Dutch Unveil Ambitious Law To Cut Greenhouse Gases

Dutch parliament members unveiled ambitious new climate legislation Wednesday aimed at reducing the country's greenhouse gas emissions to almost zero by 2050, while introducing an annual review to ensure targets are met.

Dutch parliament members unveiled ambitious new climate legislation Wednesday aimed at reducing the country's greenhouse gas emissions to almost zero by 2050, while introducing an annual review to ensure targets are met.

The proposed new law, which has the backing of the vast majority of political parties in the 150-seat lower house of parliament, "sets clear greenhouse reduction targets," the ecologist-left GroenLinks party said.

It also "introduces an innovative mechanism of annual review to ensure that these targets are met by the Dutch government," it added in a statement.

Greenhouse gas reduction targets are set at 49 percent by 2030, and then down to 95 percent by 2050, according to the law put up by GroenLinks and the Labor Party.

The country must also have "100 percent carbon-neutral electricity in 2050," it says.

In order to ensure that targets are met, future Dutch governments will have to report emission figures once a year, which will be debated in parliament on a so-called "Climate Day."

Every five years the climate plan will be updated. It does not specify how the targets should be met.

The bill will now be debated by parliament members in the lower house for approval, and then needs to pass in the Senate and the upper house before it becomes law.

Should it pass, the Netherlands will become the seventh European country to intoduce such legislation along with Britain, Denmark, Finland, France, Norway and Sweden.

(Source: Agence France-Presse)

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