MnetTV          Digital Library

Search Manufacturing.net Search Manufacturing.net
Today in Manufacturing.Net

Resources
Association Links
Bookstore
Digital Library
Events Calendar
Job Search
What’s New
White Papers

Browse White Papers


News
Featured Articles
Financial News
Global Manufacturing
Government News
Mergers & Acquisitions
News Archive
People in the News

Job Search


Market Sectors
Aerospace
Automotive/Transportation
Chemical/Petroleum
Food/Beverage
Medical
Metals
Pharmaceuticals/Biotech
Plastics/Rubber
Other Manufacturing

Industry Focus
Design & Development
Electrical & Electronics
Energy
Environmental
Facilities & Operations
Labor Relations
Manufacturing Technology
Materials
Quality
Safety
Supply Chain

Amazon

About Us
Editorial Contacts
Advertise with Us

Our Partner Sites
Chem.Info
ECN
Food Manufacturing
IMPO (Industrial Maintenance & Plant Operation)
Medical Design Technology
Pharmaceutical Processing
Product Design & Development
R & D Magazine
Wireless Design & Development
Wireless Week



 


Mnet house ad 120x240



European Steel Workers Protest EU Pollution Cap
By Constant Brand, Associated Press Writer
Manufacturing.Net - December 02, 2008

Printer Friendly     E-mail to a Colleague


BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) -- Some 5,000 steel workers from across the continent protested outside European Union headquarters Tuesday to demand their industry be exempt from planned pollution caps, which they fear will lead to job losses.

Unions from across the 27-nation bloc are backing steel companies to pressure EU governments and lawmakers to water down rules to cut pollution and carbon dioxide emissions. They say such regulation would lead to higher production costs and job losses.

Europe's steel industry employs some 650,000 people.

"We are in favor of a clean environment, but we are also in favor of job security in the European (steel) industry," said Erich Foglar, president of the Austrian Trade Union Confederation.

EU governments and European parliamentarians are currently negotiating a plan which will force heavily polluting industries, like steel and cement, to sign up to a cap-and-trade emissions program, which could impose euro54 billion ($68.8 billion) a year in polluter fees.

Major polluters already trade carbon permits, meaning they must spend money to buy more pollution allowances or upgrade their plants.

Unions fear that if the EU approves the plans, it will leave the bloc's steel sector at a global competitive disadvantage. They fear steel companies like ArcelorMittal SA and ThyssenKrupp AG could move production out of Europe as a result.

The EU's 27 leaders are to meet next week in Brussels to finalize the specific details of goals to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 20 percent by 2020. EU governments and the European Parliament have already provisionally agreed to water down separate plans to curb emissions from new cars.


Printer Friendly     E-mail to a Colleague



Talkback!
Manufacturing.net is pleased to provide you an opportunity to share your opinions on any of the news stories or articles on our site. We reserve the right to edit/remove comments.
Viewing 1 User Comments
Add a Comment
Sounds like Obama's plan...  12/2/2008 11:53:00 AM
Welcome to cap-and-trade, and how it will make it too expensive to produce anything in the US either. The europeans want us to do it for that exact reason, now that they've crippled their industry.


Add a Comment...

E-Mail:
The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Subject:
Comment:

 

     



   





Flatbed trucking, flatbed shipping, flatbed carriers



Food/Beverage

Imperial Sugar To Build Cane Sugar Plant

Weather May Cause Pumpkin Pie Shortage

Pinnacle Buys Birds Eye For $1.3 Billion


Metals

Steel Of West Virginia Cutting Jobs

Alcoa Puts 2,000 Italian Jobs At Risk

Severstal Mill In Ohio To Resume Operations

Automotive/Transportation

Volkswagen Closing In On Porsche Merger

GM To Reveal Plan For European Units In December

VW To Buy Karmann Assets
News Video