The European Court of Justice urged Poland to comply “without delay” or face fines after finding it had exceeded limits for toxic fine particles for years.
Brussels has repeatedly taken Poland’s Law and Justice (PiS) government to task in recent years over other environmental issues as well as migration and the rule of law.
“The Court of Justice finds that Poland has infringed EU law on ambient air quality,” the Luxembourg-based court said in a statement.
It said that between 2007 and 2015, Poland regularly exceeded the daily limits for fine particles in the air in 35 zones and the annual limit in nine zones.
The tiny particles may contain hydrocarbons, heavy metals, and dioxins that can enter the respiratory tract and the lungs.
Several hours after the ruling, Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki announced a subsidy programme to help residents of the major coal-burning nation insulate their homes and replace old polluting furnaces with cleaner modern ones.
Piotr Wozny, the government official tasked with fighting smog, said the court verdict “shows that Poland has not created an effective system for protecting its citizens when it comes to air quality.”
Citing a World Health Organization report from 2016, he said it was “embarrassing” that 33 out of Europe’s 50 most polluted cities were in Poland.
The European Commission, the executive of the 28-nation EU, took Poland to the top court for failing to comply with an EU directive that took effect in June 2008.
The court said Poland could not use its “socio-economic and financial” arguments to justify setting late deadlines of between 2020 to 2024 to comply with the laws.
– 50,000 premature deaths –
The European Environmental Agency blames air pollution for an estimated 50,000 premature deaths per year in the country of 38 million.
The commission has already taken Bulgaria to the top court which found it in breach of air quality standards.
And it has warned it could also pursue legal action against France, Germany, Britain, Spain, Hungary, Italy, the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Romania for violating air quality standards.
Air pollution is blamed for around 400,000 premature deaths in the bloc every year.
Pollution watchdog Polish Smog Alert welcomed Thursday’s ruling as “a final warning” for Warsaw, saying that “most of the actions taken by the government as part of its Clean Air programme are mere pretence or carried out too slowly.”
The ruling comes two days after the top advisor to the ECJ said Poland broke the law by logging in one of Europe’s last primeval forests.
The European Commission in December launched unprecedented disciplinary proceedings against Poland over judicial reforms which Brussels says threaten the rule of law.
It has also taken Poland, along with Hungary and the Czech Republic, to the top court for failing to comply with a Brussels decision to relocate asylum seekers from Italy and Greece.
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