Carmen Jaspersen/ReutersThe European Union is drastically curbing its climate ambitions, with a wide-ranging policy reset that aims to halt the region’s upward spiral of energy prices without scrapping its long-term decarbonization goals entirely. The Clean Industrial Deal announced Wednesday is a plan to channel €100 billion ($105 billion) into European clean tech manufacturing, combined with measures to underwrite demand for low-carbon industrial products like steel and cement, and provide more support for consumers to reduce their electricity bills. At the same time, officials have sharply scaled back two of Europe’s signature climate policies — on carbon tariffs and corporate carbon footprint reporting — in an effort to alleviate the regulatory burden on smaller businesses. Europe has always been ahead of the curve on climate regulation compared to the US and other regions. But that legacy is increasingly unpopular with European business leaders and the public, who blame strict emissions controls and the rapid push into renewables for surging energy costs that have left automakers, the steel industry, and other key sectors unable to compete with China and the US. Europe’s commitment to the energy transition is made even more important by Washington’s retreat from climate action under President Donald Trump. But officials believe the only way for that commitment to survive the region’s ongoing political shift to the right — enshrined in a spate of national elections, as well as European parliamentary polls last year — is to make it less economically painful. “There’s a new urgency to make sure that our decarbonization agenda is also unleashing industrial competitiveness,” said Simone Tagliapietra, a senior fellow at the Brussels-based think tank Bruegel. “Otherwise, politically, this will simply not work.” |