„World Press Photo“ paroda. Apsilankykite
Bilietai

Greenpeace and Lithuania agree to cooperate during EU Council presidency

Greenpeace, a non-governmental environmental organization, plans to cooperate with Vilnius during Lithuania's EU Council presidency.
Jorgo Rissas
Jorgo Riss, Greenpeace Europe director / „Greenpeace“ nuotr.

Energy Minister Jaroslav Neverovič met with Jorgo Riss, Greenpeace Europe chief, on Tuesday to discuss energy priorities of the Lithuanian presidency, the Energy Ministry said in a press release.

Participants of the meeting, which took place in Vilnius, discussed EU’s energy and climate policy strategies until 2030, the sustainability criteria for biomass, fuel quality directive, etc.

Neverovič stressed that smooth cooperation with NGOs and understanding of their interests was an important factor that could contribute to successful implementation of EU’s energy policy objectives.

Report mistake

Successfully sent

Thank you

Economy

Lithuanian producers of EPS on the way to circular economy
Gilužio Rivjera by the real estate company Homa – hundreds of apartments and millions in investment
Capitalica fund successfully issued bonds amounting to EUR 5 million to finance the Verde project in Riga

Feature

State Progress Strategy 'Lithuania 2050': will Lithuania become the 'Silicon Valley' of social enterprise?
Citus Experts: Planning to Furbish or Brush Up your Home Interior? Get Ready for a Brutal Run
How do the country's most desirable employers nurture IT talents?

Opinion

Ramūnas Vilpišauskas. The president’s achievements in Brussels were modest
Laurynas Jonavičius. Will the new German government’s foreign policy coincide with Lithuanian interests?
Eastern Partnership ‘beyond westlessness’: a new momentum for the European integration

Politics

Taiwanese Minister Ming-hsin Kung – about Lithuania’s strengths and the two countries’ looming plans
The double standards of “values-based policy”: Lithuania did not join the condemnation of Turkey
Behind the scenes of ambassadorial appointments: Seimas looking for clarification on continuing questioning at the Presidential Palace