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EUROPEAN UNION Environmental Policy

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Title: EUROPEAN UNION Environmental Policy


1
EUROPEAN UNIONEnvironmental Policy
2
Evolution of environmental policy
  • EU institutional arrangements have evolved mainly
    through treaties.
  • Growing popular distress about environmental
    degradation, impact of a number of highly
    publicized environmental disasters,
    politicization of the environmental movement
    account for the EUs increasing involvement in
    the environmental area.
  • First at their summit in Paris in 1972, EU
    leaders called for an EC environmental policy.

3
Evolution of environmental policy
  • Within a year, the Commission proposed and the
    Council adopted the first Environmental Action
    Program (EAP),
  • 1981 the Commission establishes a separate
    directorate-general to deal with environmental
    issues.
  • Based on the SEA the Commission pursued a new
    approach, making environmental policy an integral
    part of other policies.

4
Evolution of environmental policy
  • TEU importance of taking environmental policy
    into account when formulating and implementing
    other EU policies. Allowed financial support from
    the Cohesion fund to poorer states to compensate
    for the high costs of environmental legislation.
  • Only those member states with a per capita GNP of
    less than 90 of the EU average will be entitled
    to such support.
  • Introduced the cooperation procedure for most
    environmental measures, and co-decision for
    general action programs.

5
Evolution of environmental policy
  • Treaty of Amsterdam extended the coverage of the
    codecision procedure to most areas covered by the
    cooperation procedure, from fifteen to
    thirty-eight, including the environment.
  • Enshrined the principle of sustainable
    development as one of the EUs main concerns.
  • Environmental protection requirements must be
    integrated into the definition and implementation
    of Community policies and activities.

6
Evolution of environmental policy
  • Amsterdam allowed for exception to environmental
    rules, as long as proposed national measures were
    based on new scientific evidence and the problem
    being addressed was specific to the member state
    proposing the exceptional measures.
  • Legislation directed towards the protection of
    the environment, but unconnected to the single
    market, is passed under the codecision procedure
    (Article 130s).
  • Legislation linked to trade and economic issues
    (Article 100a) is passed under the basic
    consultation procedure and still requires
    unanimity from the Council of Ministers, but does
    allow for stricter national standards in
    countries that want to adopt them individually.

7
Subsidiarity
  • According to the principle of subsidiarity
    members concede some policy areas as the
    exclusive competence of the EU especially when
    matters of efficiency arise when it is more
    sensible for the EU to act.
  • Under this principle responsibilities for
    implementation should be assigned to the lowest
    level government that can adequately perform
    them.
  • However, the body responsible for initiating such
    legislation, the Commission, does it in the form
    of directives..

8
Actors and processes
  • The Commission
  • The Environment DG initiate and define new
    environmental legislation and to ensure that
    measures, which have been agreed, are actually
    put into practice in the Member States. The
    Environment DG is based largely in Brussels and
    has around 550 staff.
  • Carries out these tasks based on its own
    initiative, complaints from citizens, NGOs or
    businesses, questions from members of the
    European Parliament and petitions received by the
    European Parliament exposing possible
    infringements of Community law.

9
Actors and processes
  • When it comes to the environment sector for 2001,
    the Commission acted on own-initiative 111
    times out of 272 for all sectors (40.8),
    received 587 complaints out of 1300 total
    (41.3), and had 113 non-communication cases
    (18.6) out of 607 for all sectors.

10
Actors and processes
  • The European Parliament
  • When a proposal comes under Article 100a the
    Parliament is least effective as it
    responsibilities conclude in basic consultation
    with the Commission.
  • EP has strongly supported the Commissions use of
    Article 130s as the legal base for the issuance
    of directives concerning the environment which
    triggers the codecision procedure.

11
The Commission proposes new legislation
The EP co-decides (130s)
The EP Consults (100a)
The Council of Ministers Decides
The ECJ Adjudicates
12
Actors and processes
  • The Council of Ministers
  • Sole decision-making body of the EU when it comes
    to environmental matters connected to the
    internal market.
  • Weakens the restrictions proposed by the
    Commission because a great deal of
    intergovernmental bargaining is needed to reach a
    compromise.
  • The battle used to be decided between the six
    green members (Germany, Holland, Denmark,
    Austria Sweden and Finland) otherwise called the
    leaders and the remaining members called the
    laggards.

13
Problems of enforcement
14
Problems of enforcement
15
Problems of enforcement
16
Environment and enlargement
  • Even though the Europe agreements and the PHARE
    program provided financial assistance to help
    bring those countries up to EU environmental
    standards the situation was bad.
  • Only some transitional periods were granted for
    implementation of environmental legislation.
  • The stress to the Cohesion fund is expected to
    become unbearable.

17
Environment and enlargement
  • There is no provision for states supported by the
    Cohesion fund in the implementation of
    environmental policy relating to compliance or
    compliance levels.
  • The Southern Enlargement of the 80s brought an
    increase of 40 between 1989-90 in opened
    infringement proceedings, for which Greece,
    Spain, and Portugal were single-handedly
    responsible.

18
What Lies Ahead?
  • Babel or Integration?
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