NGOs take EU’s “green” gas and nuclear label to court

Several environmental NGOs are taking the European Commission's "green" gas label to court, while Greenpeace is also denouncing the extension of this classification to nuclear power.

Share:

Several environmental NGOs have attacked Tuesday in the EU courts the “green” label granted by the European Commission to gas, Greenpeace filing a separate complaint denouncing the extension to nuclear power of this classification of investments deemed sustainable.

ClientEarth, WWF, Transport&Environment (T&E) and the German organization BUND have filed a complaint with the European Court of Justice against Brussels’ refusal to remove gas from its “energy mix”.taxonomy of sustainable finance”. This text, presented by the European executive in January 2022 and adopted six months later, sets the criteria for considering investments as “sustainable”, with the aim of directing private funds towards activities that reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

The text includes nuclear power generation – which does not emit CO2 – and gas-fired power plants among the investments that can benefit from green finance, subject to conditions and on a transitional basis, deeming them necessary to support the growth of intermittent renewable energies (wind, solar, etc.) and the decarbonization of the continent.

However, “fossil gas is a source of energy with a high carbon content when burned (…) Its extraction and transport also lead to the release of methane”, a greenhouse gas with a warming power 80 times more powerful than CO2 over 20 years, the four NGOs deplored in a joint statement. “This is as absurd as it is illegal, and it fundamentally undermines the credibility of the EU’s climate action. Gas is neither clean, nor cheap, nor a secure source of energy,” they argue, pointing to the risk of “worsening the EU’s dependence” on expensive imported fossil fuels.

This taxonomy contravenes the “obligations of the Paris Agreement” on climate and is in “contradiction with the policies of public financial institutions” such as the European Investment Bank, they assured, fearing that the text “channels additional investments” to gas at the expense of renewables.

Separately, the NGO Greenpeace filed an appeal with the CJEU on Tuesday against the inclusion of gas but also nuclear power in the taxonomy of “sustainable investments”, denouncing a “false label” that could “divert green financing from their objectives”. “The inclusion of nuclear activities leads to significant damage to the environment, which is expressly prohibited” by the legislation that the Commission was supposed to translate with this classification, argues Roda Verheyen, a lawyer at Greenpeace.

The inclusion of the civil atom in the “green taxonomy” had sharply divided the EU-27, arousing the opposition of Germany and a handful of member countries, including Austria and Luxembourg – these two countries have also referred the matter to the CJEU.

Prolonged heatwaves and environmental disasters are intensifying, leading to significant financial impacts in the energy, agriculture, and real estate sectors, according to the latest UN and IEA reports.
Ten multilateral development banks have approved global financing of $19.6bn for water-related projects in 2024, mainly aimed at low- and middle-income countries, according to a recent joint report.
Global CO₂ emissions reach a record level in 2024, while Europe reports a local decrease but significantly outsources its pollution to emerging economies, revealing a pronounced gap between stated ambitions and economic realities.
Citepa confirms limited drop in French emissions in 2024 at -1.8%, a pace significantly slower than previous years, reflecting highly contrasting performances across economic sectors.
The International Energy Agency warns of persistently high methane emissions, despite improved satellite-based monitoring and detection tools.
Swedish prosecutors have sought six-year prison sentences for five executives and partners of Think Pink, accused of unlawfully dumping 200,000 tonnes of toxic waste between 2015 and 2020.
Methane released by the oil, gas and coal sectors remained at near-record levels, according to the International Energy Agency, which flagged the scale of massive leaks detected.
Russian authorities are demanding €903 million from the owners of two tankers that ran aground in the Black Sea following an oil spill linked to unauthorised winter navigation.
Over 100 international organisations are urging a halt to offshore oil and gas exploration ahead of the United Nations Ocean Conference scheduled in June in Nice.
A massive fire broke out following a leak on a gas pipeline operated by Petronas in Selangor state, injuring over 100 people and causing significant damage in a residential area.
Former US Vice President Al Gore stated in Paris that Donald Trump’s decisions will not durably hinder the global rise of renewable energies, driven by falling solar production costs.
Dutch organisation Milieudefensie is suing ING for its alleged role in financing fossil fuel projects, demanding the bank halve its CO2 emissions by 2030.
Environmental groups have announced legal action against the Trump administration over measures aimed at boosting offshore oil and gas production, reigniting the legal battle from his first term in office.
The lawsuit filed by three NGOs and eight plaintiffs accusing TotalEnergies of involuntary manslaughter and harm to biodiversity has been dismissed by the French judiciary, citing insufficient evidence of infractions.
An analysis from the Interdisciplinary Environmental Clinic at Washington University highlights the immediate and long-term health risks posed by coal ash waste from MidAmerican Energy's plants in Iowa, as energy companies push to weaken regulations.
After Storm Eowyn, described as the most powerful in a decade, 577,000 households remained without electricity on Sunday evening in Ireland and the UK. Repairs are ongoing, but further disruptions are expected.
A report by France Stratégie warns of a potential 100% increase in water consumption in France by 2050, with agriculture, energy, and usage conflicts emerging as major challenges.
According to the British Meteorological Office (Met Office), carbon dioxide (CO2) has risen faster than ever, exceeding all projections and raising new questions about the global capacity to contain global warming.
CO2 emissions from global road transport could peak as early as 2025 thanks to the rise of electric vehicles and carbon regulations, according to an ICCT report.
Russia faces a major oil spill in the Kerch Strait. With 30,000 tons of soil already collected, criticisms are growing regarding the management and measures taken to mitigate the impacts.