Access to and the quality of energy and climate information across Europe is extremely poor, a new report “Transparency and Access to Data on Climate Action” by a group of climate NGOs, finds.
The authors, the Together for 1.5 consortium, present best practices and recommendations for improvement towards Member States and the EU, and call for swift action to allow civil society and other stakeholders to have a say in the decision-making processes, based on accurate, complete and timely data.
“Transparency and public access to data is key to follow the implementation of climate and energy policies and check the evolution of the set climate and energy targets,” said CAN Europe’s project manager and policy expert, Brigitta Bozso.
The Aarhus Convention requires all EU Member States to make environmental information publicly available. Despite this legal requirement, access to quality and open data is not yet granted in all Member States.
The authors of the report have carried out a first analysis of the needs, quality, availability and accessibility of key environmental data, as well as the methodology used by the public authorities to collect data. Based on these findings, the report puts forward some key recommendations:
- Greater data availability is at the core of more transparent, measurable and credible public policies. Open data sources allow stronger and more objective interaction with stakeholders for data release and publication of relevant datasets.
- It is important to maintain government data periodically updated according to the target’ s timeline.
- Data quality – such as accuracy, completeness, consistency, reliability and timeliness needs to be improved. Governments can create frameworks with standards on data formats and publication procedures for greater data quality.
- Accessibility of official data by citizens, businesses, and other stakeholders: core features of accessible data include providing them free of charge, with unrestricted access, and in easy-readable formats.
The upcoming revision of the Governance Regulation presents a significant opportunity to improve data availability, consistency and transparency at national, but also EU level.
Notes to editors:
This report presents information about the experience and obstacles encountered when gathering climate and energy data relevant to assess the national energy and climate plans (NECPs).
The consortium partners have analysed data from 12 countries: Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Denmark, Estonia, France, Germany, Hungary, Poland, Portugal, Slovenia and Spain.
Each partner has completed a comprehensive questionnaire, with the main objective of identifying barriers and needs for improvement in terms of transparency and access to data.
In a nutshell – some key findings
The good
The moderate
The bad
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