Archive for the ‘European Union’ Category

Department for Brexit mocked after accidentally praising the EU – The indy100

Picture: DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS/AFP/Getty Images

The UK's BrexitDepartmenthas come under fire for Tweeting graphs on trade and economic growth that seem to indicate the benefits of staying in the European Union.

The Department for Exiting the European Union (DExEU) has been mercilessly ridiculed online after posting graphs on the growing trade since the Second World War, presumably in an attempt to assure people Brexit will go well for the UK.

However, more than anything it seems to perfectly underlinethe importance and benefits of the UK's membership in the European Union from 1973 onwards.

People are taking the opportunity to mock the DExEU,as thegraphs seem to explicitlyhighlight just how dependent Britain is and was on trade links and deals with the other European Union states.

The trade graph, tweeted out by the official DExEUaccount, can be seen here.

Almost instantly, an eagle-eyed tweeter pointed out that the illustration seemed to omit a key detail -that detail being the reason for the growth in trade in the 1970's.

The UK actually joined the EECin 1973 where the total trade is on the rise and, if pointing it out wasn't enough,they then offered the following graph to highlight this.

More: These are the best jokes about Brexit

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Department for Brexit mocked after accidentally praising the EU - The indy100

European Union to invest over 800000 in green economy projects in Brest Oblast – Belarus News (BelTA)

BREST, 19 April (BelTA) The European Union intends to invest over 800,000 in the implementation of pilot initiatives in the area of green economy in Brest Oblast, BelTA learned from Natalya Kozlovskaya, a specialist of the EU/UNDP project for assisting Belarus' transition to green economy, during an awareness-raising event in Brest.

European grants are used to implement three green economy initiatives in Brest Oblast. The largest one is the creation of a facility to convert waste wood into biofuel at premises of the Brest city utilities enterprise. The facility was opened in 2016 and now successfully operates. A mobile plant to chop waste wood has been bought, a plant for sorting the resulting wood chips by fractions as well as a loader with mounted equipment. The project goes on. Work is in progress to buy boiler equipment.

An environmental information center has been established in the wildlife sanctuary Pribuzhskoye Polesie (the village of Leplevka, Brest District) at the expense of 150,000 granted by the European Union. The premises have been repaired and equipped: bicycles, canoes, and tents have been bought. A strategy to develop ecotourism and marketing has been put together. A business plan has been worked out. Ten new tourism products are now being mastered by the local personnel. The initiative has already produced results as the number of visitors the wildlife sanctuary attracts rose by 36% in 2016. The premises are being beautified now. Work on design specifications and estimates to build a photo tower is nearing completion. We intend to sign the contract and erect the photo tower for watching birds and animals soon, noted the project specialist.

The Brest transboundary information center's initiative for organic food production and promotion through reliance on agroecotourism operators and active members of the local community has been successfully implemented. The initiative provides for converting several populated localities in Kamenets District into a herbal tourism destination in addition to starting the production of herbal teas.

The project for assisting Belarus' transition to green economy is financed by the European Union and is being implemented by the United Nations Development Program. It was launched in January 2015. A total of 23 pilot initiatives are being implemented all over the country as part of the project, with 5 million apportioned for them. The project is supposed to end on 31 December 2017.

The first information meeting on principles, mechanisms, and prospects of promoting green economy in the Republic of Belarus took place in Brest on 19 April. The event was organized by the European Union Delegation to Belarus with assistance of the Belarusian Natural Resources and Environmental Protection Ministry and the Brest Oblast administration. There are plans to arrange similar awareness-raising events in Vitebsk, Grodno, Gomel, and Minsk Oblast.

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European Union to invest over 800000 in green economy projects in Brest Oblast - Belarus News (BelTA)

Outcome of Turkey vote expanding presidential powers likely to further cool EU relations – Chicago Tribune

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has finally fulfilled his long-held ambition to expand his powers after Sunday's referendum handed him the reins of his country's governance. But success did not come without a cost.

His victory leaves the nation deeply divided and facing increasing tension with former allies abroad, while international monitors and opposition parties have reported numerous voting irregularities.

An unofficial tally carried by the country's state-run news agency gave Erdogan's "yes" vote a narrow win, with 51.4 percent approving a series of constitutional changes converting Turkey's political system from a parliamentary to a presidential one. Critics argue the reforms will hand extensive power to a man with an increasingly autocratic bent, leaving few checks and balances in place.

Opposition parties called foul, complaining of a series of irregularities. They were particularly outraged by an electoral board decision to accept ballots that did not bear official stamps, as required by Turkish law, and called for the vote to be annulled. International monitors from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, who also listed numerous irregularities, said the move undermined safeguards against fraud.

The referendum campaign was heavily weighted in favor of the "yes" campaign, with Erdogan drawing on the full powers of the state and government to dominate the airwaves and billboards. The "no" campaign complained of intimidation, detentions and beatings.

In Istanbul, hundreds of "no" supporters demonstrated in the streets on Monday, chanting "thief, murderer, Erdogan" and banging pots and pans.

"We are protesting today because the results announced by the government are not the real ones. Because actually the 'no' we voted won. But the government is announcing it as 'yes' has won," Damla Atalay, a 35-year-old lawyer, said of the voting irregularities.

Erdogan was unfazed by the criticism as he spoke to flag-waving supporters in the Turkish capital, Ankara.

"We have put up a fight against the powerful nations of the world," he said as he arrived at the airport from Istanbul. "The crusader mentality attacked us abroad. ... We did not succumb. As a nation, we stood strong."

In a speech before a massive crowd at his sprawling presidential palace complex, Erdogan insisted Turkey's referendum was "the most democratic election ... ever seen in any Western country" and admonished the OSCE monitors to "know your place."

The increasing polarization of Turkish society has long worried Turkey observers, who note the dangers of deepening societal divisions in a country with a history of political instability.

The referendum was held with a state of emergency still in place, imposed after an attempted coup in July. About 100,000 people have been fired from their jobs in the crackdown that followed on supporters of a U.S.-based Islamic cleric and former Erdogan ally who the president blamed for the attempted putsch. Tens of thousands have been arrested or imprisoned, including lawmakers, judges, journalists and businessmen.

On Monday, the country's Council of Ministers decided to extend the state of emergency, which grants greater powers of detention and arrest to security forces, for a further three months. It had been due to expire April 19. The decision was to be sent to parliament for approval.

"The way (Erdogan) has closed the door on the opposition, there is likely to be increased political unrest," said Howard Eissenstat, associate professor of Middle East history at St. Lawrence University in upstate New York. "Forty-eight percent of the population is being told that their voices don't matter."

There is also the risk of increased international isolation, with Erdogan appealing to patriotic sentiments by casting himself as a champion of a proud Turkish nation that will not be dictated to by foreign powers in general, and the European Union in particular.

Turkey has been an EU candidate for decades, but its accession efforts have been all but moribund for several years.

"They have made us wait at the gates of the European Union for 54 years," Erdogan told his supporters at the presidential palace. "We can conduct a vote of confidence on this as well. Would we? What did England do they did Brexit, right?"

"Either they will hold their promises to Turkey or they'll have to bear the consequences," he added.

Erdogan has also vowed to consider reinstating the death penalty a move that would all but end prospects of EU membership. But, he insisted, other nations' opinions on the issue are irrelevant to him.

"Our concern is not what George or Hans or Helga says. Our concern is what Hatice, Ayse, Fatma, Ahmet, Mehmet, Hasan, Hseyin says," he thundered as the crowd of supporters chanted for the return of capital punishment. "What Allah says. That's why our parliament will make this decision."

Both Germany and France expressed concern about possible election irregularities and called on Erdogan to engage in dialogue with the opposition.

"The narrow result of the vote shows how deeply split the Turkish society is," German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel said in a joint statement. "This implies a big responsibility for the Turkish government and President Erdogan personally."

The U.S. State Department "encouraged voters and parties on both sides to focus on working together for Turkey's future," while calling on the government to protect rights and freedoms "regardless of their vote on April 16."

The words are unlikely to move Erdogan.

Relations with Germany and the Netherlands have been particularly tense, with Erdogan outraged by decisions in both countries not to allow his government to campaign there to woo the expatriate vote for the referendum.

The referendum approves 18 constitutional amendments to replace Turkey's parliamentary system with a presidential one.

The president will be able to appoint ministers, senior government officials and to hold sway over who sits in Turkey's highest judicial body, as well as to issue decrees and declare states of emergency. They set a limit of two five-year terms for presidents.

The new system takes effect at the next election, currently slated for 2019. Other changes are to be implemented sooner, including scrapping a requirement that the president not be a member of any political party. This would allow Erdogan to rejoin the governing AK Party he co-founded, or to lead it.

"Erdogan dominated the national media. He imposed a very restrictive environment for the 'no' camp," said Fadi Hakura, a Turkey specialist at the London-based Chatham House think tank. "He secured a thin majority of 1 percent. This suggests that Erdogan will become more robust and more challenging to deal with."

Associated Press writers Suzan Fraser in Ankara and Zeynep Bilginsoy and Bram Janssen in Istanbul contributed to this report.

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Outcome of Turkey vote expanding presidential powers likely to further cool EU relations - Chicago Tribune

Britain Seeks To Renege On Renewable Energy Goals As It Leaves European Union – CleanTechnica

Published on April 17th, 2017 | by Steve Hanley

April 17th, 2017 by Steve Hanley

Britain has set a goal of 15% renewable energy by 2020. Today, it is has about half that, which means it will need to go very far, very fast to meet the target. If it fails to do so, it could face fines from the European Union totaling tens of millions of pounds. In an effort to avoid that fate, the British government is looking to abandon its renewable energy goal entirely, while maintaining its links to European markets and preserving its ability to participate in cross-border electrical energy trading with neighboring countries.

Not so fast, the members of the European Union say. So deeply do the economic and cultural ties between the UK and the EU go, the negotiations to unwind them may take up to 10 years to complete.EU leaders want to make sure Britain doesnt get to cherry pick the provisions that favor it most and ignore the rest.

Politicians in the European Parliament adopted a resolution last Wednesday that opposed piecemeal or industry-specific deals between the EU and Britain as one of its conditions for approving the UKs withdrawal arrangement. The lawmakers agreed that any future deal is conditional on the UK continuing to stick with the EUs policies on climate change and the environment.

Backing away from its renewable energy goals would put the UK at odds with other European Union nations that maintain targets as part of their membership in the regions energy market. While renewable targets and electricity market rules are negotiated differently, they link at the level of political discussions.

There is a risk that energy gets wrapped up in the wider political negotiation, with the EU seeking to make access to the Internal Energy Market subject to the U.K. signing up to future energy and environment legislation, said Simon Virley, head of power and utilities at KPMG. He is a former director-general of the UKs energy and climate ministry. That is when it could get difficult.

The move is an example of Prime Minister Theresa Mays government seeking to maintain the most advantageous parts of the EU relationship while scrapping rules that raise hackles in the business community. The EUs internal energy market is a package of assets, codes, and rules that allow intra-day trading across borders. Britain wants to build up those links as part of its effort to maintain electricity supplies as aging power plants retire from service.

Britain already has power links with about 4 gigawatts of capacity according to National Grid, and that could reach about 18 gigawatts by the mid 2030s. In all future scenarios, the UK will remain a net importer of electricity until the early 2030s, the grid operator predicts. Power links with other countries are key to reducing the cost of electricity in the UK, since each gigawatt from foreign resources has the potential to reduce wholesale prices by as much as 2 percent says National Grid.

Some countries that are not part of the EU, such as Norway, have cross-border energy agreements in place and are part of the internal energy market. Switzerland, however, is not part of the EU and has been negotiating deals on energy separately with the EU for more than a decade. It is not allowed to participate in intra-day trading of electricity, according to Antony Froggatt, an analyst at the Chatham House research group in London. It is possible the UK would like to follow the Swiss example as it seeks to chart its own course as it separates from the EU.

A spokesperson for the British government insists the county remains committed to tacking climate change and will meet all targets while we remain part of the EU. The UK is seeking to avoid further constraints on its energy mix imposed by the EU, according to the official. We are proposing a bold and ambitious trade agreement that covers sectors crucial to our linked economies, including network industries, the officialsaid.

The problem is, the UK is actively trying to break free of what it considers the EU stranglehold, which seems to make its commitment to those climate change objectives rather weak tea. The government has given the lie to its own rosy pronouncements, however. Recently, it slashed incentives for residential rooftop solar installations by cutting the feed-in tariff rate (known in the US as net metering) by two thirds, according to The Guardian. Not surprisingly, installation rates of new rooftop solar have plummeted by 75% in the past few months. Many solar installers have gone bankrupt, throwing thousands of people employed in the solar industry out of work.

A government official, sounding like Donald Trump himself, concocted this pile of blather to explain the governments move:Its only fair that the costs on peoples energy bills to support solar projects should come down as the industry establishes itself and costs fall. Ultimately, we want a low carbon energy sector that can stand on its own two feet rather than relying on subsidies. Spoken like it came right from the desk of Charles and David Koch, which it very well may have.

Fossil fuel interests love to bleat about subsidies while racking in over $5 trillion in direct and indirect subsidies a year, according to the International Monetary Fund. The Koch Brothers and the multiple fake research organizations they fund always gloss over that fact while they talk about leveling the playing field and how government shouldnt be picking winners and losers, even though they routinely shovel barrels full of money to elected officials to make sure their interests get first priority. It is no coincidence that the talking points we read about in the British press are the same as the one we here in the US and in other countries, like Australia.

In England, adhering to climate targets is favored by 85% of Conservative party voters according to a survey released by Bright Blue, a UK think tank, on Tuesday.There is no mandate from Conservatives to dilute current environmental regulation, said Sam Hall, senior researcher at Bright Blue. There are a handful of prominent Conservatives who are skeptical about environmental challenges and policies. The mainstream of Conservative voters do not support scaling back current EU environmental regulations.

The unfortunate part of the British government turning its back on renewable energy targets is two-fold. First, the 2020 target of 15% is ridiculously low in the first place. Lowering it further borders on insanity. Second, it will act as a disincentive to investors thinking of backing renewable energy projects in England. Investors value stable markets more than anything else. If basic government policies can be altered so easily at the whim of a few self-interested politicians, what reason is there to support renewable energy investments going forward?

England is mad because regulators in Brussels are seen as meddlesome fools who only want to burden the UK with silly regulations. Echoes of that same argument are heard on the other side of the Atlantic from those who are taking a sledgehammer to the EPA, NASA, and any other government-funded climate research organizations. The timing of those two trends is far from accidental, as fossil fuel interests continue their quest to burn every molecule of hydrocarbons in existence for their own profit.

The voters could bring this destructive behavior to a halt, but they are overwhelmed by the tidal wave of false information pouring forth from the organizations who spout the fossil fuel party line. Which leads to this question: What good will all that wealth do anyone after the earth is stripped of its ability to support humanity? The wealthy are doomed to perish along with the hoi polloi. Do they think somehow they will be spared to enjoy an idyllic existence with but a few thousand other lucky souls? Apparently so.

Source: Bloomberg

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Tags: Brexit, Climate change, EY renewable energy goals, Global Weirding, Paris climate accords, solar power industry, UK renewable energy goals

Steve Hanley writes about the interface between technology and sustainability from his home in Rhode Island. You can follow him onGoogle +and onTwitter.

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Britain Seeks To Renege On Renewable Energy Goals As It Leaves European Union - CleanTechnica

EU launches essay writing competition – Philippine Star

MANILA, Philippines Do you have a tale you have been longing to tell? A message to convey? Ideas to express? Now is your chance to be heard.

The Delegation of the European Union to the Philippines (EU) is giving you the chance to share with the world your thoughts, stories, and experiences.

The EU is hosting "What's EUr Story?," an essay competition that aims to shine the spotlight on European experiences and influences of young Filipinos. All you need to do is to share your personal, friends or familys adventures in Europe or tell about your experiences with European nationals in the Philippines. You may also write about how you may have worked with any of the European Unions NGO (non-government organizations) or Civil Society Organization partners or just simply how one or a group of Europeans made an impact on you.

Write about how European culture has inspired you in your work, or personal life or even your local community. Share your story and get the chance to win prizes and the opportunity to have your work published here and abroad.

European Union Ambassador Franz Jessen expressed his excitement over the possibilities that the contest opens up. As he said, "The Philippines is such a unique melting pot of cultures and Filipinos are truly global citizens, with communities all over the world. Philippine history is rich and Filipinos are also very quick to embrace new trends and technologies. The different experiences of the Filipinos have led to interesting narratives which we cant wait to hear. These factors make it very exciting for us to be able to gain insights into the imprint that modern European culture has also left on young Filipinos.

The competition is open to all Filipino citizens aged 16 to 35 years old. The contest will be divided into three categories: High School Students, College Students and an Open Category.

Lifestyle Feature - Travel ( Article MRec ), pagematch: 1, sectionmatch: 1

Entries will be accepted online from April 1 to May 12. The submitted essays will be assessed by a panel of judges that includes National Artist for Literature F. Sionil Jose and Ambassador Jessen.

An iPad tablet will be awarded to the grand winner, which will be selected among the three category winners. The other two category winners will receive a smartphone as prize. Ten best works will also be selected from the finalists in each category, and will be included in a compendium of the best essays submitted in the competition. The compendium will be registered under the publications of the European Union.

Apart from being included in an anthology of literary works that will be published by the EU, the grand winner, along with the other winners from each category of the competition, will have his or her winning essay featured on Philstar.com, the competitions official online media partner.

All winners will be honored at an awarding ceremony to be announced by the EU.

If you have a story to tell that you want to share, visit the "Whats EUr Story" Facebook page at facebook.com/WhatsEUrStory to see the complete competition requirements and mechanics.

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EU launches essay writing competition - Philippine Star