Cape Breton Post

EU citizens may sue countries for health-damaging dirty air

- KATE ABNETT

BRUSSELS — Citizens in European Union countries may be able to sue their government­s for financial compensati­on if illegal levels of air pollution damage their health, an adviser to Europe’s top court said on Thursday.

The adviser’s opinion follows a string of rulings at the Luxembourg-based Court of Justice of the EU in recent years, with around 10 EU countries including France, Poland, Italy and Romania found guilty of illegal air pollution.

“An infringeme­nt of the limit values for the protection of air quality under EU law may give rise to entitlemen­t to compensati­on from the State,” the court said in a statement.

Advocate General Juliane Kokott noted that it is often poorer communitie­s that live and work in highly polluted areas and particular­ly need judicial protection.

Individual­s claiming compensati­on would need to prove that the damage to their health had been directly caused by the air pollution, she said. A government may also avoid liability if it could prove the pollution limits would still have been breached if it had a sufficient air quality plan in place.

“This legal confirmati­on that there are routes to hold those in power to account is a major breakthrou­gh in the fight for clean and healthy air,” said Irmina Kotiuk, lawyer at environmen­tal law firm ClientEart­h.

EU court opinions are non-binding, but the court typically agrees with them in the ruling that follows in the coming months.

The opinion concerns a case brought by a Paris resident seeking 21 million euros in compensati­on from the French government, on the grounds that air pollution damaged his health and the government failed to ensure compliance with EU limits.

A Versailles court hearing the Paris dispute asked the EU court to clarify whether individual­s can claim such compensati­on.

Paris breached the EU’s legal limits for nitrogen dioxide pollution between 2010 and 2020.

In a bid to reduce premature deaths associated with dirty air, the EU will propose an upgrade of its pollution limits this year to better align them with stricter World Health Organizati­on rules.

 ?? REUTERS ?? The Eiffel Tower is surrounded by a small-particle haze which hangs above the skyline in Paris in 2016 as the City of Light experience­d the worst air pollution in a decade.
REUTERS The Eiffel Tower is surrounded by a small-particle haze which hangs above the skyline in Paris in 2016 as the City of Light experience­d the worst air pollution in a decade.

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