The European Green Deal
The European Green Deal is the European Union’s roadmap to becoming the first climate‑neutral continent by 2050, while ensuring that the transition is fair, inclusive, and socially balanced.
It combines climate ambition with industrial transformation, social protection, regional cohesion, and job creation, positioning sustainability as a driver of economic resilience and decent work. At the centre of the Green Deal is the European Climate Law, which legally commits the EU to becoming climate-neutral by 2050 and establishes an interim target of reducing greenhouse gas emissions by at least 55% by 2030 compared to 1990 levels. The European Commission has also proposed a 90% emissions reduction target for 2040.
The Green Deal frames climate action not only as an environmental imperative, but also as a social and economic transformation. It seeks to modernize the EU economy while ensuring that workers, enterprises, and regions affected by the transition receive targeted support. The approach recognizes that decarbonization policies can create uneven impacts across territories and sectors, particularly in coal regions, carbon-intensive industries, transport, housing, and agriculture.
A core principle of the Green Deal is to “leave no one behind.” The strategy integrates measures to protect vulnerable households, support workers through reskilling and upskilling, promote quality job creation, address energy poverty, and strengthen territorial cohesion. The transition is framed as an opportunity to create sustainable industries, enhance competitiveness, improve working and living conditions, and expand access to clean and affordable energy and mobility.
The Green Deal is also embedded within the European Union’s broader commitment to implement the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and advance integrated economic, social, and environmental policymaking.