Latest News

EU Commission receives complaint regarding easing of sustainability regulations

EU Commission receives complaint regarding easing of sustainability regulations

Climate and human right campaigners filed a lawsuit against the European Commission Friday accusing it of weakening sustainability legislation without consulting the public or assessing its impact.

The Commission, in February, proposed "Omnibus", a set of legal changes that would exempt smaller European companies from EU sustainability reporting requirements and reduce the obligations on larger firms to monitor their supply chains and check for human rights or environmental issues.

The industries complained about the burdensome EU regulations that prevented them from competing with their rivals in China or the U.S. where President Donald Trump has rolled back regulation and is imposing tariffs to foreign goods.

ClientEarth, a legal charity, and seven other groups filed a complaint with the European Ombudsman, the EU's independent watchdog. They claimed that the Commission failed to evaluate the environmental and social effects of changing laws and that this was a form of maladministration.

The Commission was also accused of consulting lobbyists from the industry in closed-door sessions before publishing its proposal and refusing to conduct a public consultation.

A spokesperson for the Commission did not respond immediately to a comment request.

The complaint stated that "the closed-doors approach taken by the Commission which favoured certain stakeholders and not others risks also fueling anti-democratic discourses as well as eroding trust among EU citizens towards the EU institutions."

The Commission invited top oil and gas companies Eni, ExxonMobil, and TotalEnergies as well as industry lobbyists and companies to a closed door meeting on the Omnibus in February before the publication of the document. But the list included other campaign groups like the World Wildlife Fund and Human Rights Watch.

Now, the European Ombudsman has to decide whether or not to investigate the complaint.

The watchdog has no enforcement powers but it can use its investigations to make recommendations to other EU institutions about the Commission's behavior. (Reporting and editing by Helen Popper; Kate Abnett)

(source: Reuters)