3 october 2002
friends of the earth europe
brussels
THE POLLUTER DOES NOT PAY
FOE slams proposed European environmental
liability laws
A draft European directive on
environmental liability is so weak it is
practically useless, Friends of the Earth
said today. The European Parliament is
holding a 'public hearing' in Brussels on the
proposals today (Thursday), which were drawn
up by the European Commission.
Comprehensive laws on environmental
liability are essential tomake those
responsible for environmental damage or
destruction
liable for their actions. Unfortunately the
proposals drawn up by the European Commission
are far from adequate.
- They only apply to biodiversity in
certain 'protected' areas, and only to
certain protected species. Species protected
under national and international biodiversity
legislation are not fully covered. In all
only around 20 per cent of the EU's
biodiversity, and only around 13 per cent of
its land area is covered by the draft
directive.
- They only cover damage to land if it
causes “serious potential harm to public
health as a result of soil and subsoil
contamination.” Damage to soil eco-systems is
completely overlooked.
- Economic damage - such as the
contamination of organic crops through
cross-pollination with genetically modified
crops - isalso completely overlooked.
The draft directive is also riddled with
loopholes and caveats which weaken it
further. These include:
- State-of-knowledge defence. Polluters
can avoid liability by arguing that the
activities or emissions were not considered
harmful when the incident happened.
- Permit-defence. This excludes liability
for all activities and emissions for which
the operator holds a permit or
authorisation.
Geert Ritsema of Friends of the Earth
Europe said:
“These proposals on environmental
liability are completely inadequate. If
business pollutes the environment surely it
should pay for the damage it has caused? If
this legislation is passed the environment
will pay the price and the tax-payers will
foot the bill.
"Why doesn't this directive fully cover
damage caused by genetically modified crops?
The ultimate responsibility for any harm
caused by GMOs should lie with the Directors
of the biotech companies. That’s fair on
farmers, consumers, the environment and
tax-payers.”
contact:
Geert Ritsema, Friends of the Earth
Europe.
Phone: +32-2-542 0182, Mobile: +31-6-290 05
908
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