... misunderstood. If the Green Deal is set as an entirely “European brand”, being implemented downwards as a unilateral solution, some countries could refuse to support it. The consequences concern not only the EU member states (EU-27), but the global economy: Thus, we recommend that the Green Deal must be elaborated on more deeply, coined as an “Eurasian project”, aligned by the EU with other continents as well.
Given this broader definition of the Green Deal, it can change the balance of power in the world market, making the global ...
... 2020, dependence on
oil imports
from Russia was less pronounced and amounted to 28% and 26.4%, while still being way higher than the share of the second biggest supplier, the U.S. (9.2%).
COVID-19 and the subsequent
6.2%
contraction of the EU’s economy were additional factors weighing with the European Green Deal. Economic recovery has come to be considered in connection with achieving carbon neutrality. The 2020 global economic meltdown has become a driver for stepping up the environmental—and climate, in particular—ingredient in the aid packages ...
... hydrogen energy, critically important raw materials, energy-efficient construction and building modernization, the closed-cycle economy, agriculture and forestry, and biodiversity. The particulars are still being actively discussed in the European political ... ... framework will be adopted and requisite mechanisms launched on the basis of these discussions.
All the areas announced in the New Green Deal open new avenues for European and Russian economic entities in implementing various cooperation projects. Hydrogen ...