Shortly before the decisive vote in the European Parliament, environmentalists campaigned for a clear no to the EU plans to classify investments in gas and nuclear power plants as climate-friendly under certain conditions.

Before the vote this Wednesday, the German Fridays for Future activist Luisa Neubauer explicitly called on the MPs from Christian Democratic parties such as the CDU and CSU, who are considered to tip the scales, to vote against the project as a whole.

These could now show that climate protection is also their topic.

"The European Parliament could make history by refusing to greenwash gas and nuclear power as "sustainable"," said Neubauer.

Such a decision is also the EU's strongest weapon against Russia's war of aggression against Ukraine because it will ensure that more countries do without Russian gas.

According to Neubauer, renewable energies, green hydrogen and energy efficiency are cheaper than gas and nuclear power.

She emphasized that individual Union MPs have spoken out against the project.

Peter Liese (CDU) and Markus Ferber (CSU) emphasized that the market was not looking for gas and nuclear power.

Greens and Social Democrats are likely to vote against the proposal.

The President of the Nature Conservation Union (Nabu), Jörg-Andreas Krüger, also called for the project to be rejected.

This creates new fossil dependencies instead of diverting investment funds to the urgently needed climate-neutral and environmentally friendly expansion of renewable energies, he told the editorial network Germany (RND).

Taxonomy vote on Wednesday

This Wednesday, the members of the European Parliament will decide whether investments in gas and nuclear power plants can be classified as climate-friendly under certain conditions.

Specifically, the vote in Strasbourg is about the so-called taxonomy of the EU.

It is a classification system designed to steer private investment into sustainable economic activities and thus support the fight against climate change.

The taxonomy is relevant for companies because it influences the investment decisions of investors and could therefore have an impact on the financing costs of projects, for example.

Investors should also be able to avoid investments in climate-damaging economic sectors.

In a first step, it was decided last year to classify electricity production with solar panels, hydroelectric power or wind power as climate-friendly.

In addition, criteria have been defined for numerous other economic sectors.

For example, they regulate that passenger and freight trains can be classified as climate-friendly without direct CO2 emissions.

France is pushing

At the end of last year, under pressure from some member states, the EU Commission responsible for legislative proposals also proposed classifying investments in gas and nuclear power plants as climate-friendly under certain conditions.

France, which sees nuclear power as a key technology for a CO2-free economy and would like to continue exporting the technology to other countries, played a decisive role in this.

In return, Germany advocated a green label for gas as a transitional technology.

The implementation of the Commission's proposal can only be prevented if at least 20 EU countries representing at least 65 percent of the total population of the EU - or at least 353 members of the European Parliament - join forces.

Since the achievement of a corresponding majority in the Council of the EU is considered impossible, the vote in the European Parliament is decisive.

There, on Tuesday, both opponents and supporters were convinced that they could win the matter.

Among other things, opponents argue that incentives to invest in the construction of new gas-fired power plants stand in stark contrast to efforts to become independent of Russian gas.

In addition, there is sharp criticism of the planned use of nuclear power, especially against the background of possible risks from countries such as Germany, Austria and Luxembourg.

EU Financial Markets Commissioner Mairead McGuinness told the plenary that some EU countries needed gas in the transition period to shift away from dirty fossil fuels.

Nuclear power is low-carbon and therefore also part of the energy mix for a transition phase.

"I would like to stress that no Member State is required to invest in nuclear power or gas," McGuinness said.

However, Green MPs such as Bas Eickhout and CSU MP Markus Ferber were not convinced.

Ferber accused the Commission of having compiled the legal act according to political criteria rather than scientific ones.

Eickhout called the project a "pure French political game".

Specifically, the plans of the EU Commission envisage that investments in new nuclear power plants planned in countries such as France, Poland and the Netherlands can be classified as sustainable if the systems meet the latest technical standards and there is a concrete plan for a disposal facility for high-level radioactive waste be submitted by 2050 at the latest.

In addition, it should be a condition that the new plants receive a building permit by 2045.

When classifying new gas-fired power plants, it should be relevant how much greenhouse gases are emitted and whether the plants can also be operated with green hydrogen or low-carbon gas by 2035 at the latest.