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FIFTH
SECTION
CASE OF DUBETSKA AND OTHERS v. UKRAINE
(Application
no. 30499/03)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
10
February 2011
This
judgment will become final in the circumstances set out in Article 44
§ 2 of the Convention. It may be subject to editorial
revision.
In the case of Dubetska and Others
v. Ukraine,
The
European Court of Human Rights (Fifth Section), sitting as a Chamber
composed of:
Peer Lorenzen, President,
Karel
Jungwiert,
Mark Villiger,
Mirjana Lazarova
Trajkovska,
Zdravka Kalaydjieva,
Ganna
Yudkivska,
Angelika Nußberger, judges,
and
Claudia Westerdiek, Section
Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 18 January 2011,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in an application (no. 30499/03) against Ukraine
lodged with the Court on 4 September 2003 under Article 34 of the
Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental
Freedoms (“the Convention”) by eleven Ukrainian
nationals: Ms Ganna Pavlivna Dubetska, born in 1927; Ms Olga
Grygorivna Dubetska, born in 1958; Mr Yaroslav Vasylyovych
Dubetskyy, born in 1957; Mr Igor Volodymyrovych Nayda, born in 1958;
Ms Myroslava Yaroslavivna Nayda, born in 1960; Mr Arkadiy Vasylyovych
Gavrylyuk, born in 1932; Ms Ganna Petrivna Gavrylyuk, born in
1939; Ms Alla Arkadiyivna Vakiv, born in 1957; Ms Mariya Yaroslavivna
Vakiv, born in 1982; Mr Yaroslav Yosypovych Vakiv, born in 1955; and
Mr Yuriy Yaroslavovych Vakiv, born in 1979.
- The
applicants were represented by Ms Y. Ostapyk, a lawyer practising in
Lviv. The Ukrainian Government (“the Government”) were
represented by their Agent, Mr Y. Zaytsev.
- The
applicants alleged that the State authorities had failed to protect
their home, private and family life from excessive pollution
generated by two State-owned industrial facilities.
- On
15 October 2008 the President of the Fifth Section decided to give
notice of the application to the Government. It was also decided to
rule on the admissibility and merits of the application at the same
time (Article 29 § 1).
- On
an unspecified date after the case was communicated the applicant Mr
Arkadiy Gavrylyuk died. On 18 September 2009 the applicants’
representative requested that his claims be excluded from
consideration.
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
- The
applicants are Ukrainian nationals residing in the hamlet of Vilshyna
in the Lviv region.
A. Preliminary information
- The
first to fifth applicants are members of an extended family residing
in a house owned by the first applicant (the Dubetska-Nayda family
house). This house was built by the family in 1933.
- The
remaining applicants are members of an extended family residing in a
house constructed by the sixth applicant (the Gavrylyuk-Vakiv family
house). This house was built by him in 1959. It is unclear whether a
permit for construction of this house was obtained in 1959.
Subsequently the house was officially registered, to which a property
certificate of 1988 is witness.
- The
applicants’ houses are located in Vilshyna hamlet,
administratively a part of Silets village, Sokalskyy district, Lviv
Region. The village is located in the Chervonograd coal-mining basin.
- In
1955 the State began building, and in 1960 put into operation, the
Velykomostivska No. 8 coal mine, whose spoil heap is located 100
metres from the Dubetska-Vakiv family house. In 2001 this mine was
renamed the Vizeyska mine of the Lvivvugillya State Holding Company
(“the mine”; Шахта
«Візейська»
ДХК «Львіввугілля»).
In July 2005 a decision was taken to close the mine as unprofitable.
The closure project is currently under way.
- In
1979 the State opened the Chervonogradska coal processing factory
(“the factory”; Центрально-збагачувальна
фабрика «Червоноградська»)
in the vicinity of the hamlet, initially managed by the
Ukrzakhidvugillya State Company. In 2001 the factory was leased out
to the Lvivsystemenergo Closed Joint Stock Company (ЗАТ
«Львівсистеменерго»).
Subsequently the Lvivsystemenergo CJSC was succeeded by the Lviv Coal
Company Open Joint Stock Company. In 2007 a decision was taken to
allow the factory to be privatised. It is not clear whether the
factory has already been privatised.
- In
the course of its operation the factory has piled up a 60-metre spoil
heap 430 metres from the Dubetska-Nayda family house and 420 metres
from the Gavrylyuk-Vakiv family house. This spoil heap was not
subject to privatisation and remained State property.
B. The environmental situation in Vilshyna hamlet
1. General data concerning pollution emitted by the
factory and the mine
- According
to a number of studies by governmental and non governmental
entities, the operation of the factory and the mine has had adverse
environmental effects.
- In
particular, in 1989 the Sokalskyy District Council Executive
Committee (“the Sokalskyy Executive Committee”;
Виконавчий
комітет Сокальської
районної ради)
noted that the mine’s and the factory’s spoil
heaps caused continuous infiltration of ground water, resulting in
flooding of certain areas.
- According
to an assessment commissioned by the State Committee for Geology and
Mineral Resource Utilisation, jointly with the Zakhidukrgeologiya
State geological company (Державний
комітет
України
по геології
та використанню
надр;
Державне
геологічне
підприємство
«Західукргеологія»)
in 1998, the factory was a major contributor to pollution of the
ground water, in particular on account of infiltration of water from
its spoil heap. The authors of the assessment contended, in
particular, that:
“All the coal-mining industry operational in the
region for over forty years has been negatively affecting the
environment: spoil heaps from the mines and the coal-processing
factory have been created, from which dust with a high concentration
of toxic components spreads into the atmosphere and the soil ...
systems of water drainage of the mines ... and cesspools... of the
coal-processing factory are sources of pollution of surface and
underground waters ...
Rocks from the spoil heaps contain a variety of toxic
heavy metals, leaching of which results in pollution of soils,
surface and underground waters ...
Very serious polluters ... are cesspools of mining
waters and factory tailing ponds ..., which in the event of the
slightest disturbance of the hydro-insulation cause pollution of
surface and ground waters ...
The general area of soil subsidence is about 70 square
metres... the deepest subsidence (up to 3.5 metres) corresponds to
areas with the most mining activity...
During construction of the water inlets ... deep wells
were drilled which reached those [mineralised] waters. All this
inevitably affected the health of people living in the area, first of
all the children ...
Extremely high pollution levels ... were found in the
hamlet of Vilshyna, not far from the coal-processing factory and mine
no. 8 spoil heaps, in the wells of Mr T. and Mr Dubetskyy. We
can testify that even the appearance of this water does not give
grounds to consider it fit for any use. People from this community
should be supplied with drinking-quality water or resettled ...”
- In
2001 similar conclusions were proposed in a white paper published by
Lviv State University.
- On
20 April 2000 the Chervonograd Sanitary Epidemiological Service (“the
Sanitary Service”; Червоноградська
міська санітарно епідеміологічна
служба) recorded a
5.2-fold excess of dust concentration and a 1.2-fold excess of soot
concentration in ambient air samples taken 500 metres from the
factory’s chimney.
- On
1 August 2000 the Sanitary Service sampled water in the
Vilshyna hamlet wells and found it did not meet safety standards. In
particular, the concentration of nitrates exceeded the safety limits
by three- to five-fold, the concentration of iron by five- to
ten-fold and that of manganese by nine- to eleven-fold.
- On
16 August 2002 the Ministry of Ecology and Natural Resources
(Міністерство
екології та
природних
ресурсів)
acknowledged in a letter to the applicants that mining
activities were of major environmental concern for the entire
Chervonograd region. They caused soil subsidence and flooding. Heavy
metals from mining waste penetrated the soil and ground waters. The
level of pollution of the soil by heavy metals was up to ten times
the permissible concentration, in particular in Silets village,
especially on account of the operation of the factory and the mine.
- On
28 May 2003 factory officials and the Chervonograd Coal
Industry Inspectorate (Червоноградська
гірничо-технічна
інспекція з
нагляду у вугільній
промисловості)
recorded infiltration of water from the foot of the factory’s
spoil heap on the side facing Vilshyna hamlet. They noted that water
flowing from the heap had accumulated into one hectare of brownish
salty lake.
- In
2004 the Zakhidukrgeologiya company published a study entitled
“Hydrogeological Conclusion concerning the Condition of
Underground Waters in the Area of Mezhyriccha Village and Vilshyna
Hamlet”, according to which in the geological composition of
the area there were water-bearing layers of sand. The study also
indicated that even before the beginning of the mining works the
upper water-bearing layers were contaminated with sodium and
compounds thereof as well as iron in the river valleys. However,
exploitation of the mines added pollution to underground waters,
especially their upper layers.
- On
14 June 2004 the Lviv Chief Medical Officer for Health (Головний
державний
санітарний
лікар Львівської
області) noted
that air samples had revealed dust and soot
exceeding the maximum permissible concentrations 350 metres from the
factory, and imposed administrative sanctions on the person in charge
of the factory’s boiler.
- In
September 2005 Dr Mark Chernaik of the Environmental Law Alliance
Worldwide reported that the concentration of soot in ambient air
samples taken in Vilshyna hamlet was 1.5 times higher than the
maximum permissible concentration under domestic standards. The well
water was contaminated with mercury and cadmium, exceeding domestic
safety standards twenty-five-fold and fourfold respectively.
According to the report, the hamlet inhabitants were exposed to
higher risks of cancer and respiratory and kidney diseases.
2. The applicants’ accounts of damage sustained
by them on account of the mine and factory operation
- The
applicants first submitted that their houses had sustained damage as
a result of soil subsidence caused by mining activities and presented
an acknowledgement of this signed by the mine’s director on 1
January 1999. According to the applicants, the mine promised to pay
for the repair of their houses but never did so.
- Secondly,
the applicants alleged that they were continuing to suffer from a
lack of drinkable water. They contended that until 2009 the hamlet
had no access to a mains water supply. Using the local well and
stream water for washing and cooking purposes caused itching and
intestinal infections. The applicants presented three photographs
reportedly of the water available to them near their home. One photo
entitled “water in a well in Vilshyna hamlet” pictured a
bucket full of yellow-orange water near a well. The second photo
entitled “a stream near the house” pictured a small
stream of a bright orange colour. The third photo entitled
“destruction of plant life by water from the coal-processing
factory waste heap” depicted a brownish lake with many stumps
and several dead bushes in the middle of it.
- The
applicants further contended that from 2003 the Lvivsystemenergo CJSC
had been bringing, at its own expense, drinkable water into the
hamlet by truck and tractor. However, this water was not provided in
sufficient quantity. In evidence of this statement, the applicants
presented a photograph picturing five large buckets of water and
entitled “weekly water supply”.
- The
applicants further alleged that the water supply was not always
regular. In support of this argument they produced letters from the
Sokalskyy District Administration dated 9 July 2002 and 7 March 2006,
acknowledging recent irregularities in supply of drinking water.
- Thirdly,
some of the applicants were alleged to have developed chronic health
conditions associated with the factory operation, especially with air
pollution. They presented medical certificates which stated that Olga
Dubetska and Alla Vakiv were suffering from chronic bronchitis and
emphysema and that Ganna Gavrylyuk had been diagnosed with carcinoma.
- Fourthly,
the applicants contended that their frustration with environmental
factors affected communication between family members. In particular,
lack of clean water for washing reportedly caused difficulties in
relations between spouses. Younger family members sought to break
away from the older ones in search of better conditions for their
growing children.
- The
applicants, however, did not relocate. They alleged that they would
not be able to sell houses located in a contaminated area or to find
other sources of funding for relocation to a safer community without
State support. In evidence, the applicants presented a letter from a
private real estate agency, S., dated September 2009, stating the
following:
“since in Vilshyna hamlet ... there has been no
demand for residential housing for the past ten years because of the
situation of this hamlet in technogenically polluted territory and
subsidence of soil on its territory ... it is not possible to
determine the market value of the house.”
C. Administrative decisions addressing the harmful
effects of the factory and mine operation
1. Decisions aimed at improving the environmental
situation in the region
- In
November 1995 the Sanitary Service ordered the factory to develop a
plan for management of the buffer zone.
- On
5 June 1996 the Sanitary Service found that the factory had failed to
comply with its order and ordered suspension of its operation. In
spite of this measure, the factory reportedly continued to operate,
with no further sanctions being imposed on its management.
- On
7 April 2000 and 12 June 2002 the State Commission for Technogenic
and Ecological Safety and Emergencies (“The Ecological Safety
Commission”; Державна
комісія з питань
техногенно екологічної
безпеки та
надзвичайних
ситуацій)
ordered a number of measures to improve water management and tackle
soil pollution in the vicinity of the factory.
- On
14 April 2003 the Lviv Regional Administration (Львівська
обласна державна
адміністрація)
noted that the overall environmental situation had not
improved since the Ecological Safety Commission’s decision of 7
April 2000, as no funds had been allocated by the State Budget for
implementation of the relevant measures.
- On
27 January 2004 the Sanitary Service found that the mine had failed
to comply with its instruction of 4 December 2003 as to the
development of a plan for management of the buffer zone, and ordered
suspension of its operation. However, the mine reportedly continued
to operate.
- On
13 July 2005 the Marzeyev State Institute for Hygiene and Medical
Ecology (Інститут
гігієни та
медичної екології
ім. О. М. Марзеєва
АМН України)
developed a management plan for the factory buffer zone. The authors
of the report acknowledged that the factory was polluting the air
with nitrogen dioxide, carbon oxide, sulphuric anhydride and dust.
They noted, however, that according to their studies ambient air
samples taken more than 300 metres from the factory did not contain
excessive pollution. The plan provided for
implementation of a number of measures aimed at improvement of the
hydro-insulation of the spoil heap, as well as reduction of its
height to 50 metres. The authors concluded that in view of such
measures it was possible to establish a general buffer zone at 300
metres for the entire factory site.
- Later
in the year the Ministry of Health (Міністерство
охорони здоров’я)
approved the Marzeyev Institute’s plan, on an assumption that
the height of the spoil heap would be reduced by August 2008.
- On
29 April 2009 the Sanitary Service fined the factory director for
failing to implement the measures in the factory buffer zone
management plan.
2. Decisions concerning the applicants’
resettlement
- On
20 December 1994 the Sokalskyy Executive Committee noted that
eighteen houses, including those of the applicants, were located
within the factory spoil heap 500-metre buffer zone, in violation of
applicable sanitary norms. It further allowed the Ukrzakhidvugillya
company to resettle the inhabitants and to have these houses
demolished. The Committee further obliged the company director to
provide the applicants with housing by December 1996. This decision
was not enforced.
- In
1995 the Sokalskyy Executive Committee amended its decision and
allowed the residents to keep their former houses following
resettlement for recreational and gardening use.
- On
7 April 2000 the Ecological Safety Commission noted that eighteen
families lived within the limits of the factory buffer zone and
commissioned the Ministry of Fuel and Energy and local executive
authorities to ensure their resettlement in 2000-2001. The names of
the families appear not to have been listed.
- In
December 2000 and 2001 the applicants enquired of the Ministry of
Fuel and Energy when they would be resettled and received no answer.
- In
2001 the Lviv Regional Administration included resettlement of
eighteen families (names not listed) from the factory sanitary
security zone in their annual activity plan, indicating the State
budget as the funding source and referring to the Ecological Safety
Commission’s decision of 7 April 2000.
- On
12 June 2002 the Ecological Safety Commission noted that its decision
of 7 April 2000 remained unenforced and ordered the Sokalskyy
District Administration, the Silets Village Council and the factory
to work together to ensure the resettlement of families from the
factory spoil heap buffer zone by the end of 2003.
- In
June 2002 the applicants, along with other village residents,
complained to the President of Ukraine about the non-enforcement of
the decisions concerning their resettlement. The President’s
Administration redirected their complaint to the Lviv Regional
Administration and the Ministry of Ecology and Natural Resources for
consideration.
- On
16 August 2002 the Ministry of Ecology and Natural Resources informed
the Vilshyna inhabitants in response to their complaint that it had
proposed that the Cabinet of Ministers ensure prompt resettlement of
the inhabitants from the factory buffer zone in accordance with the
decision of the Ecological Safety Commission of 7 April 2000.
- On
14 April 2003 the Lviv Regional Administration informed the
applicants that it had repeatedly requested the Prime Minister and
the Ministry of Fuel and Energy to provide funding for the
enforcement of the decision of 7 April 2000.
D. Civil actions concerning the applicants’
resettlement
1. Proceeding brought by the Dubetska-Nayda family
- On
23 July 2002 the Dubetska-Nayda family instituted civil proceedings
in the Chervonograd Court (Місцевий
суд м. Червонограда)
seeking to oblige the factory to resettle them from its buffer zone.
Subsequently the Lvivvugillya State Company was summoned as a
co defendant.
- The
first hearing was scheduled for 28 October 2003.
Subsequent hearings were scheduled for 12 November and 18
December 2003, 26 and 30 April, 18 May, 18 and 30 June, 19 July
and 22 December 2004, and 25 November, 6, 20 and 26 December
2005. On some four occasions hearings were adjourned on account of a
defendant’s absence or following a defendant’s request
for an adjournment.
- On
26 December 2005 the Chervonograd Court found that the plaintiffs
resided in the mine’s buffer zone and ordered the Lvivvugillya
State Company holding it to resettle them. It further dismissed the
applicants’ claims against the factory, finding that their
house was outside its 300-metre buffer zone.
- This
judgment was not appealed against and became final.
- On
3 May 2006 the Chervonograd Bailiffs’ Service initiated
enforcement proceedings.
- On
19 June 2006 the Bailiffs fined the mine’s director for failing
to ensure the enforcement of the judgment. The latter appealed
against this decision.
- On
26 June 2006 the director informed the Bailiffs that the mine could
not comply with the judgment. It neither had available residential
housing at its disposal nor was it engaged in constructing housing,
as it had received no appropriate allocations from the State budget.
- The
judgment remains unenforced to the present date.
2. Proceedings brought by the Gavrylyuk -Vakiv family
- On
23 July 2002 the Gavrylyuk-Vakiv family, similarly to the
Dubetska-Nayda family, instituted civil proceedings at Chervonograd
Court seeking to be resettled outside the factory buffer zone.
- Subsequently
the factory was replaced by the Lvivsystemenergo CJSC as a defendant
in the proceedings.
- The
first hearing was scheduled for 29 September 2003. Subsequent
hearings were scheduled for 6, 17 and 30 October 2003, and 15 and
30 April, 18 May, 18 and 21 June 2004.
- On
21 June 2004 Chervonograd Court dismissed the applicants’
claims. The court found, in particular that, although the plan for
management of the factory buffer zone was still under way, there were
sufficient studies to justify the 300-metre zone. As the plaintiffs’
house was located outside it, the defendant could not be obliged to
resettle them. Moreover, the defendant had no funds to provide the
applicants with new housing. The court found the decision of 1994
concerning the applicants’ resettlement irrelevant and did not
comment on subsequent decisions concerning the matter.
- On
20 July 2004 the applicants appealed. They maintained, in particular,
that the law provided that the actual concentration of pollutants on
the outside boundaries of the zone should meet applicable safety
standards. In their case, the actual level of pollution outside the
zone exceeded such standards, as evidenced by a number of studies,
referring to the factory operation as the major source of pollution.
Furthermore, the decision of the Sokalskyy Executive Committee of
1994 could not have been irrelevant, as it remained formally in
force.
- On
28 March 2005 the Lviv Regional Court of Appeal (Апеляційний
суд Львівської
області)
upheld the previous judgment and agreed with the trial court’s
reasoning. In response to the applicants’ arguments concerning
the actual pollution level at their place of residence, the court
noted that the hamlet was supplied with imported water and that in
any event, while the applicable law included penalties against
polluters, it did not impose a general obligation on them to resettle
individuals.
- On
23 April 2005 the applicants appealed on points of law, relying on
essentially the same arguments as in their previous appeal.
- On
17 September 2007 the Khmelnytskyy Regional Court of Appeal
(Апеляційний
суд Хмельницької
області)
dismissed the applicants’ request for leave to appeal on
points of law.
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW
A. Constitution of Ukraine
- Relevant
provisions of the Constitution read as follows:
Article 16
“To ensure ecological safety and to maintain the
ecological balance on the territory of Ukraine, to overcome the
consequences of the Chernobyl catastrophe — a catastrophe of
global scale, and to preserve the gene pool of the Ukrainian people,
is the duty of the State.”
Article 50
“Everyone has the right to an environment that is
safe for life and health, and to compensation for damages inflicted
through the violation of this right ...”
B. Law of Ukraine “On Local Councils of People’s
Deputies and Local and Regional Self-Government” of 7 December
1990 (repealed with effect from 21 May 1997)
- According
to Article 57 of the Law, private and public entities and individuals
could be held liable under the law for failure to comply with lawful
decisions of bodies of regional self-government (which included
executive committees of district councils).
- Subsequent
legislation concerning local self-government did not envisage the
existence of such a body as an executive committee of a district
council.
C. Law of Ukraine “On Waste” of 5 March
1998
- Relevant
provisions of the Law “On Waste” read as follows:
Section 9. Property rights to waste
“The State is the owner of waste produced on State
property ... On behalf of the State the management of waste owned by
the State shall be carried out by the Cabinet of Ministers.”
D. Law of Ukraine “On Measures to Ensure the
Stable Operation of Fuel and Energy Sector Enterprises” of 23
June 2005
- The
above Law introduced a new mechanism for payment and amortisation of
companies’ debts for energy resources. It also introduced a
special register of companies involved in debt payment and
amortisation under its provisions. A company’s presence on that
register suspends any enforcement proceedings against it; domestic
courts shall also dismiss any request to initiate insolvency or
liquidation proceedings against the company.
E. Order of the Ministry of Health No. 173 of
19 June 1996 “On Approval of the State Sanitary Rules
concerning Planning and Construction of Populated Communities”
- Relevant
provisions of the Order of the Ministry of Health read as follows:
“5.4. Industrial, agricultural and
other objects, which are sources of environmental pollution with
chemical, physical and biological factors, in the event that it is
impossible to create wasteless technologies, should be separated from
residential areas by sanitary security zones.
...
On the exterior boundary of a sanitary security zone
which faces a residential area, concentrations and levels of harmful
substances should not be greater than those set down in the relevant
hygiene standards (maximum permissible concentrations, maximum
permissible levels) ...
5.5. ...
In the event the studies do not confirm the statutory
sanitary security zone or its establishment is not possible under
particular circumstances, it is necessary to take a decision
concerning a change of production technology, which would provide for
decrease in emission of harmful substances into the atmosphere, its
re-profiling or closure.
Supplement No. 4,
Sanitary classification of enterprises, production facilities and
buildings and their required sanitary security zones:
.....
A sanitary security zone of 500 metres [shall surround
the following facilities]:
....
5. Spoil heaps of mines which are being
exploited, inactive spoil heaps exceeding 30 metres in height which
are susceptible to combustion; inactive spoil heaps exceeding 50
metres in height which are not susceptible to combustion.
A sanitary security zone of 300 metres [shall surround
the following facilities]:
...
5. ... coal-processing factories using wet
treatment technology
6. ... inactive spoil heaps of mines, less
than 50 metres in height and not susceptible to combustion.”
THE LAW
I. SCOPE OF THE CASE
- On
18 September 2009 the applicants’ representative informed the
Court that applicant Mr Arkadiy Gavrylyuk had died. She further
requested that his claims be excluded from consideration.
- The
Court considers that, in the absence of any heir expressing the wish
to take over and continue the application on behalf of
Mr Arkadiy Gavrylyuk, there are no special circumstances in
the case affecting respect for human rights as defined in the
Convention and requiring further examination of the application under
Article 37 § 1 in fine of the Convention (see, for
example, Pukhigova v. Russia,
no. 15440/05, §§ 106 107, 2 July 2009 and
Goranda v. Romania (dec.), no. 38090/03, 25 May 2010).
- In
view of the above, it is appropriate to strike the complaints lodged
by Mr Arkadiy Gavrylyuk out of the list.
II. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 8 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicants complained that the State authorities had failed to
protect their home, private and family life from excessive pollution
generated by two State-owned industrial facilities. They relied on
Article 8 of the Convention, which reads as follows:
“1. Everyone has the right to respect
for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence.
2. There shall be no interference by a public
authority with the exercise of this right except such as is in
accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in
the interests of national security, public safety or the economic
well-being of the country, for the prevention of disorder or crime,
for the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of the
rights and freedoms of others.”
A. Admissibility
1. Submissions by the parties
(a) The Government
- The
Government submitted that the application was inadmissible ratione
temporis in so far as it related to the facts predating 11
September 1997, the date of entry of the Convention into force with
respect to Ukraine.
- They
further submitted that the Gavrylyuk-Vakiv family could not claim to
be victims of any violations of Article 8 as in 1959 they had
unlawfully constructed their house on the land, which was formally
allocated to them only a year later. Moreover, in breach of the law
in force at the material time, this family had never requested
authorisation of the mining authorities to construct their house on
the land above the mine. As the Gavrylyuk-Vakiv family had
deliberately constructed their house on land under industrial
development and in so doing acted in violation of applicable law,
they could not claim that the State had any obligations relating to
respect for their Article 8 rights while they lived in this house.
Their complaints were therefore inadmissible ratione personae.
- The
Government also submitted as an alternative that the Gavrylyuk Vakiv
family’s complaints were manifestly ill-founded, as their
family lived outside the statutory buffer zones of both the mine and
the factory, and their resettlement claim was rejected by a competent
court at the close of adversary proceedings. These applicants had
therefore not made out an arguable Convention claim.
- Finally,
the Government contended that none of the applicants had exhausted
available domestic remedies. In particular, they had never claimed
compensation from either the mine or the factory for any damage
allegedly sustained on account of their industrial activity.
(b) The applicants
- The
applicants disagreed. They noted that while the situation complained
about had started before the entry of the Convention into force with
respect to Ukraine, it continued afterwards and up to the present
day. In particular, the Sokalskyy Executive Committee’s
decision to resettle them had not been formally quashed and was in
force by the date of the Convention’s entry into effect. So the
competent authorities were responsible for its non-enforcement, as
well as for the non-enforcement of the subsequent decision of the
Ecological Safety Commission concerning the applicants’
resettlement and the Chervonograd Court’s judgment in the
Dubetska-Nayda family’s favour. Likewise, the State bore
responsibility for failure to enforce the buffer zone management
plans for the mine and the factory leading to environmental
deterioration in the area, where the applicants lived.
- The
applicants further submitted that the Gavrylyuk-Vakiv family had
constructed their house lawfully, on land duly allocated for this
purpose, while in 1960 they had been given extra land for gardening.
The Government’s submission that they had to seek the mining
authorities’ permission to build a house was not based on law.
Also, by the time the Convention entered into force in respect of
Ukraine, their house had been properly registered with the
authorities, as evidenced by the property certificate provided by
them to the Court.
- The
applicants further contended that the fact that the Chervonograd
Court had dismissed the Gavrylyuk-Vakiv family’s resettlement
claim did not render their application manifestly ill-founded, regard
being had to the actual excessive levels of pollution in the vicinity
of their home. In rejecting their claim for resettlement the courts
had relied on the prospective improvements anticipated following
implementation of the buffer zone management plan for the factory. As
the plan remained unimplemented, this group of applicants continued
to suffer from excessive pollution and their claim was therefore not
manifestly ill-founded.
- Finally,
the applicants alleged that they had properly exhausted domestic
remedies, as they aired their complaints through domestic courts and
referred to environmental pollution as the reason to claim
resettlement.
2. The Court’s assessment
- In
so far as the Government alleged partial inadmissibility of the
application as falling outside the scope of the Court’s
temporal jurisdiction, the Court considers itself not competent
ratione temporis to examine the
State actions or omissions in addressing the applicants’
situation prior to the date of the entry of the Convention into force
with respect to Ukraine (11 September 1997). It is however
competent to examine the applicants’ complaints, which relate
to the period after this date (see, mutatis mutandis, Fadeyeva
v. Russia, no. 55723/00, § 82, ECHR 2005 IV).
- As
regards the Government’s allegation that the complaints lodged
by the Gavrylyuk-Vakiv family are incompatible with the Convention
ratione personae, the Court notes, firstly, that Article 8 of
the Convention applies regardless of whether an applicant’s
home has been built or occupied lawfully (see, among other
authorities, Prokopovich v. Russia, no. 58255/00, §
36, ECHR 2004 XI (extracts)). Moreover, it notes that
irrespective of whether the house at issue was lawfully constructed
or regularised after the family had settled in it, by 11 September
1997, when the Convention entered into force with respect to Ukraine,
the Gavrylyuk Vakiv family was occupying it lawfully. This fact
is not disputed between the parties. In light of the above the
Government’s objection should be dismissed.
- As regards the Government’s allegation that the
Gavrylyuk-Vakiv family’s claims were manifestly ill-founded as
their resettlement claim had been rejected in domestic proceedings,
the Court agrees that it is not in a position to substitute its own
judgment for that of the national courts and its power to review
compliance with domestic law is limited (see, among other
authorities, Slivenko v. Latvia [GC], no.
48321/99, § 105, ECHR 2003 X and Paulić
v. Croatia, no. 3572/06, §
39, 22 October 2009). It is the Court’s function, however, to
review the reasoning adduced by domestic judicial authorities from
the point of view of the Convention (see Slivenko, cited
above, ibid.). Furthermore, the Court notes that the Gavrylyuk-Vakiv
family’s complaint is not limited to the alleged unfairness of
the judgments dismissing their resettlement claim. It concerns a
general failure of the State to remedy their suffering from adverse
environmental effect of pollution in their area. The Government’s
objection must therefore be dismissed.
- Finally,
as regards the non-exhaustion objection, the Court notes that the
Government have not presented any examples of domestic court practice
whereby an individual’s claim for compensation against an
industrial pollutant would be allowed in a situation similar to that
of the applicants. Furthermore, both applicant families in the
present case chose to exhaust domestic remedies with respect to their
claim to be resettled from the area, permanently affected by
pollution. One family obtained a resettlement order, which however
remains unenforced as the debtor mine lacks budgetary allocations for
it, and the other’s claim was dismissed on the grounds that it
lived outside the pollutants’ statutory buffer zone. In view of
all the above the Court has doubts concerning the applicants’
prospects of success in compensation proceedings.
- Even
assuming, however, that such compensation could be awarded to them
for past pollution and paid in good time, the Court notes that the
applicants complain about continuing pollution, curtailing which for
the future appears to necessitate some structural solutions. It is
not obvious how the compensatory measure proposed by the Government
would address this matter. In light of the above, the Court dismisses
the non-exhaustion objection.
- In
conclusion, the Court notes that the application raises serious
issues of fact and law under the Convention, the determination of
which must be reserved to an examination of the merits. The
application cannot therefore be declared manifestly ill-founded
within the meaning of Article 35 § 3 (a) of the Convention.
No other ground for declaring it inadmissible has been established.
The Court, therefore, declares the application admissible.
B. Merits
1. Applicability of Article 8 of the Convention
(a) Submissions by the parties
(i) The applicants
- The
applicants submitted that they were suffering from serious State
interference with their rights guaranteed by Article 8 of the
Convention, on account of environmental pollution emanating from the
State-owned mine and factory (in particular their spoil heaps), as
well as from the State’s failure to cope with its positive
obligation to regulate hazardous industrial activity.
- The
applicants further noted that they had set up their present homes
lawfully, before they could possibly have known that the area would
fall within the legislative industrial buffer zone and would be
environmentally unsafe.
- The
applicants next alleged that the Government’s plan approving
the 300-metre buffer zone around the factory was controversial, as
operation of the spoil heap required a 500-metre buffer zone. The
plan at issue had not been approved by the State Medical Officer for
Health until it had previewed the measures for decreasing the height
of the waste heap to 50 metres and hydro-insulating it, which
has not been done so far. They considered, therefore, that they
continued to live within the scientifically justifiable buffer zone
of the waste heap.
- The
applicants further contended that not only their houses were located
within the zone formally designated by the law as inappropriate for
habitation, but there was considerable evidence that the actual air,
water and soil pollution levels in the vicinity of their homes were
unsafe and were such as could increase the applicants’
vulnerability to pollution-associated diseases. In this regard they
referred to various Governmental and non-governmental reports and
surveys discussed in paragraphs 13-23 above.
- The
applicants additionally noted that other hazards included flooding of
the nearby areas and soil subsidence caused by mining activities.
They alleged that regard being had to the existence of numerous
underground caverns dug out in the course of mining operations these
hazards would exist even if no new mining activities took place.
- In
the meantime, the applicants were unable to relocate without the
State’s assistance, as on account of industrial pollution there
was no demand for real estate in their hamlet and they were not
capable of finding other sources of funding for relocation.
- Finally,
the applicants noted that the State being the owner of the factory
for numerous years and remaining at present the owner of its spoil
heap as well as the owner of the mine, was fully aware of and
responsible for the damage caused by their everyday operations, which
had been going on for a long time. It therefore had responsibility
under Article 8 of the Convention to take appropriate measures to
alleviate the applicants’ burden.
(ii) The Government
- The
Government did not dispute that they had Convention responsibility
for addressing environmental concerns associated with the mine and
the factory operation.
- On
the other hand, they contested the applicants’ submissions as
regards the damage suffered by them on account of alleged pollution.
In particular, the Government submitted that, as regards the
pollution emitted by the factory, its levels were generally safe
outside the 300-metre zone around it, as confirmed by numerous
studies. It is in view of these studies that the 300-metre buffer
zone around the factory was approved by the relevant authorities in
2005. The applicants’ houses, located 430 and 420 metres
from the factory, should accordingly have been safe, regardless of
whether the buffer zone plans had formally been put in place.
Although occasional incidents of increased emissions might have taken
place, they were promptly monitored and appropriate measures to
decrease them were applied in good time, as evidenced, for instance,
by the sanctions imposed on the factory management (see paragraphs 32
and 35 above).
- The
Government further submitted that although the Dubetska Nayda
family lived within the boundaries of the mine spoil heap’s
buffer zone, they, like the Gavrylyuk-Vakiv family, which lived
outside the buffer zones of either the mine or the factory, had
failed to substantiate any actual damage sustained on account of
their proximity to both industrial facilities.
- As
regards the applicants’ reference to several chronic diseases
suffered by some of them, these could well be associated with their
occupational activities and other factors.
- As
regards soil subsidence and flooding, the Government referred to
geological studies which determined that the mountainous area in
which the applicants lived had layers of water-bearing sands
underneath the surface, susceptible to flotation. Based on these
studies, the Government alleged that it could not be proved beyond
reasonable doubt that the soil had subsided as a result of mining
activities, rather than of a natural geological process.
- The
Government next alleged that in so far as the applicants complained
about the water quality, various studies, including the one done by
the Zakhidukrgeologiya (see paragraph 15 above) scientifically proved
that the chemical composition and purity of the underground water in
the area was naturally unfavourable for household consumption, except
when drilled for at a much deeper level than was done for the
applicants’ households. In addition, the applicants’
wells were not equipped with the necessary filters and pipes.
Moreover, the applicants were supplied with imported water. Finally,
it was not in 2009, as suggested by the applicants (see paragraph 25
above), but in 2007 that a centralised aqueduct for the hamlet was
put into operation.
- As
regards the authorities’ decisions on the applicants’
resettlement, they were based on preventive rather than remedial
considerations. The decision taken by the Sokalskyy Executive
Committee had expired by 1997 in view of the change in economic
circumstances. The decision at issue had been taken when enlargement
of the factory was being contemplated, which called for the
establishment of a 500-metre buffer zone around it. If such a zone
had been approved the applicants’ houses would have been
located within its boundaries, setting in motion the legal provisions
calling for their resettlement regardless of the actual level of
pollution. However, by 1997 it had become clear that the enlarged
zone would not be necessary and the 1994 decision automatically
became invalid.
- Moreover,
in 1995 the Sokalskyy Executive Committee had made amendments to its
resettlement decision. Following requests from residents subject to
resettlement, the Committee decided that there was no need to
demolish their former houses, which could be used by them for
recreational and gardening purposes. Several families who had been
provided with alternative housing in 2000-03 as they lived within the
300-metre buffer zone, did in fact continue to use their previous
houses, including for long periods, and refused to give them up.
- In
the Government’s view, this fact was evidence that the
applicants’ resettlement claims were in fact not based on the
actual levels of pollution. The conclusion that the Gavrylyuk-Nayda
family’s resettlement was not necessary was likewise reasonably
made by the national judicial authorities. As regards the
Dubetska-Nayda family, their resettlement was ordered on the basis of
formal statutory provisions and did not involve any assessment of the
actual or potential damage involved. In any event, both families were
free to apply to the authorities for placement on a waiting list for
social housing, which they had never done.
- In
sum, the applicants did not show that the operation of either the
mine or the factory had infringed on their rights to an extent which
would attract State responsibility under Article 8 of the Convention.
(b) The Court’s assessment
(i) The Court’s jurisprudence
- The
Court refers to its well-established case-law that neither Article 8
nor any other provision of the Convention guarantees the right to
preservation of the natural environment as such (see Kyrtatos v.
Greece, no. 41666/98, § 52, ECHR 2003-VI). Likewise, no
issue will arise if the detriment complained of is negligible in
comparison to the environmental hazards inherent in life in every
modern city. However, an arguable claim under Article 8 may arise
where an environmental hazard attains a level of severity resulting
in significant impairment of the applicant’s ability to enjoy
his home, private or family life. The assessment of that minimum
level is relative and depends on all the circumstances of the case,
such as the intensity and duration of the nuisance and its physical
or mental effects on the individual’s health or quality of life
(see, among other authorities, Fadeyeva, cited above, §§
68-69).
- While
there is no doubt that industrial pollution may negatively affect
public health in general and worsen the quality of an individual’s
life, it is often impossible to quantify its effects in each
individual case. As regards health impairment for instance, it is
hard to distinguish the effect of environmental hazards from the
influence of other relevant factors, such as age, profession or
personal lifestyle. “Quality of life” in its turn is a
subjective characteristic which hardly lends itself to a precise
definition (see Ledyayeva and Others v. Russia, nos. 53157/99,
53247/99, 53695/00 and 56850/00, § 90, 26 October 2006).
- Taking
into consideration the evidentiary difficulties involved, the Court
will primarily give regard to the findings of the domestic courts and
other competent authorities in establishing the factual circumstances
of the case (see Buckley v. the United Kingdom, judgment of 25
September 1996, Reports of Judgments and Decisions 1996-IV,
pp. 1291-93, §§ 74-77). As a basis for the analysis it may
use, for instance, domestic legal provisions determining unsafe
levels of pollution (see Fadeyeva, cited above, § 87) and
environmental studies commissioned by the authorities (see Taşkın
and Others v. Turkey, no. 46117/99, §§113 and 120, ECHR
2004 X). Special attention will be paid by the Court to
individual decisions taken by the authorities with respect to an
applicant’s particular situation, such as an undertaking to
revoke a polluter’s operating licence (see Taşkın
and Others, cited above, § 112) or to resettle a
resident away from a polluted area (see Fadeyeva, cited above,
§ 86). However, the Court cannot rely blindly on the
decisions of the domestic authorities, especially when they are
obviously inconsistent or contradict each other. In such a situation
it has to assess the evidence in its entirety (see Ledyayeva and
Others, cited above, § 90). Further sources of
evidence for consideration in addition to the applicant’s
personal accounts of events, will include, for instance, his medical
certificates (see Lars and Astrid Fägerskiöld v.
Sweden (dec.), no. 37664/04, 26 February 2008) as
well as relevant reports, statements or studies made by private
entities (see Fadeyeva, cited above, § 85).
- In
addition, in order to determine whether or not the State could be
held responsible under Article 8 of the Convention, the Court must
examine whether a situation was a result of a sudden and unexpected
turn of events or, on the contrary, was long-standing and well known
to the State authorities (see Fadeyeva, cited above, §§
90-91); whether the State was or should have been aware that the
hazard or the nuisance was affecting the applicant’s private
life (see López Ostra v. Spain, 9 December 1994,
§§ 52 53, Series A no. 303 C) and to what
extent the applicant contributed to creating this situation for
himself and was in a position to remedy it without a prohibitive
outlay (see Ledyayeva, cited above, § 97).
(ii) Assessment of the facts in the
present case
- The
Court reiterates that the present case concerns an allegation of
adverse effects on the applicants’ Article 8 rights on account
of industrial pollution emanating from two State-owned facilities –
the Vizeyska coal mine and the Chervonogradska coal-processing
factory (in particular, its waste heap, which is 60 metres high).
- The
applicants’ submissions relate firstly to deterioration of
their health on account of water, air and soil pollution by toxic
substances in excess of permissible concentrations. In addition,
these submissions likewise concern the worsening of the quality of
life in view of the damage to the houses by soil subsidence and
persistent difficulties in accessing non-contaminated water, which
have adversely affected the applicants’ daily routine and
interactions between family members.
- In
assessing to what extent the applicants’ health was affected by
the pollution complained about, the Court agrees with the Government
that there is no evidence making it possible to establish
quantifiable harm in the present case. It considers, however, that
living in the area marked by pollution in clear excess of applicable
safety standards exposed the applicants to an elevated risk to
health.
- As
regards the quality of the applicants’ life, the Court notes
the applicants’ photographs of water and their accounts of
their daily routine and communications (see paragraphs 24-30 above),
which appear to be palpably affected by environmental considerations.
- It
notes that, as suggested by the Government, there may be different
natural factors affecting the quality of water and causing soil
subsidence in the applicants’ case (see, for instance,
paragraph 21 above). Moreover, at the present time the issue of
accessing fresh water appears to have been resolved by the recent
opening of a centralised aqueduct. At the same time, the case file
contains sufficient evidence that the operation of the mine and the
factory (in particular their spoil heaps) have contributed to the
above problems for a number of years, at least to a certain extent.
- This
extent appears to be not at all negligible, in particular as
according to domestic legislation residential houses may not be
located within the buffer zones of the mines and the spoil heaps are
designated as a priori environmentally hazardous. It appears
that according to the State Sanitary Rules, a “safe distance”
from a house to a spoil heap exceeding 50 metres in height is
estimated at 500 metres (see paragraph 69 above). The Dubetska-Nayda
family’s house is situated 100 metres from the mine spoil heap
and 430 metres from the factory one. The Gavrylyuk-Vakiv family’s
house in its turn is situated 420 metres from the factory spoil
heap.
- While
agreeing with the Government that the statutory definitions do not
necessarily reflect the actual levels of pollution to which the
applicants were exposed, the Court notes that the applicants in the
present case have presented a substantial amount of data in evidence
that the actual excess of polluting substances within these distances
from the facilities at issue has been recorded on a number of
occasions (see paragraphs 17-18 and 22-23 above).
- In
deciding on whether the damage (or risk of damage) suffered by the
applicants in the present case was such as to attract guarantees of
Article 8, the Court also has regard to the fact that at various
times the authorities considered resettling the applicants. The need
to resettle the Dubetska-Nayda family was ultimately confirmed in a
final judgment given by the Chervonograd Court on 26 December 2005.
- As
regards the Gavrylyuk-Vakiv family, on 21 June 2004 the same court
found their resettlement unnecessary. However, in its findings the
judicial authorities relied on anticipation that the factory would
promptly enforce the measures envisioned in its prospective buffer
zone management plan. These measures included hydro-insulation of the
spoil heap and decreasing its height to 50 metres (in which case, as
noted by the applicants, a 300-metre buffer zone around the spoil
heap would become permissible under domestic law). According to the
case file materials, these measures have not yet been carried out.
- Consequently,
it appears that for a period exceeding twelve years since the entry
of the Convention into force in respect of Ukraine, the applicants
were living permanently in an area which, according to both the
legislative framework and empirical studies, was unsafe for
residential use on account of air and water pollution and soil
subsidence resulting from the operation of two State-owned industrial
facilities.
- In
these circumstances the Court considers that the environmental
nuisance complained about attained the level of severity necessary to
bring the complaint within the ambit of Article 8 of the Convention.
- In
examining to what extent the State owed a duty to the applicants
under this provision, the Court reiterates that the present case
concerns pollution emanating from the daily operation of the
State-owned Vizeyska coal mine and the Chervonogradska
coal-processing factory, which was State-owned at least until 2007;
its spoil heap has remained in State ownership to the present day.
The State should have been, and in fact was, well aware of the
environmental effects of the operation of these facilities, as these
were the only large industries in the vicinity of the applicant
families’ households.
- The
Court further notes that the applicants set up their present homes
before the facilities were in operation and long before the actual
effect of their operation on the environment could be determined.
- The
Court also observes that, as the Government suggests, in principle
the applicants remain free to move elsewhere. However, regard being
had to the applicants’ substantiated arguments concerning lack
of demand for their houses located in the close proximity to major
industrial pollutants, the Court is prepared to conclude that
remedying their situation without State support may be a difficult
task. Moreover, the Court considers that the applicants were not
unreasonable in relying on the State, which owned both the polluters,
to support their resettlement, especially since a promise to that
effect was given to them as early as in 1994. As regards the
Government’s argument that the applicants could have applied
for social housing, in the Court’s view they presented no valid
evidence that a general request of this sort would have been more
effective than other efforts made by the applicants to obtain State
housing, especially in view of the fact that the only formal reason
for them to seek relocation was environmental pollution.
- In
the Court’s opinion the combination of all these factors shows
a strong enough link between the pollutant emissions and the State to
raise an issue of the State’s responsibility under Article 8 of
the Convention.
- It
remains to be determined whether the State, in securing the
applicants’ rights, has struck a fair balance between the
competing interests of the applicants and the community as a whole,
as required by paragraph 2 of Article 8.
2. Justification under Article 8 § 2 of the
Convention
(a) Submissions by the parties
(i) The applicants
- The
applicants asserted that in addressing their environmental concerns
the State had failed to strike a fair balance between their interests
and those of the community.
- In
particular, for the period of more than twelve years since the entry
of the Convention into force with respect to Ukraine, the State
authorities have failed either to bring the pollution levels under
control or to resettle the applicants into a safer area.
- While
some measures in respect of mitigating the applicants’ hardship
were taken at various times, they were inconsistent and insufficient
to change the applicants’ overall situation as well as marked
by prohibitive delays.
- In
particular, it was only in 2009 that the hamlet was provided with a
centralised aqueduct. Until then drinking water, which was not
available at all before 2003, was brought in small quantities by
trucks and tractors at irregular intervals, sometimes as long as
several months in winter. On several occasions the State authorities
attempted to penalise the mine and the factory management for their
failures to ensure safer pollution levels, but these punishments were
negligible or remained unenforced (such as the decision to suspend
operation of the mine) and did not bring about any subsequent
improvements.
- The
applicants further submitted that, as regards their resettlement, the
1994 decision to this end was never officially revoked, remained in
force and was confirmed in 2000 by the Ecological Safety Commission.
The subsequent court decisions disregarding it were therefore
unlawful. Moreover, in deciding that the applicants no longer lived
in the factory buffer zone, the judicial authorities relied on its
prospective plan for buffer zone management, envisioning a number of
measures to ensure that living outside the 300-metre zone actually
would become safe, including downsizing of the spoil heap to 50
metres and hydro-insulating it. However, as the zone management
measures had remained unenforced, the applicants continued to live in
an environmentally unsafe area.
- Moreover,
the Dubetska-Nayda family’s house was also located within the
mine’s buffer zone, which was confirmed by the judicial
authorities in a final and binding decision of 26 December 2005
ordering this family’s resettlement.
- Further,
significant delays marked consideration of the applicants’
claims by domestic judicial authorities. On many occasions the trial
court failed to inform the applicants of hearing dates or
unreasonably postponed hearings on account of defendants’
absences.
- Finally,
even though the Dubetska-Nayda family succeeded in obtaining a
resettlement judgment, its effect was set at naught, as for some five
years now it has remained unenforced. The prospects for its
enforcement within foreseeable future were unpromising, regard being
had, in particular, to the entry into force of the Law of Ukraine “On
Measures to Ensure the Stable Operation of Fuel and Energy Sector
Enterprises”, which stalled the possibility of recovering debt
from the Vizeyska mine.
- In
sum, the applicants submitted that the State authorities had failed
to act diligently and in good time in addressing their problems
caused by pollution from the mine and the factory.
(ii) The Government
- The
Government disagreed. They submitted that they had done everything in
their power to ensure that people living near the mine and the
factory, whose operation was admittedly connected with some
environmental risks, were least affected by them.
- In
particular, the State put in place a legislative framework to
regulate the operation of industrial polluters, including the
establishment of safe emission levels and buffer zones. It has kept a
constant watch on compliance with pollution safety standards by the
mine and the factory and, in the event of occasional failures, the
management was promptly penalised and the problems addressed. As a
result, within 300 metres of the factory the levels of pollution were
actually usually within the limits statutorily recognised as safe.
This fact, confirmed by rigorous empirical monitoring, enabled
scientific substantiation of the 300-metre buffer zone plan around
the factory. A plan for the mine was likewise developed, however, in
view of the mine’s eventual closure there was no need to
approve it or put it in place.
- The
Government further submitted that, as regards the applicants’
resettlement claims, neither family had actually suffered damage or
risk of damage from pollution such as to warrant their resettlement.
As the 1994 decision, which had expired by 1997 in view of the
economic challenges downsizing the factory’s production levels
instead of their anticipated increase, at no point in time from the
entry of the Convention into force with respect to Ukraine to the
present was the State responsible for the Gavrylyuk-Vakiv family’s
resettlement, as that family lived outside both buffer zones.
- As
regards the Dubetska-Nayda family, the State was obliged to resettle
them on statutory grounds by the Chervonograd Court’s decision
of 26 December 2005. While the State’s obligation to enforce
this judgment was not in dispute, delays were caused by the severe
financial problems of the debtor mine as well as the mining sector
nationwide. The mine was unprofitable and owed substantial amounts to
various creditors, including salary arrears to its employees. It was
therefore unable to pay its debts and was subject to liquidation.
Attempting to tackle the nationwide critical situation in the fuel
and energy sector, the State was forced to enact the Law “On
Measures to Ensure the Stable Operation of Fuel and Energy Sector
Enterprises”, suspending or restructuring debts of the
enterprises in the industry. Although it was not clear when the
judgment would be enforced, funds were being sought and provision of
the family with housing had been included in the list of measures
previewed in the course of the liquidation.
- In
any event, both applicant families were given a judicial forum to
handle their resettlement complaints. In so far as they complained
that their court proceedings were lengthy, the delays were caused by
the complexity of the subject and the search for the comprehensive
evidence necessary to substantiate a reasoned and fair decision. In
addition, some adjournments were on account of the applicants’
failures to appear.
- Overall,
the State, which was facing a complex task of balancing between
environmental and economic concerns relating to the mine and the
factory operation, had duly considered the applicants’
interests against those of the community in addressing them.
(b) The Court’s assessment
(i) The Court’s jurisprudence
- The Court reiterates that the principles applicable
to an assessment of the State’s responsibility under Article 8
of the Convention in environmental cases are broadly similar
regardless of whether the case is analysed in terms of a direct
interference or a positive duty to regulate private activities (see
Hatton and Others v. the United Kingdom [GC], no. 36022/97,
§ 98, ECHR 2003 VIII, and Fadeyeva, cited above, §§
89 and 94).
- In
cases involving environmental issues, the State must be allowed a
wide margin of appreciation and be left a choice between different
ways and means of meeting its obligations. The ultimate question
before the Court is, however, whether a State has succeeded in
striking a fair balance between the competing interests of the
individuals affected and the community as a whole (see Hatton and
Others, cited above, §§ 100, 119 and 123). In making
such an assessment all the factors, including domestic legality, must
be analysed in the context of a particular case (see ibid., § 120,
and Fadeyeva, cited above, §§ 96-97).
- Where the complaints relate to State policy with
respect to industrial polluters, as in the present case, it remains
open to the Court to review the merits of the respective decisions
and conclude that there has been a manifest error. However, the
complexity of the issues involved with regard to environmental
policymaking renders the Court’s role primarily a subsidiary
one. It must first examine whether the decision-making process was
fair, and only in exceptional circumstances may it go beyond this
line and revise the material conclusions of the domestic authorities
(see Fadeyeva, cited above, § 105).
- In
scrutinising the procedures at issue, the Court will examine whether
the authorities conducted sufficient studies to evaluate the risks of
a potentially hazardous activity (see Hatton and Others, cited
above, § 128, and Giacomelli v. Italy, no. 59909/00, §
86, ECHR 2006 XII), whether, on the basis of the information
available, they have developed an adequate policy vis-à-vis
polluters and whether all necessary measures have been taken to
enforce this policy in good time (see Ledyayeva and Others, cited
above, § 104, and Giacomelli, cited above,
§§ 92-93, ECHR 2006 ...). The Court will likewise
examine to what extent the individuals affected by the policy at
issue were able to contribute to the decision-making, including
access to the relevant information and ability to challenge the
authorities’ decisions in an effective way (see, mutatis
mutandis, Guerra and Others v. Italy, judgment of 19
February 1998, Reports 1998-I, p. 228, § 60; Hatton
and Others, cited above, § 127; and Taşkın and
Others, cited above, §119).
- As
the Convention is intended to protect effective rights, not illusory
ones, a fair balance between the various interests at stake may be
upset not only where the regulations to protect the guaranteed rights
are lacking, but also where they are not duly complied with (see
Moreno Gómez v. Spain, no. 4143/02, §§ 56 and
61, ECHR 2004 X). The procedural safeguards available to the
applicant may be rendered inoperative and the State may be found
liable under the Convention where a decision-making procedure is
unjustifiably lengthy or where a decision taken as a result remains
for an important period unenforced (see Taşkın and
Others, cited above, §§ 124-25).
- Overall,
the onus is on the State to justify, using detailed and rigorous
data, a situation in which certain individuals bear a heavy burden on
behalf of the rest of the community (see Fadeyeva, cited above, §
128).
(ii) Assessment of the facts in the
present case
- The
Court remarks that the authorities contemplated and conceived a
number of measures aimed at minimising the harmful effects of the
mine and the factory operation on the applicants’ households.
It should be noted, for instance, that the quality of the legislative
framework concerning industrial pollution is not in dispute between
the parties in the present case. Further, as suggested by the
Government, the authorities regularly monitored the levels of actual
pollution and designed various measures to minimise them, including
imposing penalties on the mine and factory management for breaches
and eventual development of a plan for maintenance of the factory
buffer zone. In addition, the applicants were promised compensation
for damage caused by soil subsidence and water was brought in at
State expense. No later than 2009 a centralised aqueduct was built,
which should relieve the applicants of the burdens associated with
accessing drinking-quality water, a major issue raised in their
application. Finally, as mentioned above, on numerous occasions the
authorities considered resettling the applicants as a way of
providing an effective solution to their environmental hardship.
- Notwithstanding
the effort, for more than twelve years the State authorities have not
been able to put in place an effective solution for the applicants’
personal situation, which throughout this period has remained
virtually the same.
- It
is noted that on the date of the Convention’s entry into force
(11 September 1997) the applicants were living in close
proximity to two major industrial polluters, which adversely and
substantially affected their daily life. It appears that in order to
fulfil their Convention obligations, the State authorities, who owned
these polluters, contemplated two major policy choices vis-à-vis
the applicants’ situation – either to facilitate their
relocation to a safer area or to mitigate the pollution effects in
some way.
- Yet
in 1994, before the Convention’s entry into force, the
Sokalskyy Executive Committee made the choice in favour of
relocation. In the following period, however, the Government did not
act promptly and consistently and did not back up this decision with
the necessary resources to have it enforced. While according to the
Government’s observations the 1994 decision automatically lost
its legal power by 1997 in view of the factory downsizing, the
applicants were never officially informed of this, much less given a
reference to the legal provision on the basis of which the decision
at issue could have automatically lost its effect, in particular, in
the absence of a new factory buffer zone management plan. Moreover,
it appears that in April 2000 the 1994 decision was backed up by that
of the Ecological Safety Commission, resolving to solicit State
funding for the resettlement of eighteen families from the factory
buffer zone. While the names of the families apparently remained
unlisted, their number – eighteen - was the same as that
mentioned in the 1994 decision. The Court therefore finds that the
applicants could have reasonably expected to be among them. It was
not until 21 June 2004 for the Gavrylyuk-Vakiv family and 26 December
2005 for the Dubetska-Nayda family that the applicants were formally
declared to be living outside the prospective factory buffer zone and
not entitled to relocation at State expense. It was also only on
26 December 2005 that the State authorities acknowledged their
obligation under domestic law to resettle the Dubetska-Nayda family
from the mine spoil heap buffer zone. The judicial proceedings, which
lasted some three and a half years at one level of jurisdiction for
the Dubetska-Nayda family and a little over five years at three
levels of jurisdiction for the Gavrylyuk-Vakiv family, were marked by
certain delays, in particular, on account of some significant
intervals between hearings. Next, the decision given in the
Dubetska-Nayda family’s favour did not change the family’s
situation, as throughout the next five years and until now it has not
been funded. Consequently, the Court remarks that for more than
twelve years from the Convention’s entry into force and up to
now little or nothing has been done to help the applicants to move to
a safer area.
- The
Court considers that when it comes to the wide margin of appreciation
available to the States in context of their environmental obligations
under Article 8 of the Convention, it would be going too far to
establish an applicant’s general right to free new housing at
the State’s expense (see Fadeyeva, cited above, §
133). The applicants’ Article 8 complaints could also be
remedied by duly addressing the environmental hazards.
- In
the meantime, the Government’s approach to tackling pollution
in the present case has also been marked by numerous delays and
inconsistent enforcement. A major measure contemplated by the
Government in this regard during the period in question concerned the
development of scientifically justified buffer zone management plans
for the mine and the factory. This measure appears to have been
mandatory under the applicable law, as at various times the public
health authorities imposed sanctions on the facilities’
management for failures to implement it, going as far as the
suspension of their operating licences (see paragraphs 32 and 35
above). However, these suspensions apparently remained unenforced and
neither the mine nor the factory has put in place a valid functioning
buffer zone management plan as yet.
- Eight
years since the entry of the Convention into force, in 2005, the
factory had such plan developed. When dismissing the applicants’
claims against the factory for resettlement, the judicial authorities
pointed out that the applicants’ rights should be duly
protected by this plan, in particular, in view of the anticipated
downsizing of the spoil heap and its hydro-insulation. However, these
measures, envisioned by the plan as necessary in order to render the
factory’s operation harmless to the area outside the buffer
zone, have still not been enforced more than five years later (see
paragraph 38 above). There also appear to have been, at least
until the launch of the aqueduct no later than in 2009, delays in
supplying potable water to the hamlet, which resulted in considerable
difficulties for the applicants. The applicants cannot therefore be
said to have been duly protected from the environmental risks
emanating from the factory operation.
- As
regards the mine, in 2005 it went into liquidation without the zone
management plan ever being finalised. It is unclear whether the mine
has in fact ceased to operate at the present time. It appears,
however, that the applicants in any event continue to be affected by
its presence, in particular as they have not been compensated for
damage caused by soil subsidence. In addition, the Dubetska-Nayda
family lives within 100 metres of the mine’s spoil heap, which
needs environmental management regardless of whether it is still in
use.
- In
sum, it appears that during the entire period taken into
consideration both the mine and the factory have functioned not in
compliance with the applicable domestic environmental regulations and
the Government have failed either to facilitate the applicants’
relocation or to put in place a functioning policy to protect them
from environmental risks associated with continuing to live within
their immediate proximity.
- The
Court appreciates that tackling environmental concerns associated
with the operation of two major industrial polluters, which had
apparently been malfunctioning from the start and piling up waste for
over fifty years, was a complex task which required time and
considerable resources, the more so in the context of these
facilities’ low profitability and nationwide economic
difficulties, to which the Government have referred. At the same
time, the Court notes that these industrial facilities were located
in a rural area and the applicants belonged to a very small group of
people (apparently not more than two dozen families) who lived nearby
and were most seriously affected by pollution. In these circumstances
the Government has failed to adduce sufficient explanation for their
failure to either resettle the applicants or find some other kind of
effective solution for their individual burden for more than twelve
years.
- There
has therefore been a breach of Article 8 of the Convention in the
present case.
III. APPLICATION OF ARTICLE 41 OF THE CONVENTION
- Article 41 of the Convention provides:
“If the Court finds that there has been a
violation of the Convention or the Protocols thereto, and if the
internal law of the High Contracting Party concerned allows only
partial reparation to be made, the Court shall, if necessary, afford
just satisfaction to the injured party.”
A. Damage
1. Pecuniary damage
- The
applicants claimed 28,000 euros (EUR) in respect of pecuniary damage.
They alleged that this sum represented the purchase price of two
comparable houses (one for each of the two applicant families) in the
neighbouring area, not affected by pollution. They argued that they
were entitled to this amount in damages, as their houses had lost
market value and could not be sold on account of their unfavourable
location.
- The
Government submitted that these claims were exorbitant and
unsubstantiated.
- In
considering the applicants’ claim for pecuniary damage, the
Court would state that the violation complained of by the applicants
is of a continuing nature. Throughout the period under consideration
the applicants have been living in their houses and have never been
deprived of them. Although during this time their private life was
adversely affected by operation of two industrial facilities, nothing
indicates that they incurred any expenses in this connection.
Therefore, the applicants failed to substantiate any material loss.
- In
so far as they allege that their houses have lost market value, the
Court reiterates that the present application was lodged and examined
under Article 8 of the Convention and not under Article 1 of Protocol
no. 1, which protects property rights. There is therefore no causal
link between the violation found and the loss of market value
alleged.
- As
regards future measures to be adopted by the Government in order to
comply with the Court’s finding of a violation of Article 8 of
the Convention in the present case, the Court reiterates that the
State obligation to enforce the final judgment in respect of the
Dubetska-Nayda family is not in dispute. As regards the
Gavrylyuk-Vakiv family, their resettlement to an ecologically safe
area would be only one of many possible solutions. In any event,
according to Article 41 of the Convention, by finding a violation of
Article 8 in the present case the Court has established the
Government’s obligation to take appropriate measures to remedy
the applicants’ individual situation.
2. Non-pecuniary damage
- In
addition, the Dubetska-Nayda family claimed EUR 32,000 in
non-pecuniary damage and the Gavrylyuk-Vakiv family claimed
EUR 33,000 in this respect. The applicants alleged that these
amounts represented compensation for their physical suffering in
connection with living in an unsafe environment, as well as
psychological distress on account of disruption of their daily
routine, complications in interpersonal communication and frustration
with making prolonged unsuccessful efforts to obtain redress from the
public authorities.
- The
Government submitted that the applicants should not be awarded any
compensation.
- The
Court is prepared to accept that the applicants’ prolonged
exposure to industrial pollution caused them much inconvenience,
psychological distress and even a degree of physical suffering, and
that they might well feel frustration on account of the authorities’
response to their hardship – this is clear from the grounds on
which the Court found a violation of Article 8. Taking into account
various relevant factors, including the duration of the situation
complained of, and making an assessment on an equitable basis, the
Court awards the applicants the amounts claimed in respect of
non-pecuniary damage in full.
B. Costs and expenses
- The
applicants did not submit any claim under this head. The Court
therefore makes no award.
C. Default interest
- The
Court considers it appropriate that the default interest should be
based on the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank, to
which should be added three percentage points.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT UNANIMOUSLY
- Decides to strike the application out of its
list of cases, in so far as Mr Arkadiy Gavrylyuk’s
complaint is concerned;
- Declares the application admissible in respect
of all other applicants;
- Holds that there has been a violation of Article
8 of the Convention;
- Holds
(a) that
the respondent State is to pay, within three months of the date on
which the judgment becomes final in accordance with Article 44 § 2
of the Convention,
(i) the
first, the second, the third, the fourth and the fifth applicant
jointly EUR 32,000 (thirty-two thousand euros);
(ii) the
seventh, the eighth, the ninth, the tenth and the eleventh applicant
jointly EUR 33,000 (thirty-three thousand euros)
plus
any tax that may be chargeable in respect of the above amounts, to be
converted into the national currency of Ukraine at the rate
applicable on the date of settlement;
(b) that
from the expiry of the above-mentioned three months until settlement
simple interest shall be payable on the above amount at a rate equal
to the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank during the
default period plus three percentage points;
- Dismisses the remainder of the applicants’
claim for just satisfaction.
Done in English, and notified in writing on 10 February 2011,
pursuant to Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Claudia Westerdiek Peer Lorenzen
Registrar President