Com o green deal, European Commission propose to zero GHG emissions by 2050
The European Union is made up 27 countries located in the old continental. Within this conglomerate of countries are located the largest economies in the world, like Germany and Switzerland.
The concern with sustainable agendas has been increasingly discussed and has greater importance for the major world economics, directly affecting patterns of economic relationships, social and political relationship between the bloc and other countries in the world.
Therefore, the European Union (EU) want to achieve, until 2050, zero net greenhouse gas emissions. Such ambition is written in the document the Green deal european union (european green deal, in a free translation), but also popularly known through its Guidelines, in particular, those applied to renewable energy sources.
The bloc defines the European Ecological Pact as “an answer to these challenges. It is a new growth strategy aimed at transforming the EU into an equitable and prosperous society, endowed with a modern economy, efficient in the use of resources and competitive that, in 2050, has zero net greenhouse gas emissions and where economic growth is decoupled from the use of non-renewable resources.”
What does the agreement comprise?
The European Ecological Pact aims to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, and also, the commitment to reduce emissions by at least 55% until 2030 compared to the levels of 1990.
For that, countries are drawing up new approaches, What:
- The creation of new sustainable transport;
- Methodologies for depollution of the energy system;
- Renovation of buildings and adoption of a greener lifestyle;
- Promotion of job vacancies related to nature aiming to protect the planet and human health;
- Actions to reduce global climate actions;
The publication emphasizes the intention to change not only the form of production of large companies with a macro vision, but also reach and change the consumption habit in a particular way of each individual, making a change more solid.
The schedule of the ecological pact
To effectively put the pact into practice and demonstrate to the entire society and influence other nations, the block, through its official page, provides a real-time schedule of actions already taken and predictions of what will be executed.
since December 2019 until today they have been performed and exhibited 7 actions that really impacted the lives of European citizens and the market of companies that do business with the old continent. Since compliance with the directives are mandatory prerequisites for any type of establishment of economic relations with all countries in the bloc. This being a strategy to foster change in other countries and the entire global production chain.
Brazil and the Green Deal
Brazil and the European Union have a strong bond in relation to actions aimed at sustainability in a marketing context. Protocols and methodologies were created with the maintenance and continuous improvement of this relationship and, consequently, in the improvement of production practices of marketed products.
The best known requirements and protocols nationwide refer to compliance with standards Bonsucro, e ISCC, for product chains from sugarcane and soy.
you can check more information about the European green deal here.The European Union also released in an innovative and dynamic way quick reading folders the actions that will be taken until 2050 e that you can access here.
Original BiO3 content. To find out more about the European Commission and the Ecological Pact click on link. For partnerships and means of implementation contact us.