1. Introduction
Scholars have observed a ‘turn to rights’ in environmental and climate litigation and adjudication, especially since the landmark judgement of the Dutch Supreme Court in Urgenda.Footnote 1 There has been an increase of human rights inspired environmental and climate cases before national courts and international human rights courts and treaty bodies.Footnote 2 There has, however, been scant attention to the role of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) in relation to human rights and the environment. This is noteworthy, because the CJEU occupies a relevant position in this debate about the nexus between environmental law and human rights for four reasons. Firstly, the CJEU is a relatively powerful international court given the primacy of EU law and the existence of well-established doctrines. The latter can be observed through strong enforcement mechanisms such as direct effect, state liability and non-contractual liability of the EU as well as the binding nature of CJEU judgements. Secondly, the CJEU is also an active environmental court because of the extensiveness of EU secondary law in the environmental law field. The CJEU has, for instance, dealt with cases related to greenhouse gas reduction and air and water quality.Footnote 3 Thirdly, the CJEU has in practice been functioning as a human rights court according to various scholars, especially after the Charter of Fundamental Rights became legally binding in 2009.Footnote 4 Fourthly, this Charter contains, contrary to other international human rights treaties such as the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), a specific provision related to the environment, albeit not formulated in terms of an individual right.Footnote 5 Article 37 of the Charter stipulates that ‘a high level of environmental protection and the improvement of the quality of the environment must be integrated into the policies of the Union and ensured in accordance with the principle of sustainable development.’
The foregoing four points warrant the question as to the role of fundamental rights, and more specifically the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights, in the environmental case law of the CJEU. Has the CJEU also made a turn to human rights like other (inter)national courts in environmental cases? In order to answer this question and find the relevant and required cases, a structured case law search of CJEU judgements in environmental cases with carefully selected search terms was performed.Footnote 6 In its discussion of the case law, this article focuses on the role of substantive human rights in the CJEU’s environmental case law. This means that this article primarily engages with -in addition to Article 37- the following provisions: Article 2 (right to life), 7 (right to respect for private life and the home) and 17 (right to property).Footnote 7 Whilst other rights within the Charter, such as the rights of the child (Article 24 of the Charter), can potentially include environmental elements, the selected few are the most relevant provisions in environmental litigation and will therefore be the focus of this article. Moreover, this article will not focus on procedural (environmental) rights such as Articles 41, 42 and 47 or the Aarhus Convention because this has been done by others.Footnote 8 This article will also touch upon the role of the case law of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) in relation to the Charter-equivalent provisions of Articles 2, 8 and Article 1 Protocol 1 to the ECHR, especially in the light of Article 52(3) of the Charter as well as the doctrine of positive obligations.
This article is divided in two parts. Section 2 discusses the current role of the Charter in the environmental case law of the CJEU. After presenting a general overview (Section 2A), explanations are provided for the absence of a turn to human rights in the case law of the CJEU (Section 2B). Section 3 starts with a short discussion of the criticism of human rights-based approaches to environmental protection (Section 3A). We will subsequently examine the future potential of the Charter by focusing on the (potential) role of positive obligations in relation to Articles 2, 7 and 17 of the Charter (Section 3B). Next, specific attention will be paid to the (potential) role of the self-standing environmental provision Article 37 of the Charter (Section 3C). In doing so, we will show that the Charter has only played a limited role in environmental cases before the CJEU to date. This is attributed to the limited added value of the Charter in the light of EU secondary law about the protection of the environment as well as the limited engagement with the Charter by national courts and litigants who rely on the ECHR instead. We argue that the Charter can, nonetheless, have added value in environmental cases before the CJEU via the doctrine of positive obligations and as a useful interpretative tool via Article 37 of the Charter.
2. The Charter in the environmental case law of the CJEU
A. The role of Charter provisions in the environmental case law of the CJEU
A first glance of the results of the case law analysis shows that the Charter has had a relatively limited impact in the environmental case law of the CJEU. Table 1 shows the specific Charter provisions that figure in the case law of the CJEU, including the Opinions of Advocates General (AGs). This table leads to four observations.
Firstly, the table illustrates the dominance of procedural fundamental rights in the environmental case law of the CJEU, most notably Article 47 of the Charter. This underscores the attention in the literature for the further incorporation of the Aarhus Convention within EU Law (‘Aarhus-isation’ of EU law).Footnote 10
Secondly, Table 1 indicates that ‘shield cases’ (still) dominate the case law, as has also been observed in the literature.Footnote 11 Articles 16, 17, 20 and 21 have primarily been used by companies as a ‘shield’ to protect their interests against government measures that were partly taken to protect the environment.Footnote 12 Such ‘anti-environmental’ cases do not necessarily reflect a ‘turn to environmental rights’ or the ‘greening’ of existing (international) human rights law.Footnote 13 By contrast, environmental ‘sword’ rights tend to refer to private individuals that invoke their rights to further environmental protection and/or counter environmental pollution. These provisions include Articles 2, 7, 35 and 37 of the Charter. Such Charter provisions that are used as ‘swords’ in the interests of environmental protection play a role in fewer cases than the ‘shield’ rights, as Table 1 shows as well.Footnote 14 An example of a ‘shield case’ is Križan that dealt with the alleged infringement of the right to property in Article 17 of the Charter of the operator of a landfill site as a result of the annulment by a court of a permit for infringing the Integrated Pollution and Prevention and Control Directive (2008/1/EC).Footnote 15 The Grand Chamber of the CJEU ruled that such an annulment does not constitute an unjustified interference and pointed to environmental protection as a legitimate interest. In Standley, UK farmers also challenged the Nitrates Directive (91/676/EEC) for infringements of their right to property, albeit unsuccessfully.Footnote 16 The CJEU decided that the right to property of the private corporations concerned must not take precedence over the general interest in environmental protection.
Thirdly and relatedly, the two provisions that lend themselves best to a ‘greening’ of the Charter, Articles 2 and 7 of the Charter, have only played a marginal role in the environmental case law of the CJEU.Footnote 17 These provisions can be used as a ‘sword’ to force the authorities to act against environmental harm or pollution causing interferences with these human rights, thereby providing a higher level of environmental protection. There have been two references to the right to life (Article 2 of the Charter) by AG Kokott in the air quality cases Craeynest and JP. Footnote 18 AG Kokott held in Craeynest: ‘The rules on ambient air quality therefore put in concrete terms the Union’s obligations to provide protection following from the fundamental right to life under Article 2(1) of the Charter and the high level of environmental protection required under Article 3(3) TEU, Article 37 of the Charter and Article 191(2) TFEU. Measures which may impair the effective application of Directive 2008/50 are thus comparable, in their significance, with the serious interference with fundamental rights on the basis of which the Court made the rules on the retention of call data subject to strict review.’Footnote 19 In contrast to the AG, the CJEU did not refer to Articles 2 and 37 of the Charter. It, nonetheless, referred to this paragraph in the Opinion of AG Kokott explicitly linking air quality with the fundamental right to life in Article 2 of the Charter.Footnote 20 In its judgement, the CJEU limited the margin of discretion of the authorities in the light of the considerable importance of environmental protection. It determined that the level of pollution at each measuring point is essential instead of an average of multiple points.Footnote 21 In the more recent case of JP, the CJEU reached a different conclusion than AG Kokott and decided that various air quality directives are not intended to confer upon individuals rights the violation of which gives rise to state liability and a right to compensation.Footnote 22 The CJEU was silent about the Charter and did not even implicitly refer to Kokott’s engagement with the Charter.
Attention to Article 7 (right to respect for private life and the home) is also relatively limited both in quantitative as well as qualitative terms.Footnote 23 The only exception is Commission v Austria. Austria relied on Article 7 of the Charter to justify its interference with the free movement of goods flowing from the prohibition for lorries of over 7.5 tonnes to use a section of the A12 motorway in the Inn valley.Footnote 24 Austria claimed that Article 7 of the Charter (and Article 8 ECHR) obliged the authorities to protect citizens against harm to health and the quality of life as a result of air pollution. Even though the CJEU recognised that the environmental and health objectives could justify this inference, it eventually concluded that ‘a measure so radical as a total traffic ban on a section of motorway constituting a vital route of communication’ was disproportionate also because alternative and less restrictive measures, such as the introduction of a speed limit of 100 km/h, were not duly considered.
Fourthly, in many instances the AG engages with the Charter in a particular case while the CJEU remains silent, as in the earlier discussed air quality cases Craeynest and JP.Footnote 25 This is not surprising because of the more analytical or academic approach of AGs that naturally involves a broader perspective with reflections on alternative approaches.Footnote 26 This article does not suggest that engagement with the Charter is always desirable. Non-engagement is, for instance, justified when it is clear that the Charter is not applicable.Footnote 27 Likewise, there might not be a need to examine a Charter argument, if the case can already be decided on other grounds.Footnote 28
In sum, the overview in this section shows that the CJEU hardly ever relies on the Charter to provide (a higher level of) protection against environmental harm and pollution. The next section will provide explanations for this, while the rest of the article will discuss in more detail the potential of a ‘positive obligations’ doctrine in relation to Articles 2, 7 and 17 of the Charter (Section 3B) as well as the (potential) role of Article 37 of the Charter (Section 3C).
B. Explaining the limited role of the Charter in the environmental case law
The fact that the CJEU barely relies on the Charter to provide protection against environmental harm and pollution is perhaps not surprising for four reasons.
First, reliance on the Charter is often unnecessary from a substantive point of view, because citizens can rely on EU secondary law.Footnote 29 Bogojević compellingly showed the limited added value of Charter rights in large parts of EU environmental law, because of clear, precise and unconditional statutory obligations and specific limit values, such as in the Air Quality Directive or the Water Framework Directive.Footnote 30 The CJEU has construed the limit values in these directives as ‘silent rights’, namely provisions that are not formulated as fundamental rights as such but have been construed as creating rights. The CJEU determined, already in the beginning of the 1990s, in relation to two older air quality directives containing such values that the latter are intended to give rise to rights for individuals.Footnote 31 Because these limit values are imposed in order to protect human health, individuals must be in a position to assert their rights when these values are exceeded. In Janecek, the CJEU reiterated that individuals can rely on these values before national courts.Footnote 32 It subsequently positioned national courts as clear enforcers of these values in ClientEarth by requiring courts to order the authorities to draw up an air quality plan in case of non-compliance with the air quality standards.Footnote 33 It was only in the aforementioned Craeynest case that the AG linked air quality with the fundamental right to life in Article 2 of the Charter. Note that the CJEU seems to take a step back from the ‘silent rights’ idea in JP by determining that the air quality directives are not intended to confer rights upon individuals. Also in cases in which there were no such limit values in EU secondary law, the Charter is not relied on by the CJEU. This happens, for example, in cases dealing with environmental noise.Footnote 34 There has been a relatively substantial case law of the ECtHR in relation to noise pollution and the right to respect for private life and the home (Article 8 ECHR), including the well-known Hatton case on night flights at Heathrow airport.Footnote 35 A link with the Charter has, so far, not been made, except in a reference by a Polish court in case that was subsequently withdrawn.Footnote 36
Second, both the parties and national courts pay limited attention to the Charter in environmental cases.Footnote 37 Often, the referring court considers and relies on the Charter when the plaintiffs invoke the Charter.Footnote 38 The order for reference of the national court and the submissions of partiesFootnote 39 are an important reason why the CJEU engages with Article 37 of the Charter, or not.Footnote 40 If national courts remain silent on the Charter and limit their questions to secondary EU law or Treaty provisions, the CJEU is also likely to forego Charter engagement. References to the Charter by the referring court do, however, not always lead to engagement with the Charter by the CJEU.Footnote 41 The limited rights framing by both the CJEU and national courts has a mutually reinforcing effect. In other words, when national courts do not frame their reference in terms of fundamental rights, the CJEU is also not very likely to do so. At the same time, the CJEU sets an example. When it hardly engages with fundamental rights, national courts will not do so either.Footnote 42 The latter is illustrated by the limited role of the Charter in Dutch environmental cases. This lack of attention contrasts with the relatively high impact of EU law and the Charter in Dutch legal practice and court judgements in general.Footnote 43 The limited role of the Charter in Dutch environmental law cases can partly be attributed to the still rather limited knowledge of environmental lawyers about the Charter, especially in comparison with the ECHR.Footnote 44 If they rely on fundamental rights, they prefer the ECHR, possibly because they are more familiar with it.Footnote 45 The experience in other Member States mirrors the Dutch situation of ECHR-preference coupled with a prominence of the national bill of rights.Footnote 46
Third, questions about the exact scope of application have probably discouraged lawyers and courts from relying on the Charter, especially because the added value of the Charter vis-à-vis the ECHR is not immediately evident. An important limitation of the Charter is that it applies to Member States on the basis of Article 51 of the Charter ‘only when they are implementing Union law’. It did not help that the CJEU ruled that the Charter did not apply in one of the first CJEU judgements about environmental law and the scope of application of the Charter (Siragusa).Footnote 47
Fourth, in addition to the aforementioned obstacles at the national level, it has also proven difficult for natural or legal persons and environmental or human rights NGOs to gain direct access to the CJEU via Article 263 TFEU.Footnote 48 The most explicit and recent case that illustrates this is the ‘People’s Climate Case’ Carvalho.Footnote 49 This case was an evident attempt at invoking and ‘turning’ to rights. The applicants argued that the EU insufficiently reduces greenhouse gas emissions in violation of a wide variety of Charter rights (Articles 2, 3, 15, 16, 17, 20, 21 and 24). The CJEU relied on its well-established Plaumann case law in relation to the requirement of individual concern.Footnote 50 The (alleged) victims failed to show that ‘the contested act affects them by reason of certain attributes which are peculiar to them or by reason of circumstances in which they are differentiated from all other persons, and by virtue of these factors distinguishes them individually just as in the case of the person addressed’.Footnote 51 The CJEU added that the fact that the contested acts infringe fundamental rights is not sufficient in itself to establish such individual concern.Footnote 52 Hence, it did not accept the argument that the effects of climate change are unique to and different for each individual. It remains to be seen whether litigants might find their way more easily to the CJEU in the future following the broadening of rights for environmental NGOs to challenge EU acts on the basis of the amended EU Aarhus Regulation.Footnote 53 This Regulation slightly alleviates the earlier mentioned strict locus standi requirement for natural and legal persons in relation to Article 263 TFEU. In addition, eventual accession of the EU to the ECHR might also impact the CJEU’s strict interpretation of individual concern, especially when the ECtHR concludes that the requirement breaches Article 6 and/or 13 ECHR.Footnote 54 Aside from direct access to the CJEU as a party, another more indirect route as an intervening party is also far from easy to take.Footnote 55 Likewise, a slightly different problem relates to the CJEU’s approach towards direct effect of provisions of international (environmental) agreements such as Article 9(3) of the Aarhus Convention.Footnote 56
In view of the foregoing, there are several reasons why it is not remarkable that the CJEU barely relies on the Charter to provide (a higher level of) protection against environmental harm and pollution. Nonetheless, this situation is not set in stone and could (and should) change as the next section will show.
3. Tapping the untapped Charter potential?
The previous section showed the current absence of (the Charter of) fundamental rights in the environmental case law of the CJEU. This warrants the question whether and how rights should and could play a bigger role in the future. We start this section with a short discussion of the most important criticisms and limitations of human rights-based approaches to environmental protection, but eventually conclude that a rights-based approach before the CJEU is warranted, also from a legal perspective (Section 3A). The rest of this section discusses two avenues that might be pursued by the CJEU in the future in relation to substantive environmental ‘sword’ rights: positive obligations (Section 3B) and a more frequent and intense use of Article 37 of the Charter in interpreting primary and secondary EU law in an environmentally friendly way (Section 3C).
A. Is there a need for a rights turn?
It goes beyond the scope of this legal doctrinal article to address in-depth the more normative question if a stronger and explicit role of the Charter in environmental and climate litigation and adjudication is beneficial. There is a vast body of literature within (EU) environmental and human rights law that has critiqued the narrow and at times limiting focus of a human rights-based approach to environmental protection.Footnote 57 On the international level the turn to human rights is often only a second-best option for claimants, as there is no international judicial forum for environmental cases and as the 2015 Paris Agreement lacks enforcement and accountability mechanisms for individual claimants.Footnote 58 Environmental litigation before human rights courts still needs its own justification and legitimation, given the existence of open and broad human rights norms that fail to grant specific rights to individuals with regard to the environment.Footnote 59 Some scholars doubt human rights are apt or suitable for environmental and climate change litigation.Footnote 60 The legitimacy of a human rights approach has also been disputed because of the existence of open and broad human rights norms that fail to explicitly refer to the environment.Footnote 61 The limitations of the ECHR and the ECtHR have been documented extensively.Footnote 62
It is important to shortly address the most important criticism or limitation of human rights, namely their anthropocentric nature. This makes human rights ‘ill-suited’ to protect the environment as such.Footnote 63 Human rights only offer indirect protection of the environment, only vis-à-vis the rights of human beings.Footnote 64 Environmental degradation or a loss of biodiversity is, as such, not problematic from a human rights perspective as long as the rights of human beings remain unaffected.Footnote 65 This has led international human rights courts to discredit individual claims of alleged victims not personally and directly affected or not living in the ‘zones of high environmental risk’.Footnote 66 A corresponding concern is that human rights have to date been ill-suited for future or potential risks, because of the requirements of ‘serious, specific and imminent’ or ‘real and immediate’ risks and dangers.Footnote 67 Another related limitation is the individual nature of human rights whereas environmental law is aimed at the collective well-being and public interest.Footnote 68 This line of criticism has led to a ‘rights of nature’ debate and movement, partly in response to the critique of human rights’ anthropocentric nature and standing hurdles.Footnote 69 The anthropocentric and individual nature of human rights could imply that environmental interests that are not directly related to human concerns but to the well-being and flourishing of ecosystems – and which today tend to be advocated by way of a recognition of ‘rights of nature’ – might be better protected by way of an ‘absence’ of a rights turn.Footnote 70 A stringent interpretation and application of secondary EU environmental law, such as the Habitat Directive geared towards the protection of animal and plant species as such, might thus be sufficient (or arguably even more beneficial).
Human rights-based approaches to environmental protection could, nonetheless, have clear advantages in EU law, while also being logical from a more principled perspective. The latter is evident when one considers the foundational values of the EU as laid down in Article 2 TEU.Footnote 71 Respect for human rights is mentioned among the values common to EU Member States together with human dignity, freedom, democracy, equality and the rule of law, while the environment is not mentioned. Human Rights may contribute to more intense judicial scrutiny and promote the rule of law in the environmental area and hence lead to a higher level of environmental protection.Footnote 72 In Section 3C we will depict how Article 37 could lead to a more environmentally friendly interpretation of EU law when courts balance different rights and interests. Empirical research has also shown that the language of human rights is powerful and can be a useful trump card leading to (extra) publicity and public debate.Footnote 73
A human-rights-based approach by the CJEU is also desirable from the perspective of consistency and a common understanding between the ECtHR and the CJEU.Footnote 74 The increasing litigation before the ECtHR seems to suggest that environmental and climate litigants actually look at the Strasbourg Court as a more viable forum for ruling on the relationship between environmental protection and human rights, also given the obstacles sketched in Section 2B.Footnote 75 This does, however, not absolve the CJEU from engaging with the Charter. Even prior to the EU’s accession to the ECHR, ECHR rights constitute general principles of EU law on the basis of Article 6(3) TEU. In addition, Article 52(3) of the Charter determines that Charter rights corresponding to the ECHR shall have the same meaning and scope. This provision also stipulates that the ECHR only provides a minimum level of protection while the Charter has the potential to provide ‘more extensive protection’. Current President of the CJEU Lenaerts stated in a public speech that the ECHR provides a ‘minimum threshold for protection’.Footnote 76 It would thus be odd if the CJEU remains oblivious to a strong(er) rights turn in Strasbourg. This is even more so in relation to environmental protection under EU law where one would especially expect a higher level of protection. There is an abundance of secondary EU law in the environmental area as well as specific references in primary EU law to ‘a high level of protection’ as laid down in Article 191(2) TFEU and Article 3(3) TEU as well as Article 37 of the Charter.Footnote 77 In addition, EU law and the CJEU is also more concerned with the uniform application of EU law, while the ECtHR grants States a wide margin of appreciation in the complex factual and legal environmental context.Footnote 78 Two developments in particular could potentially raise the level of protection under the ECHR and, hence, compel a more solid human-rights-based approach of the CJEU. Firstly, the upcoming judgements in the pending climate cases.Footnote 79 Secondly, the recognition of a substantive and judicially enforceable right to a healthy environment in a new Additional Protocol to the ECHR that goes further than Article 37 of the Charter, discussed in Section C.Footnote 80
In conclusion, this short sub-section showed that a human-rights-based approach to environmental protection is not always the best way to protect environmental interests. At the same, a firmer human-rights-based approach by the CJEU could have particular advantages in the form of enhanced judicial scrutiny, while also being justified from a legal perspective, considering Article 2 TEU and Article 52(3) of the Charter.
B. The potential of positive obligationsFootnote 81
The previous section showed that the right to life (Article 2 of the Charter) and the right to respect for private life and the home (Article 7 of the Charter) have played a limited role in the case law of the CJEU to date. This is perhaps surprising because similar provisions in the Charter’s equivalent, the ECHR, have figured more prominently in the environmental case law of the ECtHR. The ‘rights turn’ in Strasbourg predates more recent turns at the national level following Urgenda. The greening of existing ECHR rights already started in the 1990s with Lopez-Ostra and might be further developed in the climate cases that are currently pending before the Grand Chamber of the ECtHR.Footnote 82 This includes the right to life (Article 2 ECHR), the right to respect for private life and the home (Article 8 ECHR) and the right to property (Article 1 of Protocol 1 to the ECHR). The ECtHR derived positive obligations from Articles 2 and 8 of the ECHR and Article 1 of Protocol 1. In the light of Article 52(3) of the Charter the question arises as to whether the same or similar positive obligations flow from Articles 2, 7 and 17 of the Charter. This section addresses this question and focuses especially on the substantive positive obligations developed by the ECtHR. It shows the potential added value of such positive obligations in relation to environmental noise as a concrete example.
According to the ECtHR’s case law several kinds of positive obligations that are relevant to environmental law flow from Articles 2 and 8 ECHR and Article 1 of Protocol 1. An important one is the positive obligation to put in place environmental regulations that protect the interests protected by those provisions from environmental risks.Footnote 83 In Öneryildiz v Turkey, a case about the operation of a rubbish tip that exploded due to the build-up of methane, the ECtHR held that the positive obligation to take all appropriate steps to safeguard life for the purposes of Article 2 ECHR entailed above all a primary duty on the State to put in place a legislative and administrative framework designed to provide effective deterrence against threats to the right to life.Footnote 84 In Tătar v Romania, a case about environmental pollution by sodium cyanide and heavy metals as a result of the exploitation of a gold mine, the ECtHR also held that the positive obligations under Article 8 ECHR entailed a duty on the State to set up a legislative and administrative framework to effectively prevent damage to the environment and human health.Footnote 85 The ECtHR held that this obligation indisputably applied in the particular context of dangerous activities. According to the ECtHR special emphasis had to be placed on regulations geared to the special features of the activity in question, particularly with regard to the level of the potential risk to human lives. It also held that those regulations had to govern the licensing, setting up, operation, security and supervision of the activity.Footnote 86 The authorities may also be under a positive obligation to enforce those environmental regulations, as those regulations serve little purpose if they are not duly enforced.Footnote 87 Another example of a positive obligation relevant to environmental law is the obligation of the authorities under Article 8 ECHR to conduct appropriate investigations and studies before taking decisions about complex issues of environmental and economic policy. This ensures that the effects of activities on the environment and possible infringements of individuals’ rights may be predicted and evaluated in advance so that a fair balance may accordingly be struck between the various conflicting interests at stake.Footnote 88 A last example is the positive obligation of the authorities to provide (access to) environmental information to members of the public.Footnote 89
More than 12 years after the Charter entered into force, the doctrine of positive obligations under the Charter is still in its infancy.Footnote 90 To the knowledge of the authors, 2020 was the first year in which the CJEU ruled explicitly that positive obligations may arise from the Charter in a non-environmental case: La Quadrature du Net.Footnote 91 This case dealt with national legislation that required providers of electronic communications services to retain particular data about communications. The aims pursued by this legislation were, among other things, the investigation, detection and prosecution of criminal offences and the safeguarding of national security and public security. The question arose whether that legislation could be justified by a positive obligation under the Charter to protect people against criminal acts. The CJEU held that positive obligations of the public authorities may result from Article 7 of the Charter, requiring them to adopt legal measures to protect an individual’s private and family life, home and communications. It also held that such obligations may arise from Articles 3 and 4 of the Charter, as regards the protection of an individual’s physical and mental integrity and the prohibition of torture and inhuman and degrading treatment. In this connection the CJEU also referred to the ECtHR’s case law about the positive obligations flowing from Articles 3 and 8 ECHR. Footnote 92 As far as we know, there is no case law of the CJEU which recognises a positive obligation under the Charter to put in place environmental regulations that protect the interests protected by the Charter from environmental risks.Footnote 93 The same goes for a positive obligation to take practical measures that protect those interests from environmental risks. It is however worth mentioning that AG Kokott considered in Craeynest that Directive 2008/50/EC on ambient air quality put in concrete terms the Union’s obligations to protect the fundamental right to life under Article 2(1) of the Charter and the high level of environmental protection required under Article 3(3) TEU, Article 37 of the Charter and Article 191(2) TFEU. She based this on the assumption that exceedance of the limit values of that Directive leads to a large number of premature deaths.Footnote 94 Therefore, in her opinion (which we share) Article 2(1) of the Charter contains a positive obligation for the Union to adopt environmental regulations that protect the right to life against environmental risks like air pollution.
It can be argued, in view of La Quadrature du Net and Others and Article 52(3) of the Charter, that the CJEU can derive positive obligations from Articles 2, 7 and 17 of the Charter. After all, pursuant to Article 52(3) of the Charter the meaning and scope of those rights protected by the Charter are (at least) the same as the meaning and scope of the rights protected by Articles 2 and 8 ECHR and Article 1 of Protocol 1.Footnote 95 Nevertheless, this is not beyond doubt. This can be illustrated with the positive obligation to put in place environmental regulations that limit noise exposure, for example, around airports, roads, industrial estates and bars. If Article 7 of the Charter contains the positive obligation to limit noise exposure, the question arises as to whether this positive obligation rests on the Union or the Member States.Footnote 96 The Union has the power to adopt regulations, directives and decisions for the protection of, among other things, the environment and human health pursuant to Articles 191 and 192 TFEU. If the Union fulfils this positive obligation to limit noise exposure, this results in the Union legislating in a policy area in which it has not legislated (to the same extent) before. After all, to date setting noise exposure limits has been a matter almost exclusively for the Member States.Footnote 97 That means that the powers of the Member States to legislate in this policy area as they see fit are limited considerably, although (pursuant to Article 193 TFEU) they retain the power to maintain or introduce more stringent protective measures. Positive obligations under the Charter are therefore capable of expanding Union law and limiting the autonomy of the Member States.Footnote 98
The question arises as to whether this is compatible with the principle laid down in Article 51(2) of the Charter and Article 6(1) TEU. According to this principle the Charter does not extend the field of application of Union law beyond the powers of the Union, does not establish any new power or task for the Union and does not modify the powers and tasks as defined in the Treaties. At first sight, positive obligations under the Charter seem incompatible with this principle of attributed powers, as they are capable of expanding Union law and limiting the autonomy of the Member States. It follows from the official explanations relating to Article 51(2) of the Charter that this provision as well as Article 6(1) TEU are intended to confirm that the Charter cannot extend ‘the competences and tasks which the Treaties confer on the Union’.Footnote 99 In our opinion it is therefore clear that there can be no positive obligations under the Charter for the Union relating to policy areas with regard to which the Union does not have any powers or tasks pursuant to the Treaties. However, we are also of the opinion that Article 51(2) of the Charter and Article 6(1) TEU do not preclude positive obligations under the Charter for the Union relating to policy areas, if and in as far as the Union already has powers under the Treaties to legislate or perform other acts with regard to those areas. It is true that by legislating with regard to those subjects the Union expands (secondary) Union law, but by doing so the Union does not extend the competences which the Treaties confer on the Union. This opinion also seems to respect Article 52(3) of the Charter in the best way. As the rights guaranteed by the ECHR contain positive obligations, it would not sit well with Article 52(3) of the Charter, if the Charter did not contain similar positive obligations.
The question arises as to whether the principle of subsidiarity in Article 5(3) TEU (to which the official explanations relating to Article 51(2) of the Charter refer in rather vague terms) could preclude positive obligations under the Charter. This question is especially relevant for policy areas in which the EU and the Member States have a shared competence within the meaning of Article 2(2) and Article 4 of the TFEU, such as the protection of the environment. In our opinion it is unlikely that the Charter itself imposes positive obligations on the Member States, if the Union has not yet adopted any regulations, directives or decisions in a particular area. After all, pursuant to Article 51(1) of the Charter the Charter is only binding on the Member States when they act within the scope of Union law.Footnote 100 It follows from the Siragusa judgement that the Member States do not act within the scope of Union law, merely because the Union has the power to adopt legislation with regard to a particular policy area.Footnote 101 Generally, the Member States will therefore only act in the scope of Union law, if the Union has in fact adopted specific regulations, directives and/or decisions relating to that subject.Footnote 102 For that reason, we are of the opinion that the principle of subsidiarity as laid down in Article 5(3) of the TEU cannot generally preclude the Charter from imposing positive obligations on the Union relating to policy areas with regard to which the Union and the Member States have shared competence. The Charter cannot generally impose similar positive obligations on the Member States that the Member States could fulfil in accordance with the principle of subsidiarity. Moreover, it is difficult for Member States to achieve a sufficient level of environmental protection at a national, regional or local level, because environmental problems are often cross-border problems and are therefore usually better dealt with at Union level. In our opinion, the Charter can therefore impose positive obligations on the Union to put in place environmental regulations that protect the interests protected by the Charter from environmental risks.
One remaining question concerns the added value of positive obligations. Several positive obligations established by the ECtHR in environmental cases are already part of EU environmental law. This includes, for example, the obligation to carry out an environmental impact assessment in certain situations and the right to access to environmental information.Footnote 103 This, however, does not prevent the CJEU from establishing more far-reaching positive obligations beyond the Strasbourg level, because 52(3) of the Charter allows for more extensive protection. Positive obligations under the Charter in the field of environmental law also have added value in policy areas in which the EU has not yet legislated or has so far only legislated in a limited way. In this connection this section discussed a potential role of substantive positive obligations that bear ‘potential’ to better limit environmental noise exposure. One could also think of reliance on such substantive positive obligations to extend the obligations in relation to industrial emissions beyond large industrial installations, for example.Footnote 104 Those positive obligations could also have added value in that they prevent the EU legislator from reversing the protection that is currently offered by EU secondary law.
C. The interpretative potential of Article 37 of the Charter
Table 1 showed that Article 37 of the Charter has received relatively frequent attention by the CJEU and especially AGs in comparison with other substantive ‘sword’ rights such as Articles 2 and 7 of the Charter. This section examines the potential role of Article 37 of the Charter in a future rights turn in the environmental case law of the CJEU. It does so after analysing how this provision has been used by the CJEU to date.
Article 37 of the Charter determines: ‘A high level of environmental protection and the improvement of the quality of the environment must be integrated into the policies of the Union and ensured in accordance with the principle of sustainable development.’ The inclusion of this principle in the Charter is noteworthy, because the ECHR, for example, does not contain a self-standing provision on the environment. It should, however, be noted that Article 37 is not a ‘right’ but a ‘principle’ that is, according to Article 51(5) of the Charter, ‘judicially cognisable only in the interpretation of…acts and in the ruling on their legality’.Footnote 105 What is more, Article 37 is based on existing primary EU law provisions: Article 3(3) TEU and Articles 11 and 191 TFEU. One could thus argue that Article 37 of the Charter adds very little given the abundant recognition of the importance of environmental protection in EU primary law.Footnote 106 At first sight, one would thus not immediately expect a considerable role of this Charter provision in the case law of the CJEU.Footnote 107 The case law until mid-2019 confirmed these expectations in the literature. Nonetheless, there has been a slight change since then. In three judgements, the Court of Justice engaged with Article 37 explicitly.Footnote 108 As will be discussed below, the role of Article 37 has also changed and become more important with a shift from a short reference to a more elaborate engagement whereby Article 37 of the Charter is used as an interpretative tool. Before discussing the (still) small number of CJEU judgements examining Article 37 of the Charter, this section will firstly examine AG Opinions that have spearheaded the slowly growing attention to Article 37 of the Charter.Footnote 109
AGs were quick in pointing to Article 37 in their opinions. They have referred to the entry into force of the Charter with the Treaty of Lisbon and Article 37 of the Charter as an ‘important development’ and a reflection of the ‘constitutional recognition’ of environmental protection.Footnote 110 Most of the older AG Opinions concern short and passing references to Article 37 of the Charter that seem to add very little in substantive terms. It is perhaps not surprising that the CJEU consequently did not engage with the Charter the years following the entry into force of the Charter in December 2009.Footnote 111 AGs have in recent years used Article 37 of the Charter in a more elaborate and substantive way as ‘an interpretative tool of secondary law’ in line with suggestions for such a use in the legal doctrine.Footnote 112 AG Sharpston emphasised in Commission v Malta that the entry into force of Article 37 and 3(3) TFEU as ‘guiding objective[s] of EU law’ has implications for judicial review and thus the pre-Lisbon case law.Footnote 113 She referred to Article 37 of the Charter as ‘an interpretative tool of secondary law’ even though it is not clear what exact weight Article 37 of the Charter had in her analysis.Footnote 114 She subsequently found that the Maltese permission under the Bird Directive for the selective capture, keeping or other judicious use of certain birds in small numbers breached EU law. The CJEU also found a violation, albeit without reference to Article 37 of the Charter. AG Sharpston also invoked Article 37 of the Charter in Protect Natur-, Arten- und Landschaftsschutz Umweltorganisation. She held: ‘Such an interpretation of the notion of ‘criteria, if any’ would indeed have perverse consequences. A procedural system that virtually excluded the right of any environmental organisation to challenge administrative acts adopted on the basis of national provisions implementing the Water Framework Directive would be liable to seriously undermine the effet utile of the prohibition set out in Article 4 and, more generally, gravely jeopardise attaining the objective of a high level of environmental protection enshrined in Article 37 of the Charter.’Footnote 115 The CJEU noted the Opinion of AG Sharpston approvingly, albeit not so much in relation to Article 37 but primarily in relation to Article 9(3) of the Aarhus Convention.Footnote 116 In the European Air Transport case about airport noise, AG Cruz Villalon used Article 37 of the Charter in conjunction with Article 7 of the Charter and the case law of the ECtHR to ‘provide further support’ for the conclusion that Directive 2002/30 on noise-related operating restrictions at airports does not bring about maximum harmonisation: ‘That would give rise to a kind of paralysis of State action against noise pollution, depriving States of any latitude in the exercise of their environmental, planning and health policies.’Footnote 117 The CJEU arrived at the same conclusion as the AG without recourse to the Charter and ruled that the Directive does not preclude Member States from adopting limits on maximum noise levels indirectly affecting civil aviation.Footnote 118
After having discussed the developments as to the usage of Article 37 of the Charter in AG Opinions, we will next examine how the CJEU has referred to this provision. There are three modalities of engagement with Article 37 of the Charter that will be discussed: passing references, usage as an interpretative tool and justification of interferences with the four freedoms or other fundamental rights. As will be made clear, the CJEU has -just like AGs- recently started to use Article 37 of the Charter more explicitly as an interpretative tool.
First, the passing references. A few (older) judgements citing Article 37 of the Charter do not really engage with this provision substantively but rely on Article 191 TFEU instead. Associazione Italia Nostra Onlus, dealing with strategic environmental assessments, is an illustration of a passing reference to Article 37 of the Charter.Footnote 119
Second, in three more recent cases the CJEU relied on Article 37 of the Charter as an interpretative tool in line with the aforementioned recent approach of AGs. In One Voice and Ligue pour la protection des oiseaux, the CJEU used Article 37 of the Charter (and Article 191 TFEU) as a relevant ‘contextual’ provision to interpret the Birds Directive to arrive at an interpretation that is most beneficial from an animal welfare perspective, namely limited by-catches that occur only accidentally and briefly whereby the birds can be released without serious damage.Footnote 120 In the Case of A. and others (Wind turbines at Aalter and Nevele), the CJEU also cross-checked its interpretation of Directive 2001/42 so as to require an SEA for modifications of ‘plans and programmes’ that have significant environmental effects: ‘Those foregoing considerations are consistent with the purpose and objectives of Directive 2001/42, which itself comes within the framework established by Article 37 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union, according to which a high level of environmental protection and the improvement of the quality of the environment must be integrated into the policies of the European Union and ensured in accordance with the principle of sustainable development.’Footnote 121 The CJEU thus heeded the suggestion of the referring Belgian court in its order for reference that the scope of the directive may not be interpreted restrictively in the light of Article 37 of the Charter.Footnote 122 The third case, Wasserleitungsverband Nördliches Burgenland, dealt with the ability of natural or legal persons to rely on the EU Nitrates Directive before national courts in relation to interferences with groundwater quality. An Austrian administrative court dismissed the application of a water supplier, an individual and a municipality requesting measures to ensure that the groundwater contained less than 50 mg/l of nitrates for lack of subjective public-law rights and direct concern. The CJEU confirmed that the clear, precise and unconditional obligations in the EU Nitrates Directive could indeed be relied on vis-à-vis the competent national authorities. For that purpose, it looked at the wording, the context and the objectives and pointed to Article 37 of the Charter (as well as Article 191 TFEU and Article 3(3) TEU).Footnote 123
Third, Article 37 of the Charter is sometimes used by the CJEU to highlight the importance of environmental protection as a justification for an interference with the four freedoms or other fundamental rights. The General Court pointed to Article 37 of the Charter in four cases about the emission allowance trading scheme.Footnote 124 The operators of installations challenged decisions of the Commission rejecting supplementary quotas for greenhouse gas emission allowances. They relied on conflicting fundamental rights including the right to property and the freedom to conduct a business and argued that the disproportionate infringements were not justified by an objective of general interest.Footnote 125 The General Court made a reference (‘without any fanfare’Footnote 126 ) to the objective of environmental protection as provided in Article 37 of the Charter and subsequently examined whether a fair balance had been struck and eventually rejected the arguments. The CJEU went a bit further in the infringement procedure against Austria for the breach of the free movement of goods by prohibiting lorries of over 7.5 tonnes from using a section of the A12 motorway in the Inn Valley. Austria used the protection of health and the environment as a public-interest ground to justify this restriction. The CJEU underlined the ‘essential’, ‘transversal and fundamental’ nature of this objective with reference to Article 37 of the Charter.Footnote 127
In sum, the previous analysis shows that Article 37 has – to date – hardly served as a freestanding right or a standard for legal review, but primarily as an interpretative tool.Footnote 128 This latter role has slightly grown in recent years, even though this role still seems limited. It remains to be seen whether the CJEU follows this path in future cases. Because of the reference to Article 37 of the Charter in the European Climate Law, Article 37 of the Charter has the potential to support the greening of the environmental case law of the CJEU and other rights in the Charter.Footnote 129 Even though Article 37 of the Charter is formulated as a principle, it can – in combination with Articles 2 and 7 of the Charter and/or other environmental principles of EU law, such as the precautionary principle – pave the way for greater weight being attached to the environment when a fair balance needs to be struck.Footnote 130 It could also lead to a more intensive judicial review of national and EU measures.Footnote 131 It can thus help courts in deciding difficult cases with conflicting rights and interests whereby the obligation to provide a high level of environmental protection takes ‘pre-eminence over other considerations’.Footnote 132 This potential role fits with the second and third modality discussed before. The CJEU could – in theory – even go further and use Article 37 of the Charter as more than merely an interpretative tool even on the basis of Article 52(5) of the Charter. It has been argued in the literature, on the basis of the rather limited case law of the CJEU, that the doctrine of justiciabilité mediate (‘limited justiciability’) allows for Charter principles to have invocabilité d’exclusion (an ‘exclusionary effect’). This means that these principles can exclude the application of conflicting national or EU norms.Footnote 133 Article 37 of the Charter might also have reflexive effect beyond the scope of application of EU law. The Irish High Court, for example, considered Article 37 to be ‘binding in contexts where the State is implementing EU law, but, even outside that sphere, can be considered as reflective of a basic democratic commitment to proper stewardship of the natural and built environment.’Footnote 134
4. Conclusions
This article showed that the Charter has only played a limited role in the environmental case law of the CJEU so far. This goes especially for the substantive ‘sword’ rights such as Article 2 (right to life) and Article 7 (respect for private life and the home). This conclusion applies to a lesser extent to anti-environmental ‘shield’ rights such as Article 17 (right to property) and Article 16 (freedom to conduct a business). The near absence of the role of substantive ‘sword’ rights in the environmental case law can be attributed to the fact that the invocation of the Charter is often not necessary, because EU secondary law contains many specific environmental obligations and rights. In addition, national courts and litigating parties often forego reliance on the Charter and instead rely on the ECHR because of the more developed case law of the ECtHR in the environmental law field. The CJEU is consequently not encouraged or forced to separately engage with the Charter. The CJEU has also recently precluded a rights turn by declaring the ‘People’s Climate Case’ Carvalho inadmissible due to lack of standing. It also closed off the possibility of state liability in JP in relation to breaches of air quality directives by denying that these directives are intended to confer rights upon individuals.
We, nonetheless, consider that a rights turn in environmental cases before the CJEU is warranted and possible, even though human rights are not the best way to protect environmental interests in all circumstances. Article 52(3) of the Charter (and the future accession of the EU to the ECHR) require the CJEU to adopt at least the same level of protection as the ECHR and as we argued before an even higher level. The upcoming climate cases in Strasbourg in particular, as well as a possible separate right to a healthy environment, might spur the CJEU to a (more explicit) rights turn. We anticipate two possible avenues for the CJEU. We argued that the CJEU can derive positive obligations from relevant Charter provisions, including Articles 2 and 7 of the Charter, following the abundant case law of the ECtHR and Article 52(3) of the Charter. Another potential option is a greater role of Article 37 of the Charter. The CJEU has already relied on this provision as an interpretative tool in several recent cases. Despite the provision’s open-textured and broad formulation as a Charter principle, it can be used by the CJEU to attach more weight to environmental protection when balancing interests protected by EU secondary law against other rights or freedoms.
Competing interests
The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.