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E-raamat: Deploying the European Green Deal: Protecting the Environment Beyond the EU Borders

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"Drawing on a range of expert contributions, this book explores how the European Green Deal is being deployed in practice and observes how the EU tries to promote the protection of the environment in third countries. The book begins by assessing the state-of-the art in terms of the key conceptual issues and analyses sectoral initiatives that are particularly relevant for the deployment of the European Green Deal external dimensions. These include the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism, the EU's regulatory action in the control of maritime emissions, the 2030 Biodiversity Strategy, the Deforestation Initiative, the Zero Pollution Initiative, the From Farm to Fork Initiative, and the Climate Neutrality and Clean Energy Initiative in the context of the Energy Charter Treaty. Next, the authors deal with horizontal aspects of the European Green Deal that also have external dimensions, such as the Green Deal Diplomacy, the Green Public Procurement, funding measures, initiatives related to corporate sustainability and due diligence, and the implementation and enforcement of EU environmental law. The volume concludes with a cross-cutting analysis, focusing on how the EU can strengthen the impact of its normative power on international environmental governance, while also noting its limitations. Deploying the European Green Deal will be of great interest to students and scholars of international and EU environmental law and environmental policy and governance"--

This book explores how the European Green Deal is being deployed in practice and observes how the EU tries to promote the protection of the environment in third countries.



Drawing on a range of expert contributions, this book explores how the European Green Deal is being deployed in practice and observes how the EU tries to promote the protection of the environment in third countries.

This book begins by assessing the state of the art in terms of the key conceptual issues and analyses sectoral initiatives that are particularly relevant for the deployment of the European Green Deal external dimensions. These include the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism, the EU’s regulatory action in the control of maritime emissions, the 2030 Biodiversity Strategy, the Deforestation Initiative, the Zero Pollution Initiative, the From Farm to Fork Initiative, and the Climate Neutrality and Clean Energy Initiative in the context of the Energy Charter Treaty. Next, the authors deal with horizontal aspects of the European Green Deal that also have external dimensions, such as the Green Deal Diplomacy, the Green Public Procurement, funding measures, initiatives related to corporate sustainability and due diligence, and the implementation and enforcement of EU environmental law. This volume concludes with a cross-cutting analysis, focusing on how the EU can strengthen the impact of its normative power on international environmental governance, while also noting its limitations.

Deploying the European Green Deal will be of great interest to students and scholars of international and EU environmental law and environmental policy and governance.

 

1. Introductory remarks and conceptual framework

Xavier Fernández-Pons and Mar Campins Eritja

1. Introduction

2. Significance of the EGD

3. EU competences to deploy the EGD

4. External dimensions of the EGD and extraterritoriality

5. Some clarifications and acknowledgements

References

2. Conditioning access to the European Union market on carbon footprint: the
Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism

Xavier Fernández-Pons

1. Introductory remarks

2. Measures against climate change and the risk of carbon leakage

3. Key features of the EU CBAM

4. Compatibility of the EU CBAM with WTO rules

4.1 The principles on non-discrimination between like products

4.2 The exception on measures relating to the conservation of exhaustible
natural resources

4.3 The chapeau of Article XX GATT 1994

5. Compatibility of the EU CBAM with the global rules on climate change

6. Final remarks

3. EU regulatory action on maritime emissions: Unilaterally protecting the
environment beyond IMOs global strategy

Marta Abegón Novella

1. Introductory remarks

2. The IMOs global regulatory framework on the reduction of GHG maritime
emissions

2.1 The IMOs first initiatives on the reduction of GHG emissions from ships

2.2 The Initial IMO Strategy on the reduction of GHG emissions from ships
(2018) and its revision (2023)

3. EU regulatory action to reduce GHG maritime emissions

3.1 The EU strategy to reduce CO2 emissions from maritime transport (2013)
and the MRV Regulation (2015)

3.2 EU initiatives included in the Fit for 55 package to deliver the EGD
(2021): the FuelEU Maritime Initiative and the extension of the EU ETS to
maritime transport

4. The UE unilateral regulatory action and their controversial
extraterritorial effects

5. The fit of EU regulatory action with respect to the IMOs global
regulatory framework: between unilateralism and cooperation

6. Final remarks

4. The 2030 Biodiversity Strategy: The EUs international commitment and
responsibility to reverse the biodiversity loss

Susana Borràs-Pentinat

1. Introductory remarks

2. The EU 2030 Biodiversity Strategy in the era of the sixth extinction

3. The external dimension of the EU Biodiversity Strategy: A global
biodiversity agenda

3.1 The EUs international commitments to protect biodiversity worldwide

3.2 Facing the responsibilities of the EUs external biodiversity footprint:
the structural and systemic causes of biodiversity loss

4. The nature-positive economy leads the way; ecological integrity lags
behind

5. Final remarks

5. Understanding the deforestation initiative for European trade in products
from the Brazilian Amazon

Márcia Rodrigues Bertoldi

1. Introductory remarks

2. The current state of deforestation in the Amazon: we are eating the
forest

3. The EGD and the Deforestation Initiative

4. A new regulation for a standing forest

5. Considerations about possible impacts of the deforestation initiative in
Brazil

6. Special reference to the absence of principles of environmental law

7. Final remarks

6. Zero Chemical Pollution: A real new impetus for change?

Mar Campins Eritja

1. Introductory remarks

2. Specific objectives of the Zero Pollution initiative

3. Strategies to achieve the objectives of the Zero Pollution initiative in
chemicals and chemical wastes

4. Legal challenges posed by the Zero Pollution initiative

4.1 Combining the definition of zero pollution with the high level of
environmental protection

4.2 The legal basis for EU measures related to Zero Pollution

4.3 The external dimension of EU measures related to production, marketing,
and use of chemicals

5. Final remarks

7. Farm to Fork: Strengths and Weaknesses of a European Strategy for a Global
Transition towards Fair, Healthy and Sustainable Food Systems

Xavier Pons Rafols

1. Introductory remarks

2. The international approach to food systems and food security

3. General overview of the F2F Strategy of the EU

4. The role of the EUs F2F Strategy in enabling global transition of food
systems

5. Final remarks

8. The European Green Deal and the Energy Charter Treaty: Chronicle of a
Breakup Foretold?

Gastón Medici-Colombo

1. Introductory remarks

2. The ECT investment protection regime

3. The EGD and the need for bold regulatory action (in the fossil fuel
sector)

4. The climate regulatory chill of investment protection

5. The ECT fossil fuel litigation affair

6. The modest ECT modernization

7. The European exodus

8. Final remarks

9. From Climate diplomacy to Green Deal diplomacy

Teresa Fajardo del Castillo

1. Introductory remarks

2. From Climate Diplomacy to Green Deal Diplomacy

3. The EGD Diplomacy at the climate change COPs

4. The new generation of Free Trade and Association Agreements and the Global
Green Deal

5. The Global Climate Change Alliance

6. The EGD Diplomacy and the Global Gateway

7. Final remarks

10. The European Green Deal and Public Procurement Law: Its Extraterritorial
Reach beyond the EUs Borders

Ezgi Uysal and Willem A. Janssen

1. Introductory remarks

2. EU public procurement law and green procurement

3. Public procurement in the EU Green Deal

3.1 Nudging the member States towards GPP

3.2 Mandating GPP through sectoral legislation

4. The extraterritorial effects of public procurement under the Green Deal

4.1 Extraterritorial effects of PPMs of an economic operators supply chain:
relevance of the link to the subject matter of the contract and life-cycle
thinking

4.2 Extraterritorial effects of an economic operators violation of
environmental law: the relevance of CSDD and the Public Sector Directive

4.3 Ensuring that extraterritorial effects materialize: Contract Compliance

5. Final remarks

11. The European Green Deal Investment Plan. The External Impact of
Mobilizing Climate Finance with an Experimentalist Design

Gonzalo Larrea

1. Introductory remarks

2. The experimentalist design of the EGDIP

3. The EGDIPs external potential

3.1 The UNFCCC Financial Mechanism

3.2 Replicating the EGDIPs experimentalist design

4. Final remarks

12. Business, Human Rights and the Environment: From Corporate Social
Responsibility to Mandatory Human Rights and Environmental Due Diligence

Alfonso González Bondia

1. Introductory remarks

2. Adoption of a voluntary approach to CSR

3. First steps towards mandatory human rights and environmental DD

3.1 Timber and other products associated with deforestation or forest
degradation

3.2 Minerals from conflict zones

4. The proposal for a Directive on corporate sustainability DD

5. Final remarks

13. Implementation and enforcement of environmental legislation as a
cornerstone of the European Green Deal

Alexandre Peñalver i Cabré

1. Introductory remarks

2. The role of the EU in implementing and enforcing environmental
legislation

3. The most important causes of the lack of environmental implementation and
their main negative effects

4. Mechanisms for strengthening the implementation and enforcement of
environmental law

5. Information on environmental enforcement

5.1 The importance of information for the enforcement of environmental
legislation

5.2 Annual Reports of the EU Commission monitoring the application of EU law

5.3 Environmental Implementation Review (EIR)

5.4 The EU Network for the IMPEL

5.5 Reports from international organizations

6. Final remarks

14. Joint analysis of cross-cutting issues and final considerations

Xavier Fernández-Pons, Teresa Fajardo del Castillo, Mar Campins Eritja

1. Introduction: the weaknesses of current global environmental protection
systems

2. The ambition of the EGDs external dimensions

3. Limitations of the EGDs external dimensions

4. Towards a Global Green Deal?

References

Index
Mar Campins Eritja is Professor of Public International Law at the Universitat de Barcelona (Spain). Her scientific interest has focused on the international and EU legal protection of the environment, with a special emphasis on the international regime on climate change, the international regime on dangerous wastes, and the environmental protection of the Arctic. She leads and participates in various competitive research projects and has published extensively in these areas and is the holder of the Jean Monnet Chair on EU Environmental Law (20172020, 20202023) funded by the EU Commission. In addition to her teaching duties at the Faculty of Law of the Universitat de Barcelona, she has held various management positions: Vice-Dean of the Faculty of Law (20022004 and 20162021), Assistant to the Vice-Rector for International Policy, and Vice-Rector for International Policy (20052008). She has been a Fulbright scholar at American University and visiting professor at Nova Southeastern University, the University of Puerto Rico, Lapland University, the University of Ottawa, Dalhousie University, the Université de Montréal, and Strathclyde University. She was Member of the Direction Board of the UB Research Water Institute (20152022) and Member of the Center for Environmental Law Studies of Tarragona (CEDAT) at the University Rovira i Virgili.

Xavier Fernández-Pons is Associate Professor of Public International Law at the University of Barcelona. He obtained his PhD in Law from the University of Bologna, and he is also Diplomate of the Centre for Studies and Research of The Hague Academy of International Law. He is Researcher at the Centre for Environmental Law Studies of Tarragona (CEDAT) at the University Rovira i Virgili and Member of the Jean Monnet Chair on European Union Environmental Law at the University of Barcelona. His main lines of research are international economic law, World Trade Organization, regional trade agreements, foreign investments, European Unions trade policy, trade and environment, and trade and health, all areas in which he has published extensively.