Pollution and prevention of pollution from industrial sources is a central field of European and German environmental policy. This presentation of Alexander Neubauer, Coordinator European Research and Senior Fellow at Ecologic Institute, introduced the basic terms, concepts and instruments that European and German industry-related environmental policy employs.
The presentation focused on the concept and the main instruments of the IPPC Directive (2008/1/EC) and the Directive on Industrial Emissions (2010/75/EU), which will replace the IPPC Directive. The main innovation of the IPPC Directive is to require an integrated permit based on Best Available Techniques (BAT) for certain types of industrial installations. The Best Available Techniques Reference Documents (BREFs) are of utmost importance in this respect. They contain highly relevant informtion, e.g. on emissions or consumption levels associated with Best Available Techniques for the respective installation types. The BREFs are the result of an exchange of information between experts from EU Member States (at the European level). They are highly important sources of information for the relevant authorities in the Member States.
The presentation is available for download in English [pdf, 68 kB] and Chinese [pdf, 142 kB].
Further lectures:
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Introduction to European and German Environmental Policy
(R. Andreas Kraemer, Director Ecologic Institute) -
Security through Energy Policy: Germany's Strategy in Context
(R. Andreas Kraemer, Director Ecologic Institute) -
Agricultural and Rural Development Policy in the EU and Germany: Recent Developments and Perspectives
(Ruta Landgrebe, Ecologic Institute, Fellow) -
Biodiversity Policy in Germany and the EU: Recent Developments and Perspectives
(Sandra Naumann, Ecologic Institute, Coordinator Latin America, Fellow) -
European and German Waste Policy
(Alexander Neubauer, Ecologic Institute, Coordinator European Research, Senior Fellow) -
General Overview of European Water Policy
(Dr. Manuel Lago, Fellow, Environmental/Natural Resources Economics) -
International cooperation for transboundary water pollution control: The Rhine River example with focus on the Rhine/Danube-Basin
(Dr. Darla Nickel, Coordinator Water Studies, Fellow) -
Gaining public acceptance: case study waste recovery
(Andreas Fußer, Hand & Fußer Konzept und Kommunikation)