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Governments, companies, environmental associations and citizens all
over the European Union (EU) are struggling with large scale
projects. On the one hand large scale projects can contribute to
economic development, on the other hand they often also raise
environmental concerns. Because of their size and potential impact,
large scale projects usually lead to heavy debates and quickly
become of great symbolic value. Consequently, large scale projects
are excellent examples of the difficulty to balance economic
development with environmental protection.The types of large scale
projects, planned as well as under construction in the EU, are very
diverse. One can think of all kinds of infrastructure projects
(motorways, railways, waterways, stations, ports, airports,...),
building projects (offices, housing projects, sports stadiums,
redevelopment of brownfields,...), waste projects (incineration,
landfill,...), energy projects (electricity and gas networks, wind
farms, biogas installations, heat networks, extraction
projects,...), climate projects (CDM projects,...), water projects,
etc.In order to promote the legal thinking about all kinds of
environmental and planning law aspects of large scale projects,
Hasselt University and KU Leuven, Campus Brussels jointly hosted
from 10 to 12 September 2014 the second European Environmental Law
Forum (EELF) Conference, with as central topic ''Environmental and
Planning Law Aspects of Large Scale Projects''. The conference
focused more specifically on the following aspects:- The role of
spatial and environmental planning- Permitting and review
procedures- Critical sectoral regimes- Horizontal measuresThis book
offers a selection of the contributions presented at the EELF
Conference. They have all been submitted to two double-blind peer
reviews.The book is subdivided into six main themes:1. General2.
Public participation3. Environmental impact assessment4. Water5.
Nature6. Land use
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