Abstract

The sustainable use of precious water resources requires effective water management. In the European Union, water management is mainly regulated by the Water Framework Directive (2000/60/EC), introducing an integrated river basin management approach. As a European Union (EU) directive, the legislation needs to be implemented in the Member States, entailing not only legal transposition but also application and enforcement. One major instrument introduced by the Water Framework Directive is the environmental goal achievement obligation of article 4 WFD, containing also a deterioration ban with several exemptions. We compare the transposition, application, and enforcement of the exemption of permanent deterioration (art. 4 (7) WFD) in the context of the environmental goal achievement obligation regime in Lower Saxony (Germany) and the Netherlands. The study rests on a comparative legal analysis of literature, river basin management plans, and jurisprudence. Although based on the same EU directive wording and case law of the European Court of Justice, the deterioration ban and the exemption of permanent deterioration are implemented rather differently. While the deterioration ban is predominantly understood as planning obligation in the Netherlands, it became an important permit requirement in Lower Saxony since the Weser ruling of the European Court of Justice.

Highlights

  • Published: 18 January 2021Water is the base of life on Earth

  • As a result of water management competency regulations in goal achievement obligation regime in Lower Saxony (Germany), both federal and state law play a role for water management in Lower Saxony

  • In Lower Saxony, we found project-specific justifications for the use of permanent deterioration exemptions in current river basin management plans

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Summary

Introduction

Water is the base of life on Earth. Water is encompassing and of essential importance for life on earth. Our supply of useful freshwater is threatened: Challenges include unsustainable overuses affecting water quality or quantity, ineffective water management as well as pressures such as for instance inundations [2]. Climate change and population growth further enhance pressures on our water system [3]. Being such a valuable resource, our water system needs to be managed in a smart and sustainable way. Water management has the objective to provide water of sufficient quality and quantity as well as preventing negative effects of water uses and external impacts on the water system and ecosystems that are dependent on sufficient water of good quality as far as possible [4]

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