| Literature DB >> 35910752 |
Abstract
In order to further curb the damage to the ecological environment from the perspective of legal synergistic supervision, a synergistic analysis method between the ecological protection environmental law and the ecological Civil Code is proposed. Coordinated supervision, with the new Civil Code as the research background, from the perspective of interpretation, explores the solution to the problem of "ecological environmental damage" in the newly promulgated Civil Code for behavior that damages the ecological environment. The research results believe that, from the perspective of rights, environmental rights should be regarded as the concentrated expression of rights in the sense of private law in the ecological environment law. Article 1234 of the Tort Liability Section stipulates that "the state-specified agency or the law-specified organization" as the representative of environmental public interests proposes damage. The request resolves the legitimacy of relevant agencies and organizations as civil subjects to represent environmental public interests. Finally, it clearly stipulates the responsibility for ecological restoration, expands the way of undertaking tort liability caused by environmental damage, and solves the problem that it was limited to "restoration" in the past and could not be actually performed.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35910752 PMCID: PMC9334050 DOI: 10.1155/2022/9631782
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Environ Public Health ISSN: 1687-9805
Figure 1Public crisis collaborative governance system.
Definition of “damage” in the separate law on environmental protection.
| Environmental Protection Single Act | Clause | Specific contents |
|---|---|---|
| Air Pollution Prevention And Control Law (2018 Amendment) | Article 125 | If the discharge of air pollutants causes damage, it shall bear tort liability according to law. |
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| Water Pollution Prevention and Control Law | Article 102 | Water pollution refers to the change of chemical, physical, biological, or radiological characteristics of water body due to the intervention of certain substances, thereby affecting the effective use of water, endangering human health or destroying the ecological environment, resulting in the deterioration of water quality. |
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| Marine Environmental Protection Law | Article 94 | Marine environmental pollution damage refers to the direct or indirect introduction of substances or energy into the marine environment, resulting in harmful effects such as damage to marine biological resources, harm to human health, damage to fisheries, and other legal activities at sea, damage to the quality of seawater use, and impairment of environmental quality. |
Figure 2Types of ecological environment pollution damage.
The specific performance of ecological environment pollution damage.
| Type | Environmental damage | Personal injury | Property damage | Damage to the ecological environment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Specific performance | An observable or measurable adverse change in human health, property value, or the ecological environment and its ecosystem services due to environmental pollution or ecological damage | Violation of human life, health, or body due to environmental pollution, resulting in human disease, disability, death, or observable or measurable adverse changes in mental state | Property damage or reduction in value directly caused by environmental pollution or ecological damage, as well as necessary and reasonable expenses to protect property from loss | Observable or measurable adverse changes in the physical, chemical, or biological properties of the ecological environment, as well as disruption or impairment of the ability to provide ecosystem services, as a result of direct or indirect digging of the environment by polluting the environment or destroying it |
Figure 3Types of personal injury confirmation.
Specific manifestations of personal injury.
| Type | Personal injury confirmation | Group personal injury confirmation |
|---|---|---|
| Specific performance | Individuals who died: those who were clearly diagnosed as disabled in accordance with the “Standards for the Identification of the Degree of Injury and Disability in the Human Body” specific or severe nonspecific clinical symptoms or signs, abnormal biochemical indicators, or physical examination results were found in clinical examinations and were diagnosed according to the “diseases and related health problems.” The International Statistical Classification (ICD-10) clearly diagnoses one or more diseases; although it is not determined as death, disability, or disease, clinical measures must be taken to prevent irreversible organic or functional damage to the human body (treatment or behavioral intervention). | Epidemiological surveys show that there are significant differences between the surveyed population and the control population in disease frequency (such as morbidity and mortality), physiological and biochemical indicators, or clinical physical examination results: spatial analysis shows that the surveyed population disease frequency (such as disease, death, death, and disability) aggregates in significant space. |
Figure 4Two types of ecological environment damage consequences caused by environmental pollution and ecological destruction.
Figure 5Relief ways for the damage caused by polluting the environment and destroying the ecology.
Comparison of types of relief approaches for ecological damage.
| Type comparison | Environmental public interest litigation | Environmental damage compensation lawsuit | Environmental criminal procedure | |
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| Civil public interest litigation | Administrative public interest litigation | |||
| Conditions for filing a lawsuit | Behaviors that pollute the environment, damage the ecology, and damage public interests of the society | Administrative organs with supervisory and management positions in the fields of ecological environment and resource protection illegally exercise their powers or fail to act, resulting in infringement of national interests or social public interests | Large, major, or particularly major environmental emergencies that seriously affect the consequences of damage to the ecological environment, and no agreement has been reached or cannot be negotiated after consultation | Those who pollute the environment and destroy the ecology constitute a crime |
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| Subject of litigation | Statutory authority social organization procuratorate | Procuratorate | Landlords, people's government, and administrative organs | Procuratorate |
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| Correspondence basis | Environmental protection law code of civil procedure judicial interpretation of environmental civil public interest litigation | Administrative procedure law | Several provisions of the supreme people's court on trial of compensation cases for ecological environmental damage (trial) | Environmental protection law criminal law judicial interpretation of criminal cases of environmental pollution |
Figure 6Statements about environmental torts in the various stages of the introduction of the Tort Liability Law.
Figure 7Types of verdicts in cases in which the court upheld the request.
Subjects of “restoration” claims in 112 environmental civil cases unit/case.
| Types of subject matter of “reinstatement” claims | Court upholds verdict | Court does not uphold judgment |
|---|---|---|
| Villagers group | 3 | 0 |
| Natural person | 8 | 20 |
| Farmers' professional cooperative | 1 | 0 |
| Corporate | 0 | 2 |
| State-owned forest farm | 1 | 0 |
| Environmental protection organization | 20 | 1 |
| Prosecutor's office | 55 | 1 |
Subjects requesting relief for ecological and environmental damage in the separate law on environmental protection.
| Environmental Protection Single Act | Water Pollution Prevention and Control Law | Air Pollution Prevention and Control Law | Soil Pollution Prevention and Control Law | Solid Waste Pollution Prevention and Control Law | Marine Environmental Protection Law | Noise Pollution Prevention and Control Law |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clause | Article 99 | Article 125 | Article 96 (3) and Article 97 | Article 121 and Article 122 | Article 89 (2) | Article 61 |
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| Request body | Elected representative | Unspecified | Party; relevant agencies and organizations | Relevant agencies and organizations; local people's government or its designated departments, institutions, and organizations | The part that exercises the right to supervise and manage the marine environment | Units and individuals |
Figure 8The second type of damage relief.