Restoring sustainable carbon cycles

EESC opinion: Restoring sustainable carbon cycles

Key points

The EESC:

  • Considers that finding a solution to the carbon neutrality equation in Europe requires mitigating greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, increasing carbon sinks and finding alternatives to fossil carbon in our economy.
  • Supports the Commission's communication, which proposes nature-based solutions (known as "carbon sequestration") and industrial technological solutions.
  • Believes that the land sector can be actively involved in combating global warming while contributing to the broader transition to a sustainable food system.
  • Stresses that the topic of sustainable carbon cycles must be considered in a holistic manner: increasing carbon sinks and replacing fossil carbon as much as possible will require more biomass to be produced, which will affect the land sector.
  • Believes that carbon sequestration should not only be seen as a commercial opportunity, but also as a key component of European agriculture and forestry in the future and as a tool for climate action contributing to more resilient rural areas, in line with the long-term vision for EU rural areas.
  • Thinks that the common agricultural policy (CAP) must provide the policy framework paving the way for the low-carbon transition in agriculture, rewarding investments in carbon storage while carbon storage should not be a condition of the CAP, and that a specific carbon market must be further promoted.
  • Considers that the development of carbon sequestration will require a clear legal framework that is shared by the Member States, taking into account the differences in the level of investment and support that the Member States can provide and the challenges for certified carbon sequestration projects identified in the EC communication.
  • Thinks that industrial solutions, such as permanent CO2 storage in geological formations or mineralisation of carbon in innovative aggregates, will have to be sustainable and prevent negative impacts on biodiversity, ecosystems and communities.
  • Recalls that the well-being of workers, as well as the need for fair remuneration, should be taken into account so that farmers and workers will commit to and make a success of the transition to a low-carbon economy.