Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- General editors' preface
- Notes on the contributors
- Table of treaties
- Table of legislation
- List of abbreviations
- Part I Environmental liability in Europe
- 1 International and supranational systems of environmental liability in Europe
- 2 Some observations on the law applicable to transfrontier environmental damage
- Part II The case studies
- Part A Scope of liable persons
- Case 1 Industrial plant
- Case 2 Sudden incident
- Case 3 Dangerous substances
- Case 4 Genetically modified organisms
- Case 5 Micro-organisms
- Case 6 Waste disposal site
- Case 7 Producer of waste
- Case 8 Nuclear power plant
- Case 9 The harmless substance
- Case 10 Historic pollution
- Part B Causation and multiple tortfeasors
- Part C Remedies and legal standing
- Part III Comparison, summary and conclusions
- Bibliography
- Index
Case 2 - Sudden incident
from Part A - Scope of liable persons
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 July 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- General editors' preface
- Notes on the contributors
- Table of treaties
- Table of legislation
- List of abbreviations
- Part I Environmental liability in Europe
- 1 International and supranational systems of environmental liability in Europe
- 2 Some observations on the law applicable to transfrontier environmental damage
- Part II The case studies
- Part A Scope of liable persons
- Case 1 Industrial plant
- Case 2 Sudden incident
- Case 3 Dangerous substances
- Case 4 Genetically modified organisms
- Case 5 Micro-organisms
- Case 6 Waste disposal site
- Case 7 Producer of waste
- Case 8 Nuclear power plant
- Case 9 The harmless substance
- Case 10 Historic pollution
- Part B Causation and multiple tortfeasors
- Part C Remedies and legal standing
- Part III Comparison, summary and conclusions
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
A runs an industrial plant that has no adverse effects on the environment, but poses an imminent threat to the environment in case of a breakdown. Due to a breakdown, B suffers loss of, or damage to, property. Fault cannot be established.
Is A liable to B? Would there be any difference if B had suffered loss of life or personal injury?
What would liability be like if the polluting effects cause minor health and/or property damage to the majority of the people living in the community?
Is A liable to B if the damage was caused by unusual circumstances, such as an act of war, hostilities, civil war, insurrection or a natural disaster?
Is A liable to B if the damage was caused by an act done by a third party with the intent to cause damage?
Is A liable to B if the damage resulted necessarily from compliance with a specific order or compulsory measure of a public authority?
Is A liable to B if B has, by his own fault, contributed to the damage?
Comparative remarks
Comparison
Sudden incident
In most countries (Austria, Belgium, Finland, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal, Scotland, Spain and Sweden), the outcome is the same, whether damage is caused by a sudden incident due to a breakdown or by continuous interference. In Germany, however, the victim cannot rely on § 906 BGB and § 22(1) WHG, which relate to continuous interference only.
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- Information
- Environmental Liability and Ecological Damage In European Law , pp. 161 - 203Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008