Friday, June 26, 2026
HomeEnvironmental Crime: Council...

Environmental Crime: Council Clears New EU Law With Tougher Sanctions and Extended List of Offences

Environmental Crime: Council Clears New EU Law With Tougher Sanctions and Extended List of Offences

Today, the Council formally adopted a directive on the protection of the environment through criminal law. The law will improve the investigation and prosecution of environmental crime offences.

The directive establishes EU-wide minimum rules on the definition of criminal offences and penalties. It replaces the previous law which dates back to 2008.

The law will only apply to offences committed within the EU. However, member states are able to choose to extend their jurisdiction to offences that have been committed outside their territory.

Expanded list of offences

The number of conducts that will constitute a criminal offence will increase from nine to 20. New offences include timber trafficking, the illegal recycling of polluting components of ships and serious breaches of legislation on chemicals.

The new law also introduces a ‘qualified offence’ clause which applies when an offence referred to in the directive is committed intentionally and causes the destruction of or irreversible or long-lasting damage to the environment.

Penalties and sanctions

Intentional offences which cause the death of a person will be punishable with a maximum prison sentence of at least ten years (member states may decide to provide for even tougher penalties in their national legislation). Other offences will result in emprisonment of up to five years. The maximum prison sentence for qualified offences will be at least eight years.

For companies the fines will be at least 5% of the total worldwide turnover for the most serious offences or alternatively €40 million. For all other offences, the maximum fine will be at least 3% of turnover or alternatively €24 million.

Member states will have to make sure that natural persons and companies may be sanctioned by additional measures such as an obligation for the offender to reinstate the environment or compensate for the damage, excluding them from access to public funding or withdrawing their permits or authorisations.

www.consilium.europa.eu

#modernbusinessnetwork #modernusinessindia #modernbusinessamerica  #modernbusinesseurope#modernbusinessasia#modernbusinessgulf  #modernbusinessgermany #modernbusinessworld #EU#EULAW#directive

spot_img
spot_img

Continue reading

Jindal India Power And SCCL Enter Long-Term Coal Supply Agreement

Jindal India Power And SCCL Enter Long-Term Coal Supply Agreement 8 Lakh Metric Tons of High-Quality Coal to be Procured from Naini Coal Mine The BC Jindal Group, one of India’s leading business conglomerates,...

W&H And GARANT Use Interpack Platform To Expand Industry Connections

W&H And GARANT Use Interpack Platform To Expand Industry Connections Interpack has once again confirmed its role as a key platform for international exchange in the packaging industry, concluding successfully for Windmöller &...

China Strengthens Focus On Smart Robotics Under National Innovation Strategy

China Strengthens Focus On Smart Robotics Under National Innovation Strategy China´s 15th Five-Year Plan (2026-2030) marks pivot to innovation China has launched its 15th Five-Year Plan by placing robotics at the heart of its...
spot_img