Diabolic Digest
Fischler
‘surprise’ choice as greenest commissioner
Agriculture
chief Franz Fischler has emerged with flying colours as the surprise choice of
NGOs as the ‘greenest’ member of the European Commission.
July 2002
The Austrian shares the accolade with Environment Commissioner Margot Wallström
in a review of the executive's policies by the 'Green-8' group, which includes
Friends of the Earth, Greenpeace and the World Wide Fund for Nature.
Fischler’s bold drive to streamline the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) and
his bid to address the problems of over-fishing earned five 'smileys' from the
NGOs in their mid-term assessment of the Prodi Commission.
”Commissioner Fischler was a surprise,” said Greenpeace EU policy advisor Jorgo
Iwasaki-Riss.
”He’s not directly responsible for the environment but his courageous recent
initiatives on CAP and fishing were commendable.”
Iwasaki-Riss commended Wallström’s efforts in pushing for the ratification of
the Kyoto Protocol on climate change, despite the absence of support from the
United States. However, the Swede was chided over her record on material and
waste management.
The Green-8’s wooden spoon went to Transport and Energy Commissioner Loyola de
Palacio, who props up the green league with six ‘frownies’.
Just above her are Enterprise Commissioner Erkki Liikanen, with three frownies,
and Research Commissioner Philippe Busquin on two.
“De Palacio is the Commission's environmental bad guy,” Iwasaki-Riss lamented. “She’s
actively trying to block and dilute environmental policy, not only in her own
area, but in a wider context.”
The review’s authors have a long list of gripes with the Commission
vice-president, including her active promotion of nuclear power despite the
Commission’s official neutral stance, and her support for “unsustainable”
transport development in Central Europe.
“She’s clearly a talented political player, but she's on the wrong side,” the
Greenpeace man said.
Prodi’s Commission as a whole, three years into its term, earned a general
thumbs-up from the Green-8.
But Iwasaki-Riss said it sometimes lacked the political will to see its
potential through on a range of crucial environmental issues.
The campaigner urged the executive to put its full weight behind its landmark
proposals for the CAP and the chemical industry.
The Commission broadly welcomed the NGOs' report as complementary to its own
internal review of environment policies.
“The mid-term review of eight environmental NGOs is part of the Commission's
permanent dialogue with civil society,” it said in a statement.
The executive, however, disagreed with some of the report’s findings.
It insisted that it was taking a leading role in promoting global sustainable
development, had taken concrete steps to tackle waste management and was
working to decouple the link between economic growth and transport consumption.
This article first appeared in the 25-31 July 2002
edition of the European Voice. © Copyright
2002 The Economist Newspaper Limited. All rights reserved.
ã2004 K. Diab. Unless otherwise stated, all the content on this website
is the copyright of Khaled Diab.