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News > ETUC: Creation of a separate EU ETS for road transport and buildings: Raising energy bills risks Gilets Jaunes backlash against climate action

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  • 15th July 2021 - 12:21 UTC

ETUC: Creation of a separate EU ETS for road transport and buildings: Raising energy bills risks Gilets Jaunes backlash against climate action

The European Commission’s proposal to make working people foot the cost of the green transition by raising the price of petrol and household energy risks creating a Gilets Jaunes-style backlash against urgently-needed climate action.

Workers facing an increasing frequency and intensity of extreme weather events know better than anyone the need to rapidly reduce greenhouse gas emissions, so European trade unions support the more ambitious climate action contained in the Fit for 55 package launched today.

However, the burden of the climate transition is being placed on low-income households through the Commission’s proposal to create a separate Emission Trading System for road transport and buildings.

At a time when 50 million EU households are already in energy poverty:

  • Some studies suggest that a carbon price of 170€/t CO2 would result in average annual carbon costs of €373 per household for transport and €429 per household from residential buildings
     
  • A new ETS on road transport and heating of building would take a lot of time to develop and could lead to inadequate carbon pricing impacting differently regions and countries in Europe and therefore increasing inequalities
     
  • The introduction of a carbon price in road transport and heating of buildings would not result in rapid changes in consumption, except for those high-income households who have the capacity to invest in low carbon solutions

Polling by the European Parliament shows that people who have difficulties paying their bills are already the group least likely to prioritise climate action.

The Commission have proposed a new Climate Action Social Facility to compensate vulnerable households, but its size is insufficient to compensate the regressive distributional effects of the new ETS on road transport and building.

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