Europe’s dirty problem: Environmental crime
Criminals are good at taking advantage of differences
in waste rules among countries, something the Commission wants to stop.
BY LOUISE
GUILLOT
JANUARY 20,
2022 11:00 AM CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/europe-sustainability-waste-eu-environmental-crime/
Brussels is
hatching ambitious plans to crack down harder on environmental crime, but its
chances of success will depend on EU countries' willingness to cooperate.
That could
prove to be a significant obstacle. Countries vary widely on what constitutes
environmental crime, let alone how to tackle it — leading to major loopholes
that criminals have become adept at exploiting.
Diverging
rules about what is classified as "waste," for example, means
countries have different definitions of waste trafficking — which generates
between €4 billion and €15 billion annually — as a criminal offense.
Traffickers
are savvy to the differences, and will label plastic waste imports as "raw
material or recycled material ... when in fact it’s waste that has never been
treated,” said Éric Figliolia, France's deputy representative at Eurojust, the
EU agency that facilitates judicial cooperation among countries.
Efforts to
crack down on other lucrative types of organized environmental crime prevalent
in the EU — such as wildlife trafficking, which is worth between €7 billion and
€9 billion, and the illegal timber trade, worth €6 billion — face similar
roadblocks.
A situation
where "certain crimes are less strictly punished in a country or
another" leads to safe havens, said Jan op gen Oorth, spokesperson for EU
law enforcement agency Europol.
While
places like Italy and Central Europe have long been seen as havens for
environmental crime, it's a problem across the bloc. Op gen Oorth said the
Benelux region — Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg — is "very
attractive for criminals because it has lots of airports, big ports, good
infrastructure, good highways, and you're well connected to the German, the
French and the English markets."
Because
organized environmental crime tends to happen across borders, EU agencies like
Europol, Eurojust and the EU Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF) have an important role to
play. But they can only get involved once a country reports a crime and asks
for assistance.
That means
cracking down on these criminal networks largely relies on countries making it
a priority, op gen Oorth said — something they haven't done in recent years.
"Every
crime area is always competing with others when it comes to allocation of
budget, allocation of priorities in law enforcement," he said, adding that
illegal migration, terrorism and international drug trafficking have tended to
top the list.
"We
are also a little bit in Europe the victims of our high standards," op gen
Oorth said. "From the moment we decide that we want to live in a society
that's clean, that's not polluted, that means waste needs to be taken care of —
in a certain way creating an opportunity for criminals."
Cooperation issues
According
to Figliolia, "there is a growing awareness among European police and
judicial authorities" of the need to cooperate on environmental crimes.
Tracking
organized environmental crime is highly technical, expensive and labor
intensive, Figliolia said. "It involves different administrative, judicial
and customs services, and all this has to be coordinated at the national level
before it can be coordinated at the international level."
Criminals
often operate in a gray zone. "With waste trafficking and environmental
crime, you see that they often have a semi-hybrid setup: They have a legal
company that do legal work, but on the side, they also do some illicit
work," op gen Oorth said. "That makes it very difficult to
detect."
Romania,
for example, has been trying to crack down on illegal logging in the wake of an
infringement procedure from the European Commission, but progress has been
slow. That's because countries like Romania "lack technical assistance …
and expertise," said Laura Bouriaud, a professor at Romania's Stefan cel
Mare University of Suceava who studies illegal logging in Central and Eastern
Europe.
“There is a
need for more specialized police units, environmental guards … and more modern
means of enforcement,” she said.
Such
specialized units already exist in France, Sweden, Spain, Italy and Germany.
But more
resources don't always guarantee smooth cooperation. During the 2015 Dieselgate
scandal, German authorities were "reticent to cooperate," according
to Frédéric Baab, a French magistrate with Eurojust, which coordinated work
among countries to investigate and prosecute companies involved in the case.
When that happens, "everything is stalled," he told Le Monde.
The
Commission's fix
Brussels
wants to clear those roadblocks and spur countries into action.
As part of
its revision of the 2008 Environmental Crime Directive, the Commission will
call on countries to report on their prosecution of environmental crimes in a
new database to get a clearer picture of the scale of the problem.
It also
plans to harmonize definitions of environmental crimes and set tougher
sanctions for them.
"Sanction
levels differ greatly among Member States and their application in practice
appears not to be dissuasive," the Commission noted, adding: "There
has been no clear improvement of crossborder cooperation since the Directive
came into force."
Figliolia
insisted that harmonizing sanctions is key because “otherwise offenders go
forum shopping and set up part of their business in countries where [these
crimes] are least prosecuted.”
“Too often
in Europe, there is no real penalty for environmental crime, lawbreakers can go
unpunished, and there are too few incentives to observe the law,” said
Environment Commissioner Virginijus Sinkevičius. “We want to change that.”
He added
that the Commission will provide “more specialized training for police,
prosecutors and judges and ensur[e] that they have the resources and tools that
they need." But he conceded that no additional funds will be allocated to
those efforts.
Although
the European Parliament wants to include environmental crime in the mandate of
the European Public Prosecutor's Office to support countries with less
expertise, Sinkevičius that could be discussed next year.
Frederik
Hafen, environmental democracy policy officer at the European Environmental
Bureau, an NGO, welcomed the Commission’s proposal “because it creates more
legal certainty” and “a lot more crimes are covered.” But he argued that the
proposed minimum levels for penalties — at least 5 percent of a company's
global turnover — are too low.
If
environmental crimes continue to carry low sanctions, governments risk spending
"more public resources on detecting and prosecuting them" than they
will recoup in fines, he said.
This
article is part of POLITICO’s Sustainability Pro service, which dives deep into
sustainability issues across all sectors, including: circular economy, waste
and the plastics strategy, chemicals and more. For a complimentary trial, email
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