Skip to playerSkip to main contentSkip to footer
  • 20/06/2025
No, the EU is not banning CO2 in drinks

Some claim that the European Commission is doing away with carbonated drinks as part of its "Fit for 55" climate programme.

READ MORE : http://www.euronews.com/2025/06/20/no-the-eu-is-not-banning-co2-in-drinks

Subscribe to our channel. Euronews is available on Dailymotion in 12 languages
Transcript
00:00No, the EU is not banning CO2 in drinks.
00:06An alleged screenshot from the European Commission website circulating online
00:10says that the EU will ban carbon dioxide in soft drinks, beer and mineral water from 2027.
00:17It says that the Commission is doing away with CO2 in drinks
00:20to reduce around 400 million tonnes of annual emissions as part of its Fit for 55 programme.
00:26Anyone flouting the new rule would be subject to fines of up to €50,000 per litre,
00:31according to the supposed webpage.
00:33However, a search of the European Commission's website shows that no such statement exists
00:38and the EU's Fit for 55 package doesn't include any proposal to ban CO2 in drinks.
00:43Fit for 55 is a climate and energy initiative designed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions
00:48by at least 55% by 2030, compared to levels in 1990.
00:52Some of its measures include CO2 emissions standards for vehicles,
00:56moving towards zero emissions from new cars and vans by 2035,
01:00but there's nothing about banning carbonation in drinks.
01:03There's no credible source out there that corroborates this claim.
01:06The screenshot of the alleged Commission press release also doesn't fully look the part,
01:10showing that it's not real.
01:12In general, it doesn't look like any recent press releases
01:15and uses a photo of European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen from 2019,
01:20rather than a current one.
01:21The Commission's logo is blurred and low resolution,
01:24and certain elements seen in real press releases are missing,
01:27such as the language selection box and a publication date.
01:30There's also a typo in the headline.
01:32Comission is supposed to be spelt with two S's,
01:35and its official name in German is the Europäische Kommission,
01:39not the Europä-Kommission.
01:41EU initiatives are often the target of misinformation campaigns,
01:44as the measures contained within are either misinterpreted
01:47or deliberately exaggerated to whip up hysteria.

Recommended