Abstract

Water is generally indicated as a public good that is essential for life. Within the Union water law, this emphatic qualification appears as a generic political declaration linked to the uncertain recognition of the right to water. By analysing the common private and public interests, this study argues that the restricted territorial sovereignty's theory, widely accepted for transboundary water resources, should be applied to all water resources. Water would be a shared European public good, subject to a sui generis community of property regime limiting the sovereignty of Member States over their water resources. By investigating the coherence of this community of property regime with the principle of neutrality enshrined in Article 345 TFEU, the essay suggests that the regulation of the water services would be drawn into the scope of the Treaties because of their instrumental nature in guaranteeing the exercise of fundamental rights, the social cohesion of the Union and the protection of a common public good. The idea is put forward that water services would be an emblematic case of European public services, understood as a specific development of the concept of service of general economic interest, instrumental to the implementation of the European model of society.

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