EU reaches deal to reduce methane gas emissions from energy sector

15 November 2023, 09:44

Methane Emissions
Methane Emissions. Picture: PA

The industry will be forced to properly measure, monitor, report and verify emissions under the deal.

European Union negotiators have reached a deal to reduce highly polluting methane gas emissions from the energy sector across the 27-nation bloc.

According to experts, one of the biggest causes of climate change is methane gas emissions – second only to carbon dioxide. The gas also causes serious health problems.

Most emissions come from the energy, agriculture and waste sectors.

Under the provisional agreement announced just weeks before the Cop28 climate conference, the fossil gas, oil and coal industry will be forced to “properly measure, monitor, report and verify their methane emissions according to the highest monitoring standards, and take action to reduce them”, said the European Commission, the EU’s executive arm.

The deal needs to be formally approved by both the European Parliament and the Council, which represents member states, before the new legislation comes into force.

This came as China and the United States pledged to accelerate their efforts to address climate change ahead of a major United Nations meeting on the issue, making a commitment to take steps to reduce emissions of methane and other greenhouse gases besides carbon dioxide.

The US, the EU and other nations have previously committed to reduce overall methane emissions worldwide by 30% by 2030.

The Commission said the compromise requires operators to report about quantification and measurements of methane emissions at source level, and forces oil and gas companies to detect and repair methane leaks on EU soil.

Methane Emissions
One of the biggest causes of climate change is methane gas emissions, second only to carbon dioxide (AP)

It also bans routine venting and flaring, which release methane in the atmosphere, and limits venting from thermal coal mines from 2027, with stricter conditions introduced after 2031.

“It requires companies in the oil, gas and coal sectors to carry out an inventory of closed, inactive, plugged and abandoned assets, such as wells and mines, to monitor their emissions and to adopt a plan to mitigate these emissions as soon as possible,” the Commission added.

The EU Methane Regulation for the energy sector is part of the so-called European Green Deal that seeks to establish the world’s most ambitious climate and biodiversity targets.

Since the EU imports large quantities of oil, gas and coal, the deal also requires from 2027 that new import contracts can only be sealed “if the same monitoring, reporting and verification obligations are applied by exporters as for EU producers”, the Commission said.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

A young girl waving Palestinian flags on shoulders of a man

Gaza ceasefire begins after Hamas names hostages set for release

Man under water, with other bathes waiting behind him

Warm weather threatens Epiphany ice water plunges in Russia

TikTok Ban

TikTok removed from app stores ahead of US law banning platform

Israeli tank next to Gaza border

Hamas names hostages set for release following Gaza ceasefire delay

Remains of burnt-out property

California officials warn against soaring rents after deadly firestorms

Saif Ali Khan smiling while speaking into a microphone

Man arrested over knife attack on Bollywood star

Demonstrators light flares as they gather during a protest calling for the release of all hostages held captive by Hamas in the Gaza Strip, in Tel Aviv

Netanyahu says ceasefire ‘will not begin’ without list of hostages

A group of girls walking down stairs

Senior Taliban official calls for end of ban on education for women and girls

Photo of young child held by protesters

How will the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas unfold?

Donald Trump has said he would likely grant a reprieve to TikTok, as a ban comes into force on Sunday

TikTok shuts down in US as ban comes into effect - but Trump says he will likely give app a reprieve

Police officers stand guard as supporters of impeached South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol try to enter the Seoul Western District Cour

Supporters detained after South Korean president’s arrest sparks protest

President-elect Donald Trump and Melania Trump walk off an Air Force Special Mission airplane

Donald Trump arrives in Washington to start inauguration celebrations

US Inauguration Protests

‘People’s March’ seeks to broaden opposition as Trump prepares to take power

South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol in the back seat of a car

South Korean court orders formal arrest of president over martial law decree

Donald Trump left Palm Beach with son Barron and Wife Melania on a plane heading to Washington ahead of his inauguration.

Donald Trump returns to Washington DC as protests break out ahead of inauguration

A TikTok app on a phone

Trump says he will ‘most likely’ give TikTok a 90-day extension to avoid US ban