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HomeBusinessClimate / EnvironmentEU Council and parliament reach provisional deal on access to justice in...

EU Council and parliament reach provisional deal on access to justice in environmental matters

BRUSSELS, Belgium — The Council Presidency and European Parliament’s negotiators today reached a provisional political agreement on a proposal to revise the Aarhus Regulation, in order to bring it fully in line with the Aarhus Convention. The Aarhus Regulation sets out how the EU and its member states implement the international Aarhus Convention, which aims to guarantee access to information, public participation in decision-making and access to justice in environmental matters. The provisional agreement is subject to approval by both institutions.

“The EU and its member states are highly committed to the principles of the Aarhus Convention and today’s agreement improves the way they implement them on the ground. Today’s agreement is not only timely, it is balanced and most importantly it responds to all the concerns laid down by the Aarhus Convention Compliance Committee in the case concerned,” said Tamara Weingerl Požar, deputy permanent representative of Slovenia to the EU.

The aim of the proposal is to ensure that the EU fully complies with the Convention concerning the right of the public to review administrative acts. These are non-legislative acts adopted by an EU institution or body, which have legal and external effects and contain provisions that may, because of their effects, contravene environmental law.

The Council and Parliament negotiators agreed among other things to:

  • Broaden the legal standing beyond NGOs, thus allowing other members of the public to request internal reviews of administrative acts under certain conditions. The members of the public shall either demonstrate an impairment of their rights caused by the alleged contravention of environmental law and that they are directly affected by such impairment in comparison with the public at large; or they shall demonstrate a sufficient public interest and that the request is supported by at least 4000 members of the public residing or established in at least 5 member states, with at least 250 members of the public residing or established in each of those member states. In both cases, the members of the public shall be represented by an NGO or a lawyer;
  • Include provisions of administrative acts requiring implementing measures at national level or at Union level into the scope of administrative acts;
  • Not to delete the exemption of administrative acts concerning state aid from the regulation (a compliance issue covered by another case of the Aarhus Convention Compliance Committee);
  • Make it mandatory for the EU institutions and bodies to publish review requests and decisions on them.
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