Press release
Date: 2002-09-19
New Act on the Right to Environmental Information
Norwegian Environment Minister
Børge Brende: -
The Act Will Strengthen Environmental
Protection
The Norwegian Government today submitted a proposal for a
new Act on the Right to Environmental Information. It
provides all citizens with a legal right to obtain environmental
information, both from public authorities and from public and
private enterprises. Environment Minister Børge Brende
encourages people to use the new law actively.
- If the new Act is to have any
effect, it must be used. The right to information is a basic
democratic right and at the same time a necessary instrument in our
efforts to strengthen the implementation of environmental policies,
says Environment Minister Børge Brende. At the same time the
Act will be important for environmental organisations and for the
media in their efforts to disseminate information about issues of
importance for the environment.
The Act involves new obligations
for
private enterprises to provide environmental
information to citizens upon request. All areas of economic
activity are included (industrial production as well as service
industries and the Act also includes such areas as agriculture and
forestry). It gives citizens the right to demand information
on everything from production processes to the content of the
products which are used and which are sold. Neighbours to a
polluting industrial enterprise have the right to know what
substances the enterprise is releasing to the environment and what
effects these substances have on the environment.
A paint dealer must be able to
answer questions about what substances the products he uses or
sells contain which can harm the environment, and a farmer must be
able to answer questions about which pesticides he uses.
Information on substances or product attributes harmful to health
and the environment shall be available at all stages of production
and use and be readily available for the users of the
products.
Not all products create
environmental problems in Norway, but production and distribution
abroad may be environmentally harmful, for example garden furniture
made of timber from threatened rain forests. The new Act will
give citizens the right to ask also for this kind of information.
This can help to support ethical and environmentally aware
consumption, and increase awareness of the environmental
consequences of Norwegian consumption patterns also outside
of Norwegian borders.
The Act also extends the right of
citizens to obtain information about the environmental consequences
of the activities and decisions of
public bodies. This right applies to state, country
and municipal bodies. People are entitled both to know
whether public bodies follow up their own goals concerning
environmentally friendly operation, and to get information about
the environmental consequences of public administration and
decisions of public bodies, such as for example the environmental
consequences of a transport plan or a particular road
development. The work which has started on Green Government
will be a key instrument for establishing the environmental
consequences of state activities. By 2005 all state
institutions are to incorporate environmental management as an
integral part of the leadership system of the organisation.
The Act requires that public bodies
are required to have knowledge and
general information about the environment and make it
easily available to the general public. The objective is that
citizens shall be able to follow – and have an overview of – the
development of environmental problems, both nationally and
locally. - Public bodies have a responsibility to
disseminate this type of information, says Brende. He
emphasises that not only environmental authorities, but all sectors
must take responsibility for this. For example, fishery
authorities will be responsible for disseminating environmental
information about the state of fishery resources and the
environmental consequences of fishery policies and oil and energy
authorities will be responsible for disseminating information on
environmental aspects of energy supply and production. The
municipalities will have a special responsibility for ensuring that
the inhabitants of the municipality have access to environmental
information which enables them to form a picture of the
environmental situation in the municipality, for example about how
environmental considerations are taken into account in land
planning.
Public bodies must
strengthen administrative procedures in dealing with
requests for access to information, says Brende. The Act
states that information which is requested from public bodies must
be provided within a very short deadline, maximum 15 days. If
the authorities exceptionally do not manage to provide the
information requested within 15 days, they must provide a good
explanation. The public sector is also obliged to make the
information easily available and understandable. This will
also be a challenge!
Representatives of environmental
organisations, media, industry and consumer organisations are to be
"judges" in an appeals board which will be established to consider
complaints related to the follow up of this Act in private
enterprises. – An appeals board is necessary to ensure that
the Act is complied with. It is also important that it is the
interest groups and users of the Act which should help define the
limits of how far the Act goes, says Børge Brende. Half of
the members of the appeals board will be people with an industry
background, and the other half will be people with a background in
an environmental organisation, a consumer organisation or
media. These groups will designate their own
representatives.
Already in 1992 a provision on the
right to environmental information was included in the Constitution
and the new Act is an important step in making this provision more
concrete and operational. The Act is also necessary for
following up Norwegian obligations under international agreements,
but the Bill goes significantly further in several respects.
The Bill is the result of a
proposal from a broadly composed committee (The Environmental
Information Committee), where also industry was represented.
– I am pleased to note that industry has shown that they have
accepted responsibility on this issue, says Brende.
- The Act is not the end of
the road, but an important step in strengthening the right to
environmental information. Our experiences in following up
and implementing this law may show that there will be a need to
develop further and make more precise the rights and obligations
which the Act introduces. The main purpose of the
Environmental Information Act is that it should make it possible
for citizens, by getting better access to information, to take
active part in – and contribute to – efforts to improve protection
of the environment, says Brende.
Contact person:
Deputy Director General Atle
Fretheim