Air pollution from traffic and industry is responsible for about
400,000 premature deaths per year in the European Union, according
to Commission data.
Still, the EU executive had proposed to scrap draft proposals on
cleaning up the air, which it said did not fit in with its broader
plans for smarter, streamlined legislation.
An angry backlash from some member states and many in the European
Parliament forced the issue back onto the agenda.
"We are glad the Commission has decided to keep the NEC (National
Emissions Ceiling) directive on the table," said Alda Ozola, a
deputy state secretary in the environment ministry of Latvia, which
holds the rotating EU presidency until end-June.
It was a complex issue and a deal between the parliament and member
states would take time but Latvia would advance the talks as far as
possible, Ozola told a debate at the assembly.
Marianne Wenning, a director in the environmental department of the
Commission, said the row about whether to go ahead with national
limits on various pollutants was now "behind us".
The executive was working on bringing the EU closer to standards
laid out by the World Health Organization by 2030, she said.
Many member states break existing EU air quality rules that fall
short of pollution levels the WHO says are safe. Some industrial
sectors say they are struggling to be competitive and that EU
regulation risks driving them out of Europe.
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Any EU law that entails national limits has also stirred up
Eurosceptic sentiments, especially in Britain where it has become an
election issue in the run-up to polls in May.
But advocates say costs are offset by reduced public health bills
and a drop in sick day numbers.
Elliot Treharne, air quality manager from the Greater London
Authority, said London was working towards bringing London's air
into compliance with existing EU standards, but it could not succeed
alone as air pollutants cross borders.
"Without it (EU-wide law) the burden will be left to cities who are
already doing as much as possible," he said.
(editing by Philip Blenkinsop and David Evans)
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