The integration of the protection of nature conservation areas in Dutch spatial planning law and environmental management law

An important question concerning the protection of designated areas in Dutch environmental law is the extent to which area protection plays a part in other fields of Dutch law. The question of integrating the protection of nature reserves as regulated in the Dutch Nature Conservation Act 1998, which...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: A.B. Blomberg, A.A.J. de Gier, J. Robbe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Utrecht University School of Law 2009-06-01
Series:Utrecht Law Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.utrechtlawreview.org/articles/10.18352/ulr.99/
_version_ 1818838885660098560
author A.B. Blomberg
A.A.J. de Gier
J. Robbe
author_facet A.B. Blomberg
A.A.J. de Gier
J. Robbe
author_sort A.B. Blomberg
collection DOAJ
description An important question concerning the protection of designated areas in Dutch environmental law is the extent to which area protection plays a part in other fields of Dutch law. The question of integrating the protection of nature reserves as regulated in the Dutch Nature Conservation Act 1998, which is the focus of this contribution, is particularly important where the Dutch Environmental Management Act and the Dutch Spatial Planning Act are concerned; both Acts regulate activities which are – or can be – of great significance in the protection of natures reserves. Also important is the question whether European and international law facilitates integration. The three Acts mentioned all contain provisions and procedures which aim at or at least facilitate the coordination or integration of the protection of nature reserves with other interests, albeit in different ways and on different levels. However, as will be shown from a discussion of the relevant parts of the Acts, current national law is such that a substantive integration of the protection of nature reserves in the fields of environmental management law and spatial planning law is difficult, if not impossible, due largely to the so-called speciality principle and the mainly sectoral approach of the legislator. The coming Dutch Environmental Licensing (General Provisions) Act will not change this. The influence of international law is also limited and the structure of and the developments in European environmental law do not support national attempts at integration. To achieve full, or fuller, integration in the field of environmental law, the sectoral approach will have to be abandoned and the impediment that the speciality principle now represents would have to be removed. This would certainly lead to a less absolute protection of ecological values. However, abandoning the ‘all-or-nothing’ approach could on balance lead to a greater degree of protection of the physical living surroundings.
first_indexed 2024-12-19T03:45:30Z
format Article
id doaj.art-d541a1dea0a9479a93e47940b15b35ba
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1871-515X
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-19T03:45:30Z
publishDate 2009-06-01
publisher Utrecht University School of Law
record_format Article
series Utrecht Law Review
spelling doaj.art-d541a1dea0a9479a93e47940b15b35ba2022-12-21T20:37:08ZengUtrecht University School of LawUtrecht Law Review1871-515X2009-06-015113215710.18352/ulr.9999The integration of the protection of nature conservation areas in Dutch spatial planning law and environmental management lawA.B. BlombergA.A.J. de GierJ. RobbeAn important question concerning the protection of designated areas in Dutch environmental law is the extent to which area protection plays a part in other fields of Dutch law. The question of integrating the protection of nature reserves as regulated in the Dutch Nature Conservation Act 1998, which is the focus of this contribution, is particularly important where the Dutch Environmental Management Act and the Dutch Spatial Planning Act are concerned; both Acts regulate activities which are – or can be – of great significance in the protection of natures reserves. Also important is the question whether European and international law facilitates integration. The three Acts mentioned all contain provisions and procedures which aim at or at least facilitate the coordination or integration of the protection of nature reserves with other interests, albeit in different ways and on different levels. However, as will be shown from a discussion of the relevant parts of the Acts, current national law is such that a substantive integration of the protection of nature reserves in the fields of environmental management law and spatial planning law is difficult, if not impossible, due largely to the so-called speciality principle and the mainly sectoral approach of the legislator. The coming Dutch Environmental Licensing (General Provisions) Act will not change this. The influence of international law is also limited and the structure of and the developments in European environmental law do not support national attempts at integration. To achieve full, or fuller, integration in the field of environmental law, the sectoral approach will have to be abandoned and the impediment that the speciality principle now represents would have to be removed. This would certainly lead to a less absolute protection of ecological values. However, abandoning the ‘all-or-nothing’ approach could on balance lead to a greater degree of protection of the physical living surroundings.http://www.utrechtlawreview.org/articles/10.18352/ulr.99/integrationcoordinationspatial planningenvironmental lawEuropean lawarea protectionnature conservation
spellingShingle A.B. Blomberg
A.A.J. de Gier
J. Robbe
The integration of the protection of nature conservation areas in Dutch spatial planning law and environmental management law
Utrecht Law Review
integration
coordination
spatial planning
environmental law
European law
area protection
nature conservation
title The integration of the protection of nature conservation areas in Dutch spatial planning law and environmental management law
title_full The integration of the protection of nature conservation areas in Dutch spatial planning law and environmental management law
title_fullStr The integration of the protection of nature conservation areas in Dutch spatial planning law and environmental management law
title_full_unstemmed The integration of the protection of nature conservation areas in Dutch spatial planning law and environmental management law
title_short The integration of the protection of nature conservation areas in Dutch spatial planning law and environmental management law
title_sort integration of the protection of nature conservation areas in dutch spatial planning law and environmental management law
topic integration
coordination
spatial planning
environmental law
European law
area protection
nature conservation
url http://www.utrechtlawreview.org/articles/10.18352/ulr.99/
work_keys_str_mv AT abblomberg theintegrationoftheprotectionofnatureconservationareasindutchspatialplanninglawandenvironmentalmanagementlaw
AT aajdegier theintegrationoftheprotectionofnatureconservationareasindutchspatialplanninglawandenvironmentalmanagementlaw
AT jrobbe theintegrationoftheprotectionofnatureconservationareasindutchspatialplanninglawandenvironmentalmanagementlaw
AT abblomberg integrationoftheprotectionofnatureconservationareasindutchspatialplanninglawandenvironmentalmanagementlaw
AT aajdegier integrationoftheprotectionofnatureconservationareasindutchspatialplanninglawandenvironmentalmanagementlaw
AT jrobbe integrationoftheprotectionofnatureconservationareasindutchspatialplanninglawandenvironmentalmanagementlaw