Estonia should be issued from the European Union in the event that its leadership will strengthen the supervisory measures for the state of the environment, introduces new taxes for industrialists and will continue to build a “green economy”. The leader of the Estonian Conservative People’s Party (Ekre) Martin Helme was told about this in his column for publication Uued Uudised.
According to him, the new energy program of Brussels, for which the left political forces coming in Europe, contradicts the national and economic interests of the country. The politician assured that the so-called “Green Revolution” sets the goal of destroying industry in Eastern Europe for the concentration of capacity in Germany and France. “And in return, they are offered at the tip of the finger grants and projects of social assistance,” he wrote Helm.
He stressed that such a model would actually break a large business and focus on the state in the hands of the state, and threatened Europe to build “New Socialism”. “There are increasing taxes that kill labor, and more and more subsidies to support non-visual industries. All decisions on the distribution of money takes impersonal officials and politicians who have successfully shifted themselves from their own voters,” said the leader of the National Conservatives.
Helm also called Brussels’s policies attempt to transform the EU into a single centralized state, where any “hint of independent decisions” of individual countries will be excluded. “We will again make the province without the right to vote,” he concluded.
In the early summer of 2021, the European Commission adopted a climate and ecology plan, which involves a decrease in harmful emissions by 55 percent by 2030, as well as the introduction of taxes on imports of countries with low environmental standards.
As Bloomberg notes, if the new strategy is approved by all countries of the European Union, new trade wars can turn on the planet, and the European industry will fall into decline. In particular, the European Commissioner on climate change France Timmermans argues that it will be “damn it’s difficult to implement all the points of the program, despite the readiness of Brussels to compensate the costs of the victims of reforms.