On the basis of the EGD vision and the identified strategies, Crossgov deduced some overarching objectives for each policy stream, namely biodiversity, climate change and pollution.
A policy objective refers to an overarching goal or intention that guides the development and implementation of policies, representing the desired outcome or direction that policymakers aim to achieve.
Ocean related objectives
Biodiversity
- Protect and restore marine biodiversity
- Reduce marine pollution
- Achieve sustainable fisheries
- Support transition to a sustainable blue economy (transport, renewables, marine technologies)
- Strengthen international ocean governance cooperation to protect the oceans, promote sustainable fisheries and combat climate change.
By 2030 :
By 2050 :
Climate Change
- Reach climate neutrality by 2050 (economy with net-zero GHG emissions) in line with the EU’s commitment to global climate action under the Paris Agreement.
- Increase share in renewable energy.
- Accelerate the permitting process for renewable energy projects.
- Improve energy efficiency.
- Integrated energy system.
- Decrease emissions from maritime transport – use of sustainable fuels by vessels and at ports.
By 2030 :
By 2050 :
Pollution
- Include pollution prevention in all relevant EU policies, maximising synergies in an effective and proportionate way, stepping up implementation and identifying potential gaps or trade-offs.
- Zero emission ports (see also Sustainable and Smart Mobility Strategy).
- Prevent waste (single-use plastics, lost or discarded fishing gear and waste discarded from ships).
- Align the EU air quality standards with WHO recommendations & review quality of water standards and EU waste laws to ensure that they implement the green circular economy principles.
- Support innovation and implementation of EU policies and laws to achieve healthy, pollution-free oceans, seas and waters.
- Protect citizens and the environment against hazardous chemicals and encourage innovation for the development of safe and sustainable alternatives, by: (i) simplifying and strengthening the legal framework, (ii) improving cooperation and transparency between EU agencies and scientific bodies and (iii) ensuring that the regulatory framework rapidly reflects scientific evidence on the risk posed by hazardous chemicals.
By 2030 :
By 2050 :
How Green Is Your Ocean?
Podcast
In this episode of the podcast series “How Green Is Your Deal?”, marine governance experts Froukje Maria Platjouw and Judith van Leeuwen share their insights on how the EU governs its oceans and seas, how it features into the European Green Deal, and the challenges sustainable marine governance faces.
The content provided has been extracted from the Deliverable 1.1 (Green Deal objectives and scenarios) of the CrossGov project.