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EU top court fines Italy over failure to treat sewage
by Staff Writers
Luxembourg (AFP) May 31, 2018

The European Union's top court on Thursday fined crisis-ridden Italy 25 million euros for years of failure to treat urban sewage, warning of steeper fines with more delays.

The European Court of Justice found Italy had missed repeated deadlines to comply with "EU law on the collection and treatment of urban waste water" in scores of areas, almost all of them in the country's south.

"Italy is ordered to pay a lump sum of 25 million euros (29 million dollars) and a fine of more than 30 million euros for every six months of delay," the court ruled.

"The court already found in its first judgment in this matter in 2012 that Italy had failed to fulfil its obligations," it added.

The European Commission, the 28-nation EU's executive arm, took Italy back to the Luxembourg-based court in December 2016 for failing to fully comply with the tribunal's first ruling.

Four years after the first ruling, it said, more than six million people in 80 areas, 51 of them in Sicily, lacked proper waste water treatment.

The southern regions of Calabria and Campania together accounted for 20 areas that had substandard treatment.

"The lack of adequate collection and treatment systems for these 80 agglomerations poses significant risks to human health, inland waters and the marine environment," the commission said at the time.

The fines come as Italy is mired in political crisis following failed efforts by eurosceptic populist and right-wing parties to form a government amid staggering debt.

The deadlock could lead to new elections further bolstering anti-EU populists.


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WATER WORLD
Making sense of the water supply situation in Cape Town
Cape Town, South Africa (SPX) May 30, 2018
Cape Town has come dangerously close to running out of water after 3 years of persistent drought. Tight water usage restrictions have been successful in stalling 'day zero' - when the city's taps will be turned off - until 2019, buying time for authorities to look for more ways to manage the crisis. The JRC, with data from its Global Drought Observatory (GDO), provides analytical reports on the crisis as it develops. Rainfall levels in April, May and June, during the wettest period of ... read more

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