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European Commission v. Kingdom of the Netherlands.

Pays/Territoire
Union européenne
Type de cour
Cour internationale
Date
Sep 8, 2011
Source
UNEP, InforMEA
Nom du tribunal
European Court of Justice
Siège de la cour
Luxembourg
Juge
Malenovský, J.
Lenaerts, K.
Silva de Lapuerta, R.
Juhász, E.
Arestis (Rapporteur), G.
Numéro de référence
C-297-08P
Langue
Anglais
Sujet
Air et atmosphère, Environnement gén.
Mot clé
Cour/tribunaux Procédures judiciaires/procédures administratives Échange de droits d'émission Émissions
Résumé
This case was brought about as a result of a decision adopted by the European Commission, which stated that the Netherlands’ emissions trading system for nitrogen oxides (NOx) constituted state aid. The Netherlands’s scheme set an emissions limit for large industrial facilities. Companies which stayed below this limit were allowed to sell their surplus, and companies whose emissions exceeded the ceiling could escape fines by buying these emissions allowances. This could be very profitable for the companies who stayed below the cap. The Court of First Instance of the European Communities (General Court) found that this did not constitute state aid because it applied to all NOx-producing facilities and it was also justified on the basis of environmental protection. The European Court of Justice Third Chamber set aside the judgment of the Court of First Instance of the European Communities, stating that the Court must look at the impact of the scheme and not its objective of environmental protection. It held that the Dutch NOx emissions trading scheme did constitute state aid because it selectively provided an advantage to a small group of large companies with high emissions. These companies can trade their emission rights, allowing them to avoid the sanction of a fine. This therefore constituted an involvement of state resources.
Texte intégral
European Commission v. Kingdom of the Netherlands. 08-09-2011 english.pdf