The article analyses Regulation (EU) 2024/1991 on nature restoration as a cornerstone of European environmental policy, highlighting its systemic relevance and its paradigmatic shift away from a purely conservative approach to environmental protection. The study reconstructs the legislative process leading to the adoption of the Regulation and examines its core objectives – climate neutrality, biodiversity protection, and enhanced ecosystem resilience – framing active ecosystem restoration as an expression of intergenerational justice. Particular attention is devoted to the key operative provisions concerning terrestrial, marine, fluvial, and urban ecosystems, as well as to the strengthening of public participation and national restoration planning. The contribution finally addresses the main implementation challenges, including financial constraints, sectoral resistance, and climate-related risks, stressing the need for an integrated and long-term governance model for ecological regeneration.
Il saggio esamina il Regolamento (UE) 2024/1991 sul ripristino della natura come snodo centrale delle politiche ambientali europee, mettendone in luce la portata sistemica e il valore paradigmatico rispetto alla tradizionale impostazione conservativa della tutela ambientale. L’analisi ricostruisce l’iter di approvazione del regolamento e ne approfondisce gli obiettivi fondamentali – neutralità climatica, tutela della biodiversità e rafforzamento della resilienza degli ecosistemi – evidenziando come il ripristino attivo degli ecosistemi degradati si configuri quale espressione di un principio di giustizia intergenerazionale. Particolare attenzione è dedicata alle principali disposizioni operative, con riferimento agli ecosistemi terrestri, marini, fluviali e urbani, nonché al rafforzamento della partecipazione pubblica e della pianificazione nazionale. Il contributo si sofferma, infine, sulle criticità attuative del nuovo quadro normativo, legate ai costi economici, alle resistenze settoriali e ai rischi connessi agli eventi climatici estremi, sottolineando la necessità di un approccio integrato e di lungo periodo nella governance della rigenerazione ecologica.
EU Green Rights: re-shaping fundamental rights for future generations. La sostenibilità nella prospettiva europea dei diritti
Benanti ClaudiaWriting – Original Draft Preparation
2025-01-01
Abstract
The article analyses Regulation (EU) 2024/1991 on nature restoration as a cornerstone of European environmental policy, highlighting its systemic relevance and its paradigmatic shift away from a purely conservative approach to environmental protection. The study reconstructs the legislative process leading to the adoption of the Regulation and examines its core objectives – climate neutrality, biodiversity protection, and enhanced ecosystem resilience – framing active ecosystem restoration as an expression of intergenerational justice. Particular attention is devoted to the key operative provisions concerning terrestrial, marine, fluvial, and urban ecosystems, as well as to the strengthening of public participation and national restoration planning. The contribution finally addresses the main implementation challenges, including financial constraints, sectoral resistance, and climate-related risks, stressing the need for an integrated and long-term governance model for ecological regeneration.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


