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Review of European Administrative Law (REALaw)
2023 / 3 (October) 1
 
  • Editorial: European Administrative Law and the Challenges of Uncertainty online pdf
Articles
  • Angelica Ericsson - Doctoral candidate, Faculty of Law at Lund University

    National Pre-Authorisation Schemes to Ensure Public Health – Scientific Uncertainty, National Policy Choices, and the Risk of Bias online pdf
  • Wilke de Braal - PhD researcher at Tilburg University, The Netherlands, and EU law advisor at the Netherlands Ministr

    National Responses to Great Uncertainty in EU Authorisation of Pesticides and Industrial Chemicals online pdf
  • Silvia Lazzari - PhD candidate at Università Sapienza (Rome)

    The Environmental Impact Assessment Procedure Facing the Challenge of Uncertainty: An Overview of the European and Italian Legal Framework online pdf
  • Camille Lanssens - Research Fellow Belgian Fund for Scientific Research (F.R.S.-FNRS) Centre de droit public et social

    The Court of Justice of the European Union’s review of uncertain scientific appraisals: what role for the Impact Assessment Guidance? online pdf
  • Sofie Oosterhuis - PhD Candidate in European Administrative Law at Utrecht University

    The rise of complex decision-making in the European Union: boards of appeal as a mechanism to mitigate challenges of scientific uncertainty online pdf
  • Marco Almada - PhD candidate, European University Institute (EUI)

    Automated Uncertainty: A Research Agenda for Artificial Intelligence in Administrative Decisions online pdf
Book Review
  • Jane Reichel - Professor in Administrative Law, Faculty of Law, Stockholm University

    Ida Koivisto, The Transparency Paradox. Questioning an ideal online pdf

National Responses to Great Uncertainty in EU Authorisation of Pesticides and Industrial Chemicals

Toon als PDF
Wilke de Braal - PhD researcher at Tilburg University, The Netherlands, and EU law advisor at the Netherlands Ministr*


This article looks into how two sectoral regulatory systems – EU legislation applying to pesticides, and EU legislation applying to industrial chemicals – accommodate national participation in decisions about uncertain risks. It identifies uncertainty as situations in which the probabilities or other important information needed for a well-informed decision are lacking, and therefore refers to these situations as ‘great uncertainty’. The article explores the assumption that national participation in decision-making under great uncertainty leads to higher environmental protection compared to centralised decisions. It  does so by addressing the role of EU Member States and their national competent authorities in marketing authorisation decisions on pesticides and industrial chemicals, the exercise of national discretion in the authorisation of these substances, and the use of temporary derogation clauses by Member States once a product has been allowed to enter the market. The article compares two regulatory fields, as the two main harmonisation measures in this field – the Plant Protection Products Regulation and REACH – have established different authorisation systems: a decentralised system in the case of pesticides and a centralised system in the case of industrial chemicals. The outcomes of this comparison are that both systems enable national decisions about uncertain risks, but that the identified examples of national participation are not necessarily a response to great uncertainty.

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