EU Court Calls for Stricter Environmental Oversight on Taranto Steel Plant
The European Court of Justice has indicated that the notorious steel plant in Taranto, Italy, should be shut down if it poses significant environmental and health threats. Acciaierie d'Italia, formerly Ilva, faces legal challenges and is under government administration. The EU court emphasized enforcing stricter emissions controls to protect human health.
A notorious steel plant in the southern Italian city of Taranto should be shut down if it poses serious and significant threats to the environment and human health, the European Court of Justice said on Tuesday.
The plant, which once had the largest output in Europe, remains a major employer in an economically depressed part of southern Italy. It is heavily indebted and has faced legal challenges over its environmental and health impacts for years.
Now known as Acciaierie d'Italia (ADI) but often referred to by its old name "Ilva", the site was placed under government administration in February, ending the involvement of ArcelorMittal and with the aim of finding new private investors. "Where there are serious and significant threats to the integrity of the environment and human health ... the operation of the installation must be suspended," the EU court said in its ruling.
It did not call for the plant to be halted, saying that decision lay with the Milan district court that had asked the EU judges for a ruling. The Taranto Parents Association, which is promoting the legal action against the steelworks before the Milan court, hailed Tuesday's ruling, saying it went beyond their expectations.
"It didn't go well, it went more than well", Maurizio Rizzo Striano, a lawyer for the group, said in a Facebook video. The EU court took Italy to task for repeatedly extending operations at the plant on the basis of foreseeable emissions, saying that if actual emissions prove to exceed acceptable limits, output should be suspended.
"The Court takes the view that, contrary to what Ilva and the Italian Government claim, the permit reconsideration procedure cannot be limited to setting limit values for polluting substances the emission of which was foreseeable," it said. Measures to reduce the health hazards posed by the plant have been planned since 2012, but implementation deadlines have been regularly pushed back.
The EU court pointed out that the close link between the protection of the environment and human health are key objectives of EU law.
(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

