Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 June 2014
This article describes the processes that led the Irish Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to develop a National Inspection Plan for domestic waste water treatment systems, following intervention from European Union institutions. The discussion focuses on two issues: the role of transnational institutional settings in galvanizing innovation and regulatory reform, and the practical challenges of dealing with lower risks. It is argued that multi-level transnational regimes have considerable potential to stimulate high-level reviews of regulatory strategy. As a result, lower risks present challenges that cannot be ignored in favour of policies that focus on the most severe risks. Traditional risk regulation theories, it is contended, do not provide much assistance in selecting intervention strategies in the face of such pressures, but the example of the Irish EPA shows how regulators can address these issues.
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6 Case C-188/08, European Commission v. Ireland [2009] ECR I-172.
7 Case C-374/11, European Commission v. Ireland (not yet reported).
8 [2010] OJ C 83/47.
9 Judgment in Case C-374/11, n. 7 above, at para. 21.
10 See, e.g., ‘Septic Tank Inspections to Begin Within Weeks’, The Irish Times, 11 Nov. 2013; ‘Ireland Fined €2 Million over Failure to Impose Septic Tank Rules’, thejournal.ie, 11 Nov. 2013.
11 Council of the European Union, Implementing Decision on Granting Union Assistance to Ireland, 7 Dec. 2010, Art. 7(c); MOU on Specific Economic Conditionality, 3 Dec. 2010, para 4.iii, available at: http://register.consilium.europa.eu/content/int?lang=EN&typ=SMPL.
12 See, e.g., S. MacConnell, ‘Septic Tank Owners Face Stealth Fees’, The Irish Times, 4 Nov. 2011; T. Hogan, ‘Owners Face €100 Fee for Registering Septic Tanks’, The Independent, 7 Nov. 2011.
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16 R. Baldwin & J. Black, Assessing the Effectiveness of Regulatory Activities at ‘Low Risk’ Sites and Proposed Good Practice Framework – Final Report on Project ER13 (Scotland and Northern Ireland Forum for Environmental Research, 2011) (SNIFFER 2011).
17 The 22 potential tools for controlling low-risk sites/activities that were identified are set out in Black & Baldwin, ‘When Risk-Based Regulation Aims Low: Approaches and Challenges’, n. 4 above, at p. 17, Table 2.
18 See Baldwin & Black, n. 1 above, and Black & Baldwin, n. 2 above.
19 International Risk Governance Council (IRGC), White Paper on Risk Governance: Towards an Integrated Approach (by O. Renn with Annexes by P. Graham) (IRGC, 2005); WBGU (German Advisory Council on Global Change), World in Transition: Strategies for Managing Global Environmental Risks (WBGU, 2000); Black, n. 3 above.
20 IRGC, ibid.
21 A. Wildavksy, Searching for Safety (Transaction, 1998); Klinke, A. & Renn, O., ‘Precautionary Principle and Discursive Strategies: Classifying and Managing Risks’ (2002) 4(2) Journal of Risk Research, pp. 159–73CrossRefGoogle Scholar; T. O’Riordan & J. Cameron, Interpreting the Precautionary Principle (Earthscan, 2002).
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23 See Black & Baldwin, ‘When Risk-Based Regulation Aims Low: Approaches and Challenges’, n. 4 above, at p. 17, Table 2.
24 See SNIFFER, n. 16 above.
25 C. Argyris & D. Schon, Organizational Learning: A Theory of Action Perspective (Addison Wesley, 1978).
26 The full GRAF is set out in SNIFFER, n. 16 above.
27 SNIFFER 2011, n. 16 above
28 Case C188/08, n. 6 above.
29 EPA, Inspection Plan for Domestic Waste Water Systems (EPA, 2013), available at: http://www.epa.ie/news/pr/2013/february/name,50894,en.html.
30 See, e.g., Dutch Ministry of Justice, The Table of Eleven: A Versatile Tool (The Hague, 2004).
31 Directive 2000/60/EC establishing a Framework for Community Action in the Field of Water Policy [2000] OJ L 327/1.
32 J. Black, M. Lodge & M. Thatcher, Regulatory Innovation (Edward Elgar, 2005), at pp. 9–11.