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From fisheries to persistent organic pollutants to climate change
itself, no other environmental principle in environmental law has
produced as much controversy as the precautionary principle. Unlike
a preventive approach in which action is taken provided that the
threats to the environment are tangible, with a precautionary
approach, authorities are prepared to tackle risks for which there
is no definitive proof that the damage will materialize. The
ramifications of this increasingly apparent approach are profound
and cut across all areas of risk assessment and management,
environmental law, policy and regulation in every major sector.
However, to date little thought has been dedicated to the
implementation of the precautionary principle in a wide array of
environmental circumstances. This authoritative handbook addresses
the legal aspects of how the precautionary principle is implemented
in different sectors, and examines its successes, failures,
strengths and weaknesses. Sectors and subjects covered include
chemicals, GMOs, marine pollution, fisheries and nature
conservation, and the book draws on cases in the EU, in the USA,
and Nordic countries, where the use of precaution has been
gathering momentum. Ultimately, the book provides an indispensable
appraisal of the question - increasingly important in the era of
human-induced climate change - of whether the precautionary
principle is relevant, indeed essential, to avert major
environmental and health risks, and how and when it can be used
successfully. Published with MARIE CURIE ACTIONS
For some, a protectionist policy underlies most environmental
measures. Lawyers working in the area of fundamental freedoms are
very accustomed to discussing all issues within a free market
framework and therefore often come to market-friendly decisions.
Similarly, while environmental law has taken on a renewed intensity
at European level, the tendency has been to analyse the subject
rather narrowly, and studies fail to address the impact of
environmental law on market integration. Written by one of the
foremost experts in the area, the book challenges current thought
and re-assesses the rules of economic integration within an
environmental framework. In so doing, it bridges the gap between
environmental and trade law and provides a systematic, robust, and
practically workable analytical framework of the conflicts opposing
rapidly evolving environmental and climate change measures and
internal market as well as competition rules. The book is divided
into three parts, beginning with a systematic and in-depth analysis
of the key Treaty provisions regarding environmental protection, as
well as an overview of secondary environmental law. Part two
addresses the compatibility of EU and national environmental
protection measures with the provisions of the TFEU on the free
movement of goods and services, and the freedom of establishment.
Part three examines the compatibility of environmental protection
measures with treaty provisions on the freedom of competition and
State aids. The book also includes discussion of all major cases
handed down by the Court of Justice, highlighting the real impact
of the conflicts.
This book traces the evolution of environmental principles from
their origins as vague political slogans reflecting fears about
environmental hazards to their embodiment in enforceable laws.
Environmental law has always responded to risks posed by industrial
society but the new generation of risks have required a new set of
environmental principles, emerging from a combination of public
fears, science, ethics, and established legal practice. This book
shows how three of the most important principles of modern
environmental law grew out of this new age of ecological risk: the
polluter pays principle, the preventive principle, and the
precautionary principle. Since the first edition was published, the
principles of polluter-pays, prevention, and precaution have been
encapsulated in a swathe of legislation at domestic and
international level. Courts have been invoking environmental law
principles in a broad range of cases, on issues including GMOs,
conservation, investment, waste, and climate change. As a result,
more States are paying heed to these principles as catalysts for
improving their environmental laws and regulations. This edition
will integrate to a greater extent the relationship between
environmental principles and human rights. The book analyses new
developments including the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights, the
case law of the European Court of Human Rights, which has
continuously carved out environmental duties from a number of
rights enshrined in the European Convention of Human Rights, and
the implementation of the UNECE Convention on Access to
Information.
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