The Law of Environmental Damage: Liability and ReparationKluwer Law International, 1999 - 681 pages From its starting point within international law, throughout its progression from regional national law, The Law of Environmental Damage combines the disciplines of environmental law, liability law and insurance in its analysis of the development of reparative environmental law. In the model adopted, three generations of reparative schemes are identified based on civil liability or administrative liability or self-taken measures from the area of insurance. The results of the study are evaluated within the framework of a theory of environmental efficiency; among other factors, the reparative effect of liability rules is discussed. |
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Page 185
... accepted claims for expens- es incurred for clean - up at sea or on the beach and costs for decontaminat- ing private and public property . If the polluted property cannot be cleaned , the cost of replacement is accepted with a ...
... accepted claims for expens- es incurred for clean - up at sea or on the beach and costs for decontaminat- ing private and public property . If the polluted property cannot be cleaned , the cost of replacement is accepted with a ...
Page 189
... accepted provided each claimant could prove that he had actually been prevented from fishing due to the incident , and also that the quantum of the loss resulted from the inability to fish . The link of causation was hereby stressed ...
... accepted provided each claimant could prove that he had actually been prevented from fishing due to the incident , and also that the quantum of the loss resulted from the inability to fish . The link of causation was hereby stressed ...
Page 305
... accepted if resulting in loss of market val- ue - but the question remains whether this head of damage is regarded as fully compensable outside the scope of personal injuries . 300 The reluctance of Swedish law to recognize such kinds ...
... accepted if resulting in loss of market val- ue - but the question remains whether this head of damage is regarded as fully compensable outside the scope of personal injuries . 300 The reluctance of Swedish law to recognize such kinds ...
Contents
INTRODUCTION | 21 |
HISTORY EVOLUTION AND EMERGENCE | 39 |
RESTITUTION OF ENVIRONMENTAL DAMAGE | 115 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
42 USCA action activity adopted AIDA Amoco Cadiz Annex applied Article assessment Baltic Sea Basel Convention CERCLA civil liability claim claimant clean-up Clifford Chance common concept concerning contamination costs court CRTD damage caused defined definition ecological economic effects emissions environmental damage environmental law environmental liability Environmental Protection European Explanatory Report F Supp further global harm hereinafter immissions included infra section injury instruments international law IOPC Fund IOPC Fund Convention issue Jacobsson Kiss and Shelton land liability scheme limited Ljungman loss marine environment measures ment natural resources OECD oil pollution operator owner party person polluter pays principle pollution damage prevent Product Liability property damage Protocol regulation remedy Report responsibility restoration risk rule sources standard strict liability substances Swedish tion tort law transboundary UNCLOS Wetterstein