The
EU move follows similar proposals submitted since 2009 by the USA,
Canada, Mexico and Micronesia, and would significantly reduce HFCs in
developed
countries by following a phase-down schedule closely matching the EU
F-Gas Regulation, groundbreaking legislation adopted by the European
Parliament and the Council in 2014.
“The
EU clearly expects developed countries to lead by example,” said Clare
Perry, Head of Climate at the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA).
“The EU has upped the ante significantly and is now calling on other
developed countries to match it.”
In
developing countries, the EU proposes a new approach, aimed at
initially limiting the growth of HFCs, followed by an agreement to
negotiate
a phase-down schedule by 2020.
“The
EU proposal is trying to be sensitive to the fact that HFCs are
generally used to replace ozone-depleting HCFCs, which developing
countries
have only just begun to phase-out under the Montreal Protocol,” said
Perry.
“For
this reason, HFCs cannot be considered in isolation and this is the
first proposal to try and address that specifically within an HFC
amendment
proposal – as such, it has the potential to unlock negotiations.”
The EU estimates global cumulative reductions in all countries would amount to 127 gigatonnes of CO2-equivalent (Gt CO2-eq)
over 40 years.
The
EU proposal will be considered at the upcoming Open-Ended Working Group
(OEWG) in Paris in July, and again at the Meeting of the Parties in
Dubai in November.
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