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Nieuws-items Environmental policy
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21-05Europarlementariërs willen vast doel voor Europese hernieuwbare energie (en)
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21-05Offshore olie- en gas: alleen boren als eventuele schade betaald kan worden
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21-05Environment: Europe’s bathing waters continue to improve
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17-05Schaliesgas lijkt te zorgen voor nieuwe koude oorlog (en)
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17-05Europese Commissie looft €31.5 miljoen uit voor beste duurzame projecten (en)
Submenu:
(in the past)
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21-05Ms Connie HEDEGAARD meets with Spanish Secretaries of State for Climate and Energy (Strasbourg)
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18-05Ms Connie HEDEGAARD participates in the closing of ECO week (Copenhagen)
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17-05Ms Connie HEDEGAARD participates in the Climate Communication Campaign (Warsaw)
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16-05Sustainable Raw Materials Supply
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16-0513th FLEGT Committee meeting
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16-05Meeting of the Education, Youth, Culture and Sport(EYCS)Council
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16-05Second International Conference on Chemical
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16-05Ms Connie HEDEGAARD and Ms Cecilia MALMSTRÖM deliver keynote speeches at 4th European Civil Protection Forum (Brussels)
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16-05CityChlor, Ghent
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15-052013 European Business Summit
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15-05Mededeling Europese Commissie 'Een waardig leven voor iedereen', Den Haag
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15-05The EU’s climate change adaptation strategy: towards a more sustainable and climate-resilient economy?
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15-05Fifth Carbon Capture and Storage
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15-05Mr Janez POTOCNIK in New-York for a follow up to Rio+20 (15-16/05)
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15-05Ms Connie HEDEGAARD receives Mr Luc OURSEL, CEO of AREVA
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15-05Ms Connie HEDEGAARD receives Mr Peter KENT, Minister of the Environment of Canada
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15-05Ms Connie HEDEGAARD delivers a speech at an EPC (European Policy Center) Policy Debate on Climate Change Adaptation, at Hotel Silken Berlaymont (Brussels)
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15-05European Platform for Biodiversity Research
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14-05UNEP, the EESC and its partners - Advancing sustainable development post Rio, Brussel
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14-05commissie Immigratie & Asiel / JBZ-Raad (I&A/JBZ), Den Haag
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1976
Deelname Commissie aan conferentie in Barcelona: ontwerpovereenkomst voor bescherming Middellandse Zee aangenomen -
1976
Ondertekening Verdrag van Barcelona: bescherming van Middellandse Zee tegen verontreiniging -
1978
Verdrag Barcelona voor bescherming Middellandse Zee in werking -
1978
Start onderhandelingen met VS over giftige stoffen -
1979
Ondertekening overeenkomst inzake behoud wildleven en natuurlijk milieu -
1988
Gemeenschap ratificeert Verdrag van Wenen betreffende bescherming van ozonlaag -
1993
Commissie neemt Groenboek aan over herstel van milieuschade -
1994
Conclusie Raad over milieu: CO2, vervoer, ozonlaag en afvalverbranding -
1995
Groenboek over herziening van verordening betreffende controle op concentraties -
1998
Protocol van Kyoto over klimaatverandering in New York ondertekend -
1998
Rekenkamer publiceert speciaal verslag over optreden Unie inzake waterverontreiniging -
2000
Groenboek Commissie over op te richten handelssysteem in CO2-emissierechten -
2000
Commissie keurt Groenboek goed over effect van polyvinylchloride (PVC) op milieu -
2002
Europese Unie ratificeert Protocol van Kyoto
Global CO2 emissions reach new all-time high in 2011 - Hoofdinhoud
Global emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) rose by 3% last year to a new record of 34 billion tonnes, according to the annual report Trends in global CO2 emissions by the European Commission’s Joint Research Centre (JRC) and the Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency (PBL).
In the EU CO2 emissions dropped by 3% to 7.5 tonnes per capita. Emissions in the US and Japan fell 2%. OECD countries now account for one-third of global CO2 emissions - the same share as that of China and India combined.
China's emissions continued to grow rapidly, increasing by 9%. Chinese per capita emissions, at 7.2 tonnes, are now just below the EU level.
The top global emitters in 2011 were China (29%), the United States (16%), the EU (11%), India (6%), the Russian Federation (5%) and Japan (4%).
Growth in renewable energy is accelerating. It took solar and wind energy and biofuels 12 years from 1992 to double their share of global energy production from 0.5% to 1%, but only six more years to double it again to 2.1% by 2011. This represents about 800 million tonnes of CO2 emissions avoided, or the equivalent of Germany's total CO2 emissions in 2011.
Scientific literature suggests that it will be possible to limit the rise in average global temperature to 2°C above pre-industrial levels - the target adopted in the UN climate negotiations - only if cumulative CO2 emissions in the period 2000-2050 do not exceed 1000 to 1500 billion tonnes. If the current global trend of increasing CO2 emissions continues, cumulative emissions will surpass this limit within the next two decades.
Read more:
Trends in global CO2 emissions [755 KB] report
Joint Research Centre (JRC) news
Read more...

