A legal complaint
submitted today to the European Commission by campaign groups [1] alleges that
the construction of a controversial EU-funded motorway is already breaking EU
nature laws, and warns that completing the final section through Kresna Gorge
nature reserve in Bulgaria would be catastrophic for protected animals and
plants in the region. [2] The complaint calls on the Commission to
investigate breaches of EU law, and could result
in the Bulgarian government being taken to the European Court of Justice and
hefty fines.
The 16km-long
Kresna Gorge is the most biodiverse region in Bulgaria, home to 92 protected
species, and part of the EU's Natura 2000 network of protected areas. More
species of butterfly live in one square kilometre of Kresna Gorge than in all
of the UK.
Two good
alternatives exist to complete the E79 highway, which links Germany with
Bulgaria and Greece – without disturbing the protected gorge and in compliance
with EU legislation, according to experts. [3]
However in April,
the Bulgarian Government announced designs to build half of
the Struma Motorway through the gorge. Non government
organisations assess that this would irreversibly damage the nature haven and
would breach EU nature laws. [4]
The Bulgarian
government has already pressed ahead with construction of the motorway at
either end of the gorge, funnelling extra traffic through it. The legal
complaint notes that this breaches the EU Habitats Directive on two counts, and
has already led to an increase in road killings and population decline of a
number of protected species. [5]
Desislava
Stoyanova, campaigner at Za Zemiata/Friends of the Earth Bulgaria said: "The
Bulgarian government has two good options to prevent our richest nature site
from being destroyed, but seems set on senselessly ploughing ahead and wiping
out Kresna's wildlife. The European Commission has no choice now but to
seriously consider the case and block Bulgaria from using EU funds to break EU
laws."
In December, the European Commission publicly
committed to better implementing its nature laws. [7]
Robbie Blake,
nature campaigner at Friends of the Earth Europe said: "Kresna
Gorge is a jewel of European nature, and needlessly destroying it with a
motorway would be a crime. In April this year, European Commission environment
chief Karmenu Vella promised to step up implementation of our vital EU nature
protection laws, and how he acts on Kresna Gorge will put him to the test. This
is a clear-cut case: either he intervenes, or his commitment to putting our
nature laws into practice will just be empty words."
A final decision
has not yet been made on which route to take, with the results of a new
Environmental Impact Assessment expected in the next few weeks. The local
community and the wider Bulgarian public then will be able to express their
views on this, and it will have to be approved by the EU Commission. If the
Commission or European Court of Justice find that the project has breached EU
nature laws, the Bulgarian government
risks having to pay back some or all of the EU grant of just over €750 million. [8]
Notes:
[1] The NGOs party
to the complaint are: Friends of the Earth Europe, CEE Bankwatch Network, Za
Zemiata/Friends of the Earth Bulgaria, BALKANI Wildlife Society, Green Policy
Institute, Centre for Environmental Information and Education, School for
Nature Vlahi
[2] The E79 Struma
motorway is part of the Trans-European Corridor 4 linking Hamburg (Germany)
with Sofia (Bulgaria) and Thessaloniki (Greece). Kresna gorge is a Natura 2000
site, protected by the Habitats Directive.
[3] These are a
by-pass to the east of the Gorge, and a tunnel. See map: https://cloud.foeeurope.org/index.php/s/CKVu7jRZm88MJzL
[4] In 2008, the
‘Appropriate Assessment’ for the Struma Motorway project, endorsed by the
European Commission, deemed that any motorway construction in the Gorge and the
option to maintain the current road for international traffic (the so-called
zero option) is not in compliance with the EU Habitats Directive because of the
detrimental and unavoidable impacts on the protected biodiversity. The legally
agreed conclusion was to route all motorway traffic outside of the Gorge by
means of a bypass or a tunnel.
[5] The damage
that has already occurred comes as a result of increased traffic brought on by
construction at both ends of the Gorge, creating a bottleneck. Species in
observed decline include land tortoises, Leopard and four-lined snakes, and 12
species of bats. Comparative monitoring reports over a 10-year period suggest
that certain of the species, such as the four-lined snake, may even be extinct
from the site. The populations of other small species living along the Gorge
and the existing road have experienced decreases between 50 and 93 percent.