"A proposed highway would cut through Rospuda Valley in northeast Poland
[see a photo : http://www.dw-world.de/image/0,,2375103_4,00.jpg]

For some, the Via Baltica highway is northeast Poland's ticket to economic 
prosperity. The European Commission says the planned transport corridor 
could harm protected nature preserves and break EU law.

... thick, green forests... peat bog and a marshland... eagles... orchids 
[The Rospuda Valley is home to 19 of Poland's 31 orchid species]...
... a multiple-lane highway running right through it...

classic dilemma of economic development vs. nature protection.

[see a map : http://www.dw-world.de/image/0,,2375105_4,00.jpg
caption : Red marks the proposed route, green the alternatives by 
environmentalists]

The European Commission has given Poland a Wednesday deadline to stop parts 
of a planned highway called the Via Baltica from being built. The highway 
is designed to go through areas protected by EU environmental protection laws.

The commission and environmentalists fear that construction of the highway 
could endanger... rare species of plants...  in the Rospuda Valley.
...
The EU Commission says Poland must first provide an official assessment of 
the environmental impact of the proposed highway and offer alternative 
routes to the proposed one to be reviewed before building can begin.

If it does not, the commission says Poland is breaking EU law and would be 
taken to Europe's highest court.

"If Poland fails to respond in a timely and satisfactory manner, the 
commission will consider taking urgent action and request the European 
Court of Justice to look at the case and issue an order to suspend work 
pending a hearing," said EU Environment Commissioner Stavros Dimas.

Should it go that far, the court could also impose heavy fines on Poland 
and be forced to halt building.

The roadway would connect Poland to Finland via the Baltic states, 
connecting Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia to Europe's highway network.

The dispute centers, among other things, on approval by Polish authorities 
to build a 17-kilometer (10-mile) stretch of the highway through the 
Rospuda Valley. The river valley hosts an ecosystem regarded as the last of 
its kind in Europe -- home to rare species of flora... A highway could put 
that at risk.
...
"The Polish government has defied EU requests for impact assessment and 
gone ahead and signed papers for work to start construction," said Barbara 
Helferrich, European Commission environment spokeswoman.

The proposed highway would also go through two other protected nature 
areas, which environmentalists and the EU Commission say is unacceptable.

The commission already issued Poland a warning last December for infringing 
on environmentally protected areas and in April 2006, Natura 2000 took 
legal action against Poland for failing to protect biodiversity regions.
...
Poland says it is prepared to defend itself should the Via Baltica issue go 
all the way to the European Court of Justice.

"We are ready for that because we are presenting a matter-of-fact, 
objective and, I think, very detailed argument of our reasons," said Polish 
Transport Minister Jerzy Polaczek.

Poland's environment minister, Jan Szyszko, approved the plans for the 
highway's construction.

Polish officials argue that it would be too expensive to reroute the 
highway. Also, the planned part of the Via Baltica known as the Augustow 
bypass is designed to ease the burden on the nearby town of Augustow, which 
must cope with over 4,000 heavy goods trucks a day.
...
Officials say the Via Baltica connecting Warsaw and Helsinki would boost 
transport, alleviate Augustow and help the region begin the climb out of 
out of poverty. Tourist traffic would also help fill regional coffers, they 
claim.
...
But that would come at the expense of the natural environment, say the 
highway's critics. Activists from Greenpeace and other environmental groups 
have camped out in the forests for weeks, vowing to chain themselves to 
trees and block road construction work.

The protestors are not necessarily against construction of the highway, but 
they argue it should run along a different route that would cause less 
environmental damage. One alternative would be designing the highway to go 
northwest -- around the nature preserves -- rather than the more 
northeasterly route right through them.
...
Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski -- Lech's brother -- has proposed a 
referendum to decide the fate of the Rospuda Valley.

Until now, many local residents have supported the construction of the 
highway because it could cut down on fatal traffic accidents in the area.

... a recent Polish survey showing that 67 percent are in favor of the 
longer, more costly route proposed by environmentalists that would bypass 
the nature preserves.

Helfferich of the European Commission said it's not just up to the Polish 
to decide.
"It is a unique nature area in Central Europe, and not only belongs to the 
Polish people, but also to the people of Europe," she said."   "

article URL : 
http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,2375443,00.html?maca=en-rss-en-all-1573-rdf

**************
Regards,

VB


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