countries approve 2040 climate target for 90% emissions cut

EU countries approve 2040 climate target for 90% emissions cut
EU countries approve 2040 climate target for 90% emissions cut

European ‌Unions gives final approval for 2040 climate target for 90% emission cuts

EU countries gave the final approval on Thursday, March 5, 2026, to a new climate target to slash greenhouse gas emissions 90% by 2040, pressing ahead with the bloc’s ambitious climate agenda despite political resistance.

The new climate target is a hard-fought political compromise, struck by governments and EU lawmakers last year. It is more ambitious than most major economies’ emissions-cutting commitments, including China’s.

In practice, the target will require an 85% emissions reduction from European industries against 1990 levels.

The EU will pay developing countries via carbon credits to cut emissions on Europe’s behalf to make up the rest to reach 90%.

The EU agreed to the target last year following months of wrangling between countries, such as Spain, which said worsening droughts and wildfires justified more ambitious goals, and those like Poland and Italy, which sought to soften the emissions cuts, arguing that struggling industries cannot afford the upfront investments.

A reinforced majority of EU countries’ ministers gave the ‌final formal sign-off to the legally binding goal at a meeting in Brussels. 

The Czech Republic, Slovakia, Poland, and Hungary opposed it. The climate target will now pass into EU law.

As part of the agreement, the EU will also consider the option in the future to use international carbon credits to meet a further 5% of its 2040 emissions reductions—potentially further softening the domestic efforts required.

The deal also delays the launch of a politically sensitive new EU carbon market by one year, to 2028—a move designed to win over countries skeptical of the climate goal.

The target, which is designed to keep Europe on track to meet its pledge to reach net-zero emissions by 2050, falls short of the 90% domestic emissions cut recommended by the EU’s climate science advisers.

It is also weaker than Brussels’ original plan for the goal, reflecting disagreement between EU governments over the speed and cost of their green agenda.

The target reinforces the bloc’s long-term climate strategy and increases pressure on industries to accelerate decarbonization.



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