1. Introduction
1. The close relationship between fundamental human
rights and the quality of the environment is now well established,
as the enjoyment of some of these rights may be jeopardised by degradation
of the environment. Environmental protection is a necessary requirement
for the realisation of these rights. This is true, in particular, of
the right to life, the right to health, property rights and the
right to respect for private and family life. The potential links
between environmental protection and other human rights such as
the right to information and the right of access to justice should
also be underlined.
2. This interconnection between the environment and human rights
clearly highlights their interdependence and indivisibility. The
recognition of a real individual right to an environment of a reasonable
standard is both the obvious consequence of this relationship and
also involves confirmation of the emergence of a new generation
of rights. Mr Lluís Maria de Puig, President of the Parliamentary
Assembly, recently described “protecting the environment” as “a
fundamental right” and said that “the right to live in a healthy
environment, is not just a matter of applying principles [but] concerns
the protection of a fundamental right for the citizens of our continent.”
2. The gradual
recognition of the right to a healthy environment
2.1. At global level
3. It was the Stockholm Declaration, adopted by the
United Nations Conference on the Human Environment in 1972, which
first explicitly recognised the link between environmental protection
and human rights. Principle 1 of the declaration provides that “Man
has the fundamental right to freedom, equality and adequate conditions
of life, in an environment of a quality that permits a life of dignity
and well-being (…)”, while the preamble states that environmental
protection is “essential to […] well-being and to the enjoyment
of basic human rights – even the right to life itself.” In addition
to the link established between the quality of the environment and
“conventional” human rights, the declaration can be seen to involve
indirect recognition of the right to a healthy environment. Since
its adoption, the idea has been taken up with varying degrees of explicitness
in a number of texts and declarations, although the new right has
not been granted binding legal force at United Nations level, however.
2.2. At national level
4. Many national constitutions cover environmental protection
and establish it as a constitutional objective, an individual right,
or both. For example, outside Europe, the countries concerned include
South Africa, Brazil, Peru, Ecuador, South Korea and the Philippines.
Among Council of Europe member countries, the constitutions of Belgium,
Hungary, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain and
Turkey acknowledge a fundamental individual right to environmental
protection, while those of Austria, Finland, France, Germany, Greece,
the Netherlands, Sweden and Switzerland enshrine environmental protection
as a constitutional objective.
2.3. At regional level
5. Two regional human rights protection instruments
which set out a right to an environment of a reasonable standard:
the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, Article 24 of
which provides that “All peoples shall have the right to a general
satisfactory environment favourable to their development”, and the Additional
Protocol to the American Convention on Human Rights (San Salvador
Protocol), Article 11 of which establishes the “right to a healthy
environment”.
6. The Convention on Access to Information, Public Participation
in Decision-making and Access to Justice in Environmental Matters
signed in Aarhus on 25 June 1998, to which many Council of Europe
member countries and the European Community are parties, should
also be mentioned, in particular Article 1, which reads as follows:
“In order to contribute to the protection of the right of every
person of present and future generations to live in an environment
adequate to his or her health and well-being, each Party shall guarantee the
rights of access to information, public participation in decision-making,
and access to justice in environmental matters in accordance with
the provisions of this Convention.”
3. Clear need for
an additional protocol to the European Convention on Human Rights
on the right to a healthy environment
3.1. Lack of recognition
of a right to a healthy environment in the European Convention on Human
Rights
7. In its current form, the Convention does not set
out the right to a healthy environment. The Council of Europe has,
however, already considered the issue and attention should be drawn
here to P. Staes’ motion for a recommendation of 12 April 1999 on
“Recognition of the right to a healthy and viable environment in
the European Convention on Human Rights” (
Doc. 8369), L. Rise’s report (
Doc. 8560),
Recommendation 1431 (4 November 1999) and the reply by the Committee of
Ministers (
Doc. 8892) on “Future action to be taken by the Council of Europe
in the field of environment protection” and C. Agudo’s extremely
detailed report on “Environment and human rights” of 16 April 2003
(
Doc. 9791), the opinion of the Committee on Legal Affairs and
Human Rights on the report (
Doc. 9833),
Recommendation 1614 (27 June 2003) and the reply by the Committee of Ministers
of 24 January 2004 (
Doc. 10041).
3.2. Indirect and incomplete
environmental protection through the case-law of the European Court
of Human Rights
8. Although the European Convention on Human Rights
does not include any provisions on the environment, the Court has
upheld the right to a healthy environment in an indirect manner.
In its Powell and Rayner v. the United
Kingdom judgment of 21 February 1990, it acknowledged
the potential link between certain forms of environmental pollution
and the human rights enshrined in the Convention, in particular
with regard to the right to respect for people’s homes (Article 8).
It has confirmed this position in several subsequent rulings. One
could mention the judgments in López
Ostra v. Spain of 9 December 1994, Guerra
and others v. Italy of 19 February 1998 (which put forward
the theory of “positive obligations” of states), Hatton and others v. the United Kingdom of
8 July 2003 (in which the Grand Chamber employed the term “environmental human rights”) and Öneryildiz v. Turkey of 30 November
2004 (for an approach to environmental degradation from the angle
of Article 2 of the Convention enshrining the right to life).
9. However ambitious and dynamic the European Court of Human
Rights’ case-law on environmental protection has been, it should
nevertheless be noted that it necessarily remains incomplete in
terms of guaranteeing a right to a healthy environment. While the
Court sometimes has to interpret the provisions of the Convention,
it is not able to alter its content. It is therefore only in the
strict case of the violation of a right expressly set out in the
Convention that the environment would be protected.
3.3. An explicit basis
to ensure genuine effectiveness
10. Specifically including the right to a healthy environment
in the European Convention on Human Rights would enable individuals
to appeal on the basis of that right irrespective of the other human
rights already enshrined in the Convention. The Court would then
have to rule directly on violations of that right, so the protection
would no longer be incomplete. It is also possible that the recognition
of such a right in the Convention could play a part in leading the
states parties to take greater account of environmental issues (in particular,
strengthening of the protection of the right to a healthy environment
already recognised in many national constitutions through the possibility
of appeals to the European Court, encouragement of compliance with
international commitments made by states in the field of the environment).
3.4. A natural extension
of the Council of Europe’s role in environmental protection
11. The Council of Europe has worked hard to protect
the environment. Rather than going through the impressive list of
its contributions here, it should simply be noted that it was behind
the adoption of the Bern Convention of 19 September 1979 on the
Conservation of European Wildlife and Natural Habitats, the Lugano Convention
of 21 June 1993 on Civil Liability for Damage Resulting from Activities
Dangerous to the Environment and the Strasbourg Convention of 4 November
1998 on the Protection of the Environment through Criminal Law,
which introduced the ‘polluter-pays’ principle. The adoption of
an additional protocol to the European Convention on Human Rights
establishing the right to a healthy environment could be the crowning
feature of the Council’s relentless commitment to environmental
protection and would also include the latter in its core field of
activity of defending human rights.
3.5. An additional protocol
to the European Convention on Human Rights as a debt owed to future
generations
12. At present, we are witnessing what could be called
a fourth generation of fundamental rights, or a generation of rights
and duties for the society of the future. Society as a whole and
each individual in particular must pass on a healthy and viable
environment to future generations. That is quite simply the principle
of solidarity between generations.
3.6. Bringing the European
Convention on Human Rights into line with changes in our societies and
in the concept of “human rights”
13. Setting out the individual right to a healthy environment
in an additional protocol to the European Convention on Human Rights
would also be an appropriate way of bringing the content of the
rights protected into line with the changes in society and in the
concept of “human rights” (in accordance with Article 1(b) of the Statute
of the Council of Europe). As it is now very widely recognised as
a fundamental human right, both nationally and internationally,
and especially at European level, the human right to a healthy environment should
naturally be included in the Convention.
4. Content of the
right to a healthy environment
4.1. An enforceable
right
14. It has often been argued that the right to a healthy
environment cannot be established as a genuine subjective right
for a whole series of reasons, none of which seems really justified.
15. As it is essentially collective in nature, it is claimed that
it cannot be an individual right. However, establishing it as an
individual right does seem entirely possible.
16. Under the Convention system, it is clear that it is the states
parties which must be responsible for guaranteeing such a right.
17. With regard to the risk of the Court being overloaded, past
experience suggests that it would be able to filter applications
sufficiently and restrict their admissibility through an appropriate
definition of the interest in proceeding.
18. However, it is the allegedly vague content of the right to
a healthy environment which its critics claim is the main obstacle
to establishing it as an individual right enforceable in law. By
converse implication, it can nevertheless be said that applying
precise criteria and defining the right to a healthy environment
more clearly would make it possible to do so.
4.2. Procedural and
material aspects of the right to a healthy environment
19. It does seem possible to define the human right to
a healthy environment with precision for it to be submitted to the
scrutiny of the courts, in particular the European Court of Human
Rights. It is now generally accepted that the right to a healthy
environment includes two complementary dimensions: a procedural
and a material or substantive dimension.
20. The former is divided into three procedural rights: the right
to information, the right to participate in decision-making and
the right of access to justice in environmental matters. This dimension
is not usually challenged and it should be possible for it to be
taken into consideration without too much difficulty by the Court, which
is used to procedural rights of this kind (except perhaps the individual
right to participation, cf above-mentioned opinion of the Committee
on Legal Affairs and Human Rights,
Doc. 9833, paragraph 8).
21. The second dimension, ie that of the material right to a healthy
environment, is harder to define. This is demonstrated, first of
all, by the range of terms that may be employed to describe the
human right to an environment of a reasonable standard: for instance,
the terms used for the environmental right concerned have included
healthy, viable, decent, sustainable, balanced, favourable to health
and/or well-being, or respecting the health/well-being/rights of
future generations. It should be noted here that, while the expression
‘right to a healthy environment’ has been used so far in this report,
the scope of the individual right concerned is generally broader
than just the health protection aspects. Admittedly, there is still
discussion about the various aspects of the environment and the
degree of protection they should be granted in order to ensure respect
for an environmental human right. However, that would not seem to
be an insurmountable obstacle to the recognition of the right to
a healthy environment in the European Convention on Human Rights,
as there is no need at all for the Convention to specify these different
points in detail or in advance. In the course of dealing with practical cases
brought before it, the Court will gradually clarify the substance
of the right, drawing together the approaches of the states parties
in this area. In this connection, a number of key principles shared
by most member states in the field of environmental protection can
already be indicated: the precautionary principle, the principles
of prevention and compensation (often in the form of the polluter-pays
principle), the principle of sustainability and respect for the
rights of future generations.
5. Conclusions
22. The Assembly has always reaffirmed the importance
it attaches to issues relating to the environment and believes that
living in a healthy environment is a fundamental right of all citizens
as laid down in Principle 1 of the 1972 Stockholm Declaration, Article 1
of the 1998 Aarhus Convention and in the various constitutional texts
of Council of Europe member states which include provisions on environmental
protection.
23. However, in spite of the many political and legal initiatives
taken both nationally and internationally for the purpose of protecting
the environment, this fundamental right is still not properly guaranteed.
In addition, some environmental assets are not renewable and some
environmental degradation is irreversible.
24. For its part, the European Court of Human Rights, by its case-law
developed in the environmental field, has on some occasions indirectly
protected the right to a healthy environment by upholding the individual
rights set out in Articles 2 and 8 of the European Convention on
Human Rights.
25. The Assembly therefore recommends that the Committee of Ministers:
- draw up an additional protocol
to the European Convention on Human Rights recognising the right
to a healthy and viable environment;
- include Assembly representatives in the group of experts
dealing with the matter.
26. The Assembly also wishes to encourage the governments of Council
of Europe member states to co-operate and, in the event of damage
and where appropriate, share responsibility and to establish information systems
concerning the environment and, wherever possible, foster public
participation in decision-making.
* * *
Reporting committee: Committee
on the Environment, Agriculture and Local and Regional Affairs
Reference to committee:Doc. 11729, Reference No. 3497 of 28 November 2008
Draft recommendation adopted
unanimously by the committee on 4 September 2009
Members of the Committee:
Mr Alan Meale (Chairman), Mrs Maria Manuela de Melo (1st Vice-Chairperson), Mr Juha Korkeaoja (2nd Vice-Chairman),
Mr Cezar Florin Preda (3rd Vice-Chairman), Mr Remigijus Ačas, Mr Ruhi Açikgöz, Mr Artsruni Aghajanyan, Mr Miloš Aligrudić,
Mr Alejandro Alonso Nùñez (alternate: Mr Gabino Puche Rodriguez Acosta), Mr Gerolf Annemans, Mr Miguel Arias Cañete,
Mr Alexander Babakov, Mr Ivan Brajović, Mrs Elvira Cortajarena Iturrioz, Mr Veleriu
Cosarciuc, Mr Vladimiro Crisafulli, Mr Taulant Dedja, Mr Hubert Deittert, Mr Karl Donabauer, Mr
Miljenko Dorić, Mr Gianpaolo
Dozzo, Mr Tomasz Dudziński,
Mr József Ékes, Mr Savo Erić, Mr Bill Etherington,
Mr Nigel Evans, Mr Joseph Falzon, Mr Relu Fenechiu, Mr Zahari
Georgiev, Mr Peter Götz, Mr Rafael Huseynov,
Mr Jean Huss, Mr Fazail Ibrahimli, Mr Ivan Ivanov, Mr Igor Ivanovski, Mr Bjørn Jacobsen, Mrs
Danuta Jazłowiecka, Mr Birkir Jon Jonsson, Mr Stanisław Kalemba,
Mr Guiorgui Kandelaki, Mr Haluk Koç,
Mr Bojan Kostres, Mr Pavol Kubovic, Mr Paul Lempens, Mr Anastosios
Liaskos, Mr François Loncle, Mr Aleksei Lotman, Mrs Kerstin Lundgren
(alternate: Mr Kent Olsson),
Mr Theo Maissen, Mrs Christine Marin,
Mr Yevhen Marmazov, Mr Bernard Marquet, Mr José Mendes Bota, Mr Peter Mitterrer,
Mr Pier Marino Mularoni, Mr Adrian Năstase, Mr Pasquale Nessa, Mr Tomislav
Nikolić, Mrs Carina Ohlsson, Mr Joe O’Reilly,
Mr Germinal Peiro (alternate: Mr Alain Cousin),
Mr Ivan Popescu, Mr René Rouquet,
Mrs Anta Rugāte, Mr Giacento Russo, Mr Fidias Sarikas, Mr Leander Schädler,
Mr Herman Scheer, Mr Mykola Shershun, Mr Hans Kristian Skibby, Mr
Ladislav Skopal, Mr Rainder Steenblock,
Mr Valerij Sudarenkov, Mr
Laszlo Szakacs, Mr Vyacheslav Timchenko, Mr Bruno Tobback (alternate:
Mr Daniel Ducarme), Mr Dragan
Todorovic, Mr Nikolay Tulaev, Mr Tomas Ulehla,
Mr Mustafa Ünal, Mr Peter Verlič, Mr Rudolf Vis,
Mr Harm Evert Waalkens, Mr Hansjörg Walter, Mrs Roudoula Zissi
N.B. The names of those members present at the meeting are
printed in bold
Secretariat to the Committee: Mrs Agnès Nollinger, Mr Bogdan
Torcătoriu and Mrs Dana Karanjac