To burn or not to burn – Juncker’s palm oil conundrum Should Europeans be forced to burn palm and soy in their cars in the name of EU climate policy? This is the simple question the European Commission needs to answer today. Related Environmental Issue Climate Change and Energy Related Transport Mode Fuels Related Policy Area Pricing and taxation Standards Transport policy Environmental policy Source: transebvnews By Move 4 U|2019-02-01T04:52:05+00:00February 1st, 2019|Uncategorized|0 Comments Share This Story, Choose Your Platform! FacebookXRedditLinkedInTumblrPinterestVkEmail Related Posts Worrying trend towards heavily polluting SUVs undermines carmakers’ sustainability claims Worrying trend towards heavily polluting SUVs undermines carmakers’ sustainability claims September 6th, 2021 Cars climate brief #5: Why e-fuel credits in car CO2 standards is a bad idea Cars climate brief #5: Why e-fuel credits in car CO2 standards is a bad idea August 18th, 2021 Cars climate brief #4: Why credits for electric car sales should not weaken CO2 targets Cars climate brief #4: Why credits for electric car sales should not weaken CO2 targets July 23rd, 2021 EU’s Henry Ford moment for electric cars is here. Let’s make sure it’s not fake electric EU’s Henry Ford moment for electric cars is here. Let’s make sure it’s not fake electric July 15th, 2021 What the EU’s climate plan means for Europe What the EU’s climate plan means for Europe July 15th, 2021