April 15th, 2019
Unleashing the full potential of the Good Friday Agreement
could address some of the main risks posed by Brexit to the environment of the
island of Ireland, a new report has found.
Launched at an event at Leinster House today, the
report – commissioned by the Environmental Pillar and Northern Ireland
Environment Link – examines the cross-border environmental co-operation
supported by the 1998 Agreement (GFA).
The report stresses that firming up the structures and
institutions set-up under the Agreement could minimise some of the negative
impacts arising from the removal of the existing common EU regulatory
standards.
The North South Ministerial Council, for example, has an
explicit environmental remit to facilitate co-operation and coordination in EU
matters.
Brexit poses a major environmental threat to the island of
Ireland without a common set of standards for tackling issues such as invasive
species, emissions standards, water quality, and hazardous waste, the report
states.
The report outlines several key threats posed by Brexit, namely
regulatory divergence that could lead to governance gaps and deterioration in environmental
standards coming from Brussels.
There are currently over 650 pieces of EU legislation in
force to protect the environment, habitats, air quality, waste, food safety and
a myriad of other areas.
These laws and regulations are the principal drivers for the vast majority of environmental protection in place in both the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland, the report finds.
The report points to the potential weakening of legislative protection in the North as perhaps the single greatest environmental risk posed by Brexit, especially in light of a long history of failure to meet basic standards of environmental protection in Northern Ireland.
The reasons for this include Northern Ireland’s status as a
post-conflict society, the many failures in executive formation, and the lack
of an independent environmental regulator, the report states.
The potential loss of significant stream of cross-border
funding and the physical blockage of cross-border co-operation posed by a hard
border scenario are also outlined as key threats in the report.
A hard border or a customs border could cause “innumerable problems
from movement of staff on projects and goods necessary for the carrying out of
projects”, the report states.
The report finds that many of these obstacles could be
tackled through better use of the institutions established under the GFA as a
vehicle to maintain regulatory alignment on the island.
The report also outlines several other recommendations that
would help to preserve cross-border environmental co-operation in a post-Brexit
world, including the setting up of an independent regulator for environmental
compliance in Northern Ireland.
The establishment of a broader all-island mechanism to
monitor and facilitate cross-border co-operation, as well as prioritising the
continuation of cross-border funding stream are also recommended by the report.
The report states that finding a positive solution is
largely dependent on the relationship formed between the EU and the UK, which
could include high levels of regulatory alignment across most, if not all,
areas of environmental policy.
The author of the report Alison Hough BL said that it is
vital that the “reality” of the island of Ireland’s shared environmental
context is “not ignored during the Brexit debate”.
“The natural world does not recognise borders, and
flora and fauna will not conveniently confine their habitats to man-made
political boundaries,” she said.
“The institutions and mechanisms of co-operation created under the Good Friday/Belfast Agreement must be protected and maintained, and their full potential exploited, in order to enhance environmental protection on the island of Ireland.”
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