Dan Jørgensen

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Dan Jørgensen
Dan Jørgensen 0009.JPG
Minister of Climate and Energy and Utilities
Assumed office
27 June 2019
Prime MinisterMette Frederiksen
Preceded byLars Christian Lilleholt (as Minister for Energy, Utilities and Climate)
Minister for Food, Agriculture and Fisheries
In office
12 December 2013 – 28 June 2015
Prime MinisterHelle Thorning-Schmidt
Preceded byKaren Hækkerup
Succeeded byEva Kjer Hansen
Member of the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats in the European Parliament
In office
20 July 2004 – 12 December 2013
Member of the Folketing
Assumed office
18 June 2015
ConstituencyFunen
Personal details
Born (1975-06-12) 12 June 1975 (age 46)
Odense, Denmark
NationalityDanish
Political partySocial Democrat / PES
Alma materUniversity of Aarhus, University of Washington
OccupationPolitician
ProfessionAuthor, Politician
WebsiteOfficial website

Dan Jannik Jørgensen (born 12 June 1975 in Odense) is a Danish politician of the Social Democrats who is serving as the Minister of Climate and Energy and Public Utilities in the government of Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen.[1] Previously, he served as Minister for Food, Agriculture and Fisheries under Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt. From 2004 to 2013 he served as a Member of the European Parliament for the Social Democrats, as a part of the Party of European Socialists.

Early life and education[]

Jørgensen grew up in Morud on the Danish island of Funen, attended high school at Nordfyns Gymnasium, and university at the University of Aarhus, from which he holds a master's degree in Political Science. He also studied Political Science at the University of Washington.[2][3]

Political career[]

Member of the European Parliament, 2004–2013[]

Jørgensen became a Member of the European Parliament for Denmark in the 2004 European elections with 10,350 personal votes and re-elected in 2009 with 233,266 personal votes.[4]

In parliament, Jørgensen was the head of the Danish delegation of Social Democrats, the country's largest group at the time. He served as vice-chair of the Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety from 2004, and was a substitute on the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs. In addition to his committee assignments, he was also a member of the parliament’s delegation for relations with Iran and a substitute on the delegation for relations with the United States.[5]

Career in Danish politics[]

In February 2014, as Minister for Food, Agriculture and Fisheries, Jørgensen signed a regulation which banned ritual slaughter of animals without prior stunning.[6]

In the 2015 Danish general election, Jørgensen became a member of the Folketing.

Minister of Climate and Energy and Public Utilities, 2019 - present[]

Dan Jørgensen became Minister of Climate and Energy and Public Utilities in the Mette Frederiksen cabinet, following the June 2019 election.

Jørgensen and his government have made international news with the agreement to reduce Denmark's territorial emissions by 70% in 2030 compared to 1990,[7] the decision to stop oil and gas exploration after 2050 [8][9](also driven by the fact that only one company applied for a lease in the latest auction[10]), and the energy islands in the North Sea.[11] Also in 2020, Denmark agreed with Germany on closer cooperation in their offshore wind power development via clusters in the North and Baltic Seas to spur renewable energy and hydrogen production.[12]

However, green NGOs have largely viewed Jørgensen's tenure negatively in 2020.[13][14]

More than a year after having set an ambitious reduction target for the decade, there are in February 2021 no concrete plans for dealing with the remaining two thirds of the needed reductions to achieve the Danish 2030 emission target.[15]

The government has described their climate action strategy as a "hockey stick"-model.[16] This means they plan to await new technologies and falling costs and thus only achieve most reductions at the end of the decade - this strategy has been described by other political parties as a "Bjørn Lomborg" dream.[17]

Despite pleas from the UNFCCC,[18] the International Monetary Fund,[19] the World Bank,[20] the Danish Economic Councils[21] and the Danish Council on Climate Change,[22] Jørgensen has postponed the implementation of a higher carbon pricing mechanism,[23] even though Denmark was a pioneer with its adoption in 1992.[24] The opposition to higher carbon taxes was positively received by associations representing the major emitting sectors such as the Confederation of Danish Industry[25] and Danish Agriculture and Food Council.[26]

As of January 2021, Denmark stands to have a much lower price on carbon than its neighbours in 2030, with consequences such as trucks from Germany waiting to refuel until they are in Denmark to benefit from the low diesel prices in Denmark.[27] Denmark is also one of the four EU countries without carbon taxes on passenger flights.[28] In fact, Jørgensen's government had plans to guarantee domestic flights during the COVID 19 crisis by subsidising domestic flights, a decision decried by green NGOs and the supporting parties Red-Green Alliance and the Socialist People's Party.[29] The decision was not implemented as the European Commission would not approve it due to regulations on state aid.[30]

Dan Jørgensen and the Danish government’s initial proposal for a law on electric vehicles would add 500.000 electric vehicles (incl. plugin-hybrid vehicles) by 2030.[31] Had the proposal been agreed upon, it would have meant more cars with only internal combustion engines than in 2020 in Denmark. Because of pressure from other political parties, it was agreed that there would be 775.000 electric vehicles by 2030.[32]

During his tenure, Jørgensen entered a formal agreement with the cement manufacturer Aalborg Portland (Denmark’s largest carbon emitter standing for 4% of the national emissions) concluding that they did not have to reduce their annual emissions below their 1990 level of 1.54 million CO2 tons.[33]

Similarly, Jørgensen has been criticised[34] for allowing state-owned companies to continue the build-out of fossil fuel infrastructure like a natural gas pipeline of 115 km, with an associated socio-economic cost of $113 million for Denmark.[35] In a formal answer to the Parliament, Dan Jørgensen confirmed that the gas pipeline would not reduce the carbon emissions in the short term nor add any jobs in Denmark.[36]

Dan Jørgensen received a "nose" in June 2020, a formal criticism by a majority in the Parliament for delaying negotiations with other political parties on biofuels.[37]

As stipulated in the Climate Act, the Danish Council on Climate Change has to make annual recommendations for and provide a status update on the Danish government's climate efforts. In February 2021, the Danish Council on Climate Council does not find it likely that Dan Jørgensen's government will achieve the target of a 70% reduction of greenhouse gases by 2030.[38]

Following the release of the 6th IPCC report, Dan Jørgensen said that alarm bells should ring for anyone having influence on climate politics in Denmark or abroad. While Denmark is one of the countries with the largest carbon footprint per capita,[39] Dan Jørgensen added that Denmark should not increase their ambitions, but help other countries copy Denmark's efforts.[40] He also commented that large emitters should not be treated equally: large companies growing their production should not be compared to the ones not transforming their production, disregarding the fact that what matters with regards to global warming is the total amount of carbon emissions, not the intensity of the production.[41]

Despite these controversies, Jørgensen is a strong climate change communicator. Some examples include a podcast in English called Planet A[42] and a campaign with videos on Facebook advising Danes to put more vegetables in their meatballs.[43] The campaign with Mogens Jensen cost Danish taxpayers 1.2 million kroner.[44]

Bibliography[]

  • Staunings arv - vejen til et lykkeligt Danmark (2018, People's Press)
  • Beyond deniers and believers - towards a map of the politics of climate change (2015, Global Environmental Change, co-author)
  • Grønt håb - Klimapolitik 2.0 (2010, Forlaget Sohn)
  • Mellem Mars og Venus - EU's rolle i fremtidens verdensorden (2009, Forlaget Sohn)
  • Politikere med begge ben på jorden hænger ikke på træerne (2009, Informations Forlag)
  • Grøn Globalisering - miljøpolitik i forandring (2007, Hovedland)
  • Eurovisioner - Essays om fremtidens Europa (2006, Informations Forlag)

References[]

  1. ^ Deleuran Müller, Thea (27 June 2019). "Danmarks nye regering er nu på plads: Se hele Mette Frederiksens ministerhold her". dr.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 25 March 2020.
  2. ^ http://socialdemokraterne.dk/default.aspx?func=article.view&id=701019&menuID=701702&menuAction=select&topmenuID=688048
  3. ^ http://www.europarl.europa.eu/members/expert/committees/view.do?language=EN&id=28156
  4. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 March 2012. Retrieved 5 September 2011.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. ^ http://www.europarl.europa.eu/members/expert/committees/view.do?language=EN&id=28156
  6. ^ "Welfare at slaughter". Danish Veterinary and Food Administration. 19 February 2014. Retrieved 22 February 2014.
  7. ^ "Denmark: We can slash CO2 by 70% in a decade and still have welfare". Reuters.
  8. ^ Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen (4 December 2020), Danish phase out of North Sea oil, gas to cut output by up to 15% -minister Reuters.
  9. ^ Anjli Raval (4 December 2020), Denmark to end all new North Sea oil and gas exploration Financial Times.
  10. ^ "Totals exit kan blive enden på oliejagt i Nordsøen". Politiken.
  11. ^ "Denmark to build 'first energy island' in North Sea". BBC.
  12. ^ Nora Buli (14 December 2020), Germany, Denmark agree closer offshore wind cooperation Reuters.
  13. ^ "Dan, du er dumpet: Grønne grupper er dybt skuffede over regeringens vilde klimaår". Politiken.
  14. ^ "14 ngo'er få dage før Klimarådets dom: Regeringen lever ikke op til klimaloven". Information.
  15. ^ "Klimahandlingsplan 2020" (PDF). Ministry of Climate, Energy and Utilities.
  16. ^ "Wammens "hockeystav" er et fikst sprogbillede. Men det er en dårlig klimaløsning". Information.
  17. ^ "Støttepartier: Vi kan ikke vente på teknologien i klimakampen". EnergiWatch.
  18. ^ "Calls Increase to Use Carbon Pricing as an Effective Climate Action Tool".
  19. ^ "A carbon tax is 'single most powerful' way to combat climate change, IMF says". CNBC.
  20. ^ "The World Bank: Pricing Carbon".
  21. ^ "Ensartet afgift på tværs af brancher er den billigste klimaløsning".
  22. ^ "Klimarådet: Ny rapport om vejen til 70-procentsmålet i 2030".
  23. ^ "Regeringen fremlægger grøn skattereform uden CO2-afgift". FødevareWatch.
  24. ^ "OECD Economics Department Working Papers". www.oecd-ilibrary.org. 2021. doi:10.1787/18151973. Retrieved 18 February 2021.
  25. ^ "DI: Politikerne har lagt grunden til en god grøn skattereform – men vi er ikke i mål".
  26. ^ "Ensartet CO2-afgift skudt til hjørne".
  27. ^ "Dieselparadiset Danmark: Tyske Michael sparer 750.000 om året på at tanke i Padborg". DR.
  28. ^ "Danmark er ét af kun fire EU-lande med nul flyafgifter". ING.
  29. ^ ""Det er helt grotesk": Ny hjælpepakke betaler for at sende halvtomme fly i luften". Politiken.
  30. ^ "EUU Alm.del, spørgsmål 287".
  31. ^ "Regeringen klar med udspil til transportaftale: Målet er 500.000 elbiler i 2030". DR.
  32. ^ "Aftale mellem regeringen, Radikale Venstre, Socialistisk Folkeparti og Enhedslisten om: Grøn omstilling af vejtransporten" (PDF).
  33. ^ "KEF Alm. Del. Sp 515".
  34. ^ "Naturgasløsning til sukkerfabrikker møder kritik: - Er naturgas pludselig blevet grøn energi?". TV2Øst.
  35. ^ "Minister korrekser Energinet: CO2-reduktioner ved en gasledning må ikke medregnes". ING.
  36. ^ "KEF Alm.del Sp 18".
  37. ^ "Dan Jørgensen får næse for klima-nøl: 'Ministeren har ikke taget Folketinget seriøst'". DR.
  38. ^ "New report assesses the Government's climate effort and provides recommendations on how to meet the 70 percent target in 2030". Klimaraadet / Danish Council on Climate Change.
  39. ^ "Global Afrapportering 2021 – Nøgletal" (PDF). Klima-, Energi- og Forsyningsministeriet.
  40. ^ "Dan Jørgensen: Klimarapporten indeholder en stor og alvorlig nyhed". Altinget.
  41. ^ "Klimaminister: Hockeystaven er både knækket og smidt på bålet". Information.dk.
  42. ^ "Planet A - Talks on climate change".
  43. ^ "Ministre leger klima-kokke".
  44. ^ "Ministres køkken-fifs koster million". Ekstra Bladet.

External links[]

Political offices
Preceded by
Lars Christian Lilleholt
Minister for Climate, Energy and Utilities
2019–
Succeeded by
Incumbent
Preceded by
Karen Hækkerup
Minister for Food, Agriculture and Fisheries
2013–2015
Succeeded by
Eva Kjer Hansen
Retrieved from ""