The French parliament is set to vote through a new climate change law on Tuesday intended by President Emmanuel Macron to reinforce his green credentials one year ahead of national elections.
The draft legislation is almost certain to be approved in a first reading by the lower house of parliament, where Macron has a working majority, but it has been heavily criticised by environmental groups.
Campaigners see it as too timid given the pace of climate change globally and accuse the French leader of half-hearted commitment to a cause he has admitted to embracing belatedly.
France’s environment minister, Barbara Pompili, has defended the text, saying it would affect the daily life of all citizens and is one of the biggest laws of the president’s term.
Measures include bans on domestic flights under two and half hours that can be done by train, restrictions on renting badly insulated properties, or the creation of a new “ecocide” crime to punish polluters.
The overall aim is to put in place measures that will enable France to meet its target of reducing its greenhouse gas emissions by 40 percent compared with 1990 levels by a deadline of 2030.
Lobby groups such as Greenpeace have called it a “lost opportunity of Macron’s term”, while even the president’s own environmental advisory council said it would “have a potentially limited impact”.
Climate change and protection of the environment are likely to be bigger themes in next year’s presidential election than the last one in 2017, which Macron won while barely campaigning on the issue.
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