BRUSSELS — The European Commission has proposed rolling back several EU
environmental laws including industrial emissions reporting requirements,
confirming previous reporting by POLITICO.
It’s the latest in a series of proposed deregulation plans — known as omnibus
bills — as Commission President Ursula von der Leyen tries to make good on a
promise to EU leaders to dramatically reduce administrative burden for
companies.
The bill’s aim is to make it easier for businesses to comply with EU laws on
waste management, emissions, and resource use, with the Commission stressing the
benefits to small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) which make up 99 percent
of all EU businesses. The Commission insisted the rollbacks would not have a
negative impact on the environment.
“We all agree that we need to protect our environmental standards, but we also
at the same time need to do it more efficiently,” said Environment Commissioner
Jessika Roswall during a press conference on Wednesday.
“This is a complex exercise,” said Executive Vice President Teresa Ribera during
a press conference on Wednesday. “It is not easy for anyone to try to identify
how we can respond to this demand to simplify while responding to this other
demand to keep these [environmental] standards high.”
Like previous omnibus packages, the environmental omnibus was released without
an impact assessment. The Commission found that “without considering other
alternative options, an impact assessment is not deemed necessary.” This comes
right after the Ombudswoman found the Commission at fault for
“maladministration” for the first omnibus.
The Commission claims “the proposed amendments will not affect environmental
standards” — a claim that’s already under attack from environmental groups.
MORE REPORTING CUTS
The Commission wants to exempt livestock and aquaculture operators from
reporting on water, energy and materials use under the industrial emissions
reporting legislation.
EU countries, competent authorities and operators would also be given more time
to comply with some of the new or revised provisions in the updated Industrial
Emissions Directive while being given further “clarity on when these provisions
apply.”
The Commission is also proposing “significant simplification” for environmental
management systems (EMS) — which lay out goals and performance measures related
to environmental impacts of an industrial site — under the industrial and
livestock rearing emissions directive.
These would be completed by industrial plants at the level of a company and not
at the level of every installation, as it currently stands.
There would also be fewer compliance obligations under EU waste laws.
The Commission wants to remove the Substances of Concern in Products (SCIP)
database, for example, claiming that it “has not been effective in informing
recyclers about the presence of hazardous substances in products and has imposed
substantial administrative costs.”
Producers selling goods in another EU country will also not have to appoint an
authorized representative in both countries to comply with extended producer
responsibility (EPR). The Commission calls it a “stepping stone to more profound
simplification,” also reducing reporting requirements to just once per year.
The Commission will not be changing the Nature Restoration Regulation — which
has been a key question in discussions between EU commissioners — but it will
intensify its support to EU countries and regional authorities in preparing
their draft National Restoration Plans.
The Commission will stress-test the Birds and Habitats Directives in 2026
“taking into account climate change, food security, and other developments and
present a series of guidelines to facilitate implementation,” it said.
CRITIQUES ROLL IN
Some industry groups, like the Computer & Communications Industry
Association, have welcomed the changes, calling it a “a common-sense fix.”
German center-right MEP Pieter Liese also welcomed the omnibus package, saying,
“[W]e need to streamline environmental laws precisely because we want to
preserve them. Bureaucracy and paperwork are not environmental protection.”
But environmental groups opposed the rollbacks.
“The Von der Leyen Commission is dismantling decades of hard-won nature
protections, putting air, water, and public health at risk in the name of
competitiveness,” WWF said in a statement.
The estimated savings “come with no impact assessment and focus only on reduced
compliance costs, ignoring the far larger price of pollution, ecosystem decline,
and climate-related disasters,” it added.
The Industrial Emissions Directive, which entered into force last year and is
already being transposed by member countries, was “already much weaker than what
the European Commission had originally proposed” during the last revision,
pointed out ClientEarth lawyer Selin Esen.
“The Birds and Habitats Directives are the backbone of nature protection in
Europe,” said BirdLife Europe’s Sofie Ruysschaert. “Undermining them now would
not only wipe out decades of hard-won progress but also push the EU toward a
future where ecosystems and the communities that rely on them are left
dangerously exposed.”
Tag - Fish Farming/Aquaculture
[1] https://digitalreport.protectedplanet.net/
[2] Satellite sea surface temperature measurements began in 1982; ocean heat
content estimates are derived from in situ observations that started in 1960.
[3] https://marine.copernicus.eu/osr9-summary/flipbook/
[4]
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/28/world/europe/spain-beach-blue-dragon-sea-slugs.html#:~:text=The%20arrival%20of%20the%20tiny,what%20they’re%20dealing%20with.
[5] https://marine.copernicus.eu/osr9-summary/flipbook/
[6] https://marine.copernicus.eu/osr9-summary/flipbook/