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EU Environmental Policy- Historic and Development Perspective

EU Environmental Policy- Historic and Development Perspective. Paul Tempany Policy-making expert Industrial Pollution, Climate Change and Environmental Monitoring. Consultant’s experience. Over 30 years experience in pollution control and policy in UK and EC

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EU Environmental Policy- Historic and Development Perspective

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  1. EU Environmental Policy-Historic and Development Perspective Paul Tempany Policy-making expert Industrial Pollution, Climate Change and Environmental Monitoring

  2. Consultant’s experience • Over 30 years experience in pollution control and policy in UK and EC • Water and environment agencies, government, training, research, consultancy and in industry • Author of 3 BAT reference documents for IPPC • Water pollution, waste management, IPPC, energy efficiency and climate change

  3. Aims of the presentation • Explain the history of the development of EU Environmental Policy • Highlight the key developments • Explain the developments • How these policies and developments are relevant to BiH

  4. Very Early Developments in Environmental Issues • Moses and the Israelites • Ablutions outside of the camp 15 to 12 century BC • Islamic scholars 9th to 13th centuries CE • Earliest known writings on pollution and health • Medieval butchers in Ferrara, Italy • Pits for blood from slaughtering • Edward I of England, 1272 • Banned the burning of coal on London • Philip II of Spain, XV century • Cemeteries outside of urban areas

  5. Industrial revolution – key features • Mechanisation • Greatly increased production • Steam power • Replacing human and animal muscle, wind and water • Iron making (also lead, copper) • Coal and coke replacing wood as a fuel in metallurgy • Movement of population to towns and cities • Clean water, dirty water • Poor air quality

  6. UK examples Early 1800s, Widnes (Cheshire, UK) under the cloud of the Leblanc process  1863 Alkali Act 5 inspectors to control hydrochloric acid gas from chemical industry

  7. London 1851, ‘Greatest’ city in world, 2.5M pop • and other cholera epidemics • 616 died in 1854 • 1858 Great Stink led to modern sewerage system

  8. The Great Smog 1952 20,000 deaths 100,000 ill led to Clean Air Act 1956

  9. Early EU Policy • 1957 Treaty of Rome • European Economic Community formed • Primarily economic – ‘the Common Market’ • No environmental dimension • National legislation • Early regulations under: • Article 100 ‘economic level playing field’ • Article 235 ‘any other business’

  10. Early European environmental directives • 1967 ‘Packaging directive’ for classification, labelling and packaging dangerous substances • 1970 Permissible sound level and the exhaust system of motor vehicles.

  11. Public Environmental Concerns • 1945 onwards: Nuclear testing • 1971 Greenpeace’ first action against testing • 1940s – 1960s: smogs in cities • 1950s – 1980s: acid rain • 1984 half of trees in Black Forest (DE) affected • 1962 ‘Silent Spring’: effects of pesticides • 1978 Love Canal: toxic waste

  12. Environmental images of the 1960’s

  13. Pressures and change • 1st: differing national standards posed significant barriers to trade e.g. vehicle emissions controls • 2nd: increasing international politicisation of environmental problems, e.g. acid rain, toxic wastes • 1972 UN Conference on Human Environment • Stockholm Conference • 1972 Paris Summit of Heads of State, Declaration became First Environment Action Programme

  14. 1st Environmental Action Programme (EAP) 1973 to 1976 The Commission would propose to: • reduce pollution and nuisances; • improve the natural and urban environments; • deal with environmental problems caused by the depletion of certain natural resources; • and promote awareness of environmental problems and education

  15. Development of EU Environmental Policy • From 1957 to 1987 about 200 items of legislation • Legal basis criticised • IGC 1986 to amend Treaty of Rome • 1987 Single European Act • Environmental Title Articles 130r-t very broad • New areas, • e.g. Protection of wildlife habitats, freedom of information

  16. Principles relating to the environment • to preserve, protect and improve the quality of the environment; • contribute towards protecting human health • ensure a prudent and rational utilization of natural resources. • preventive action is to be taken • that environmental damage should be rectified at source • the polluter should pay • ‘environmental protection requirements shall be a component of the Community's other policies’

  17. The Community to take account of: • Science and technical data • Environmental conditions in the regions • Costs and benefits of action or no action • Economic and social development of the Community • Where action by the EC was better than MS action • MS could introduce more stringent measures as long as compatible with e.g. internal market

  18. Drivers for Environmental Policy continue • 1976 Seveso disaster: chemical explosion • 1982 Seveso Directive • Wastes • 1978 Amoco Cadiz: oil spill • 1979 3 Mile Island: nuclear meltdown • 1984 Bhopal disaster: chemical gas leak • 1986 Chernobyl : nuclear disaster • 1985 Hole in the Ozone Layer: • international effect • 1987 Montreal Protocol

  19. 1976 Seveso incident • Small chemical plant • Close down required by law over weekend • Shut down too rapid and without precautions • Explosion caused highest ever exposure of residents to dioxins • 41 drums of toxic wastes ‘lost’ for 7 years, found in France

  20. 1992 The Maastricht Treaty • sustainable and non-inflationary growth respecting the environment’ (Article 2) • ‘economic and social progress which is balanced and sustainable’ • ‘aim at a high level of protection’, and be based on the ‘precautionary principle’ • ‘Environmental protection requirements must be integrated into ... other Community policies • Co-decision procedure with European Parliament • QMV in Council removed MS veto

  21. 1997 The Amsterdam Treaty • Sustainable development made explicit • DG ENV given more power by • Requirement to integrate environment in all policy areas • COM to prepare EIA of all policies with env impact • Co-decision became norm for environmental issues • Community competent for all areas of environment • New approaches: • Cardiff Integration Process • EU Sustainable Development Strategy

  22. 2001 Nice Treaty • Changes in QMV • Smaller MS have more votes in proportion to their population

  23. 2009 (into force) Lisbon Treaty • Strengthens sustainability further • Pursue sustainable development beyond Europe • Share energy competence with MS • Fisheries and marine conservation come under Agriculture • Agriculture and Fisheries come under co-decision • Parliament can influence whole budget

  24. EU 6th Env Action Plan • July 2002 to July 2012 • No new targets • 4 key thematic areas: • Climate change. • Nature and biodiversity. • Environment, health and quality of life. • Natural resources and wastes.

  25. 6th EAP: 7 Thematic Strategies • Air • Pesticides • Waste prevention and recycling • Natural resources • Soil • Marine environment • Urban environment

  26. EU 7th Env Action Plan • EC Communication on strategic initiatives • Europe 2020 strategy • European Semester • 7th EAP should be a strategic document to: • Improve implementation track record • Further integrate climate and environment • Align existing policy and practice to knowledge • Fill significant policy gaps • 26 Sept RENA ministerial meeting

  27. Limits to Scope of EU Environmental Policy • Subsidiarity principle • Some ‘framework’ legislation leaving detail to MS • Unanimity of Council of Ministers in sensitive areas • E.g. ‘green’ taxation, quantitative management of water resources, town and country planning, some aspects of energy policy

  28. What is an National Approximation Action Plan? • Harmonisation of Environmental Policy and Strategy with the EU • An Action Plan to achieve this • The largest chapter of legislation: • IS IT WORTH IT?

  29. Policy advantages and disadvantages • Priorities are no longer under exclusive domestic control. • MS can influence environmental policy in all of Europe and world • Member States must implement EU legislation or be fined •  MS participate in process •  Decision making at EU level is arguably more transparent • The requirement to meet EU standards can strengthen the negotiating position of environmental ministries in relation to other government departments within MS • Environmental standards have been tightened in most MS e.g. air and water. • Exchanging experience between MS e.g. IMPEL, EP Review Group

  30. Benefits of the EU Env Acquis Implementation will: • bring investment and jobs • Attract non-environmental investment • Reduce risks • Reduce insurance costs • Improve and maintain the image of BiH • Reduce the costs of health care • Increase the health and potential of the population • Protect the environment for the use of the current and future generations

  31. IPA Projects • This project is a ‘gateway’ • The fulfilment of this contract will open the gates to over 40 million EUROS investment

  32. Job creation - Environmental industries -

  33. Tourism • One of the world’s largest and fastest growing economic sectors • Represents one in every twelve jobs • Directly represents 5% of global and EU GDP • 30% of the world’s exports of services, US$ 3 billion a day income, 4th after fuels, chemicals and automotive products • Bringing people into closer contact with nature raises public awareness of environmental issues • Brings people together and connecting the world, fostering mutual respect, understanding and tolerance

  34. Tourism • BiH will have 3rd highest growth in world • Sarajevo listed as: • 43rd best city in world • One of top ten in 2010; • 1st in 2012 • Lots of opportunity for development of rural areas

  35. Challenges for BiH • Difficulty of implementation • Improving and maintaining image • Impacts of lack of action

  36. Pollution prevention: Ajka, Hungary, Red Mud Disaster • 4 October 2010 • Red mud is caustic waste from alumina manufacture • Damn collapsed • 9 died, 122 injured

  37. Sustainability • Lack of wood for construction and fuel linked to downfall of: • Gilgamesh ~ 3000 BCE • Minoa (Crete) ~ 1400BCE • Rome ~500 CE • Venice XVI century • UK, Spain, Portugal • loss of colonial resources

  38. Limits to Growth • Club of Rome 1968 • ‘Limits to Growth’ 1972 • Criticisms: • Underestimates technology • New resources, decreased consumption • Price mechanism • Reviewed in 1993, 2009, 2010 to be consistent with data

  39. Sustainability and climate change • Biggest experiment ever • Risk of change significant • BiH vulnerable: • Land, ecosystems and species • Erosion and soil degradation • Decreases in river flows • Flooding and land slip • Losses in tourism (especially winter), trade and raw materials, agriculture, forestry, hydroelectric power

  40. Summary • Development of environmental policy has been in response to incidents and activities • EU has adopted principles such as: • Polluter pays, subsidiarity ..... • There are disbenefits to implementation, but: • Major benefits • Benefits to the economy • Sustainability • Membership of EU brings ability to influence EU an international policies

  41. Thank you for your attention! Paul Tempany ptempany@eptisa.com

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