7th October 2024
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Spanish minister Teresa Ribera gets top EU role steering climate transition

Spain’s current ecological transition minister, Teresa Ribera, was named on Tuesday as executive vice president in the next European Commission, tasked with overseeing the bloc’s economic transition towards carbon neutrality.

A long-time environmentalist, Ribera will be ‘responsible for a clean, just and competitive transition’ as well as for competition policy, EU chief Ursula von der Leyen told a press conference.

The 55-year-old is close with Spain’s socialist (PSOE) Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, who said she would bring a ‘socialist approach’ to the European Commission, the executive arm of the bloc.

European Union chief Ursula von der Leyen unveiled her new team of commissioners on Tuesday, with Ribera inheriting one of the major portfolios such as economic transformation, environment or competition, which is responsible for enforcing anti-trust rules and policing state aid.

Ribera is expected to use the post to speed up the implementation of the EU’s Green Deal – an ambitious plan to make the bloc climate-neutral by 2050 – which has come under fire from the fossil fuel industry and the agricultural sector, as well as from political parties on the right and far-right.

Ribera has argued the Green Deal can be combined with economic competitiveness.

‘You have to be less ideological and (have) more pragmatism and explain how all the costs in the future will be higher,’ Ribera said in a recent interview with The Financial Times.

Born on 19 May 1969, Ribera is married to an Argentinian lawyer, Mariano Bacigalupo, a former executive at Spanish competition authority CNMC.

A graduate of law and political science from Madrid’s Complutense University, she began her career in the 1990s at the ministry of public works before moving to Spain’s climate change bureau.

Ribera served as secretary of state for climate change under former Socialist Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, before moving to Paris in 2013, where she headed the IDDRI think tank which focuses on sustainable development.

As part of this role she participated in discussions on the 2015 Paris climate agreement and advised the United Nations on climate matters. Sánchez then appointed her minister for the ecological transition when he came to power in 2018.

The media-savvy mother of two daughters has established herself as a pillar of Sanchez’s government who is well regarded in Brussels, although her opposition to nuclear power upsets some member states, according to a diplomatic source. She is fluent in English and French.

In Brussels, she played a key role in concluding a reform of the electricity market and in Spain she has promoted the development of green hydrogen, banned wolf hunting and put in place a pan to save the Mar Menor — one of Europe’s largest saltwater lagoons that is threatened by agricultural runoff.

Ribera’s measures have sometimes faced opposition, especially by farmers.

‘Her decisions have been marked by an “anti-farmer” bias, which raises doubts about the role she could play in Brussels,’ one of Spain’s largest farmers associations, Asaja, said in a statement, criticising her ‘inflexibility’.

Ribera has not hesitated to stand up to the big bosses in the energy sector, such as Ignacio Sanchez Galan, the head of Spanish utility giant Iberdrola, and Josu Jon Imaz, the head of Spanish oil firm Repsol.

As minister she has also clashed at times with von der Leyen, deeming her to be too soft at times on environmental issues.

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